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TIME may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website. Offers may be subject to change without notice. Your Complete Guide to the ‘Cowboy Bebop’ Universe - Netflix TudumSkip to main contentSign InBy NetflixSearchHomeTrendingWhat to WatchTV ShowsMoviesMore from NetflixTop 10A weekly global list of Netflix’s most watchedNetflix ShopExclusive merch from your Netflix favesQueue MagazineIntimate convos with the industry’s top talentPodcastsHear more about Netflix’s TV shows and filmsFeaturedLove Is BlindSquid Game: The ChallengeAvatar The Last AirbenderOne DayWednesdayFool Me OnceLiftFuriesRebel Moon — Part One: A Child of FireGriseldaYour Complete Guide to the ‘Cowboy Bebop’ Universe - Netflix TudumGuideYour Complete Guide to the ‘Cowboy Bebop’ UniverseWe’ve got your one-stop Bebop shop. By Destiny JacksonDec. 2, 2021We see you, curious travelers. Welcome to your guide for Netflix’s live-action Cowboy Bebop series. Before we get into this, we’re guessing you might have a question about the infamous title. “What exactly is a Cowboy Bebop?” In short, Cowboy Bebop revolves around a trio of bounty hunters, also known as cowboys, who hustle their way across the galaxy on a ship called the Bebop — a reference to the mid-1940s jazz movement marked by fast melodies and intricate composition — looking for their next baddie. Fret not, space cowboys in training, no matter if this is your first or umpteenth rodeo with Spike, Jet, Faye and the gang, we’ve grabbed everyone and got the stuff together to bring you the best guide to navigate the world of Bebop. 3.
If he fires her because her skin is pockmarked and he finds her unattractive, well, we don’t talk about that much and, in most places in America, there is no legal recourse. This is puzzling. We live in a society that abhors discrimination on the basis of many traits. And yet one of the major forms of discrimination is lookism, prejudice against the unattractive. And this gets almost no attention and sparks little outrage. Why?Lookism starts, like every form of bigotry, with prejudice and stereotypes. Studies show that most people consider an “attractive” face to have clean, symmetrical features. We find it easier to recognize and categorize these prototypical faces than we do irregular and “unattractive” ones. So we find it easier — from a brain processing perspective — to look at attractive people. Attractive people thus start off with a slight physical advantage. But then people project all sorts of widely unrelated stereotypes onto them.
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