People Are Revealing Examples Of "Pretty Privilege" And "Thin Privilege," And It's A Real Thing
Briefly

Anyone can ask, but attractive people are so much more likely to get help from strangers. Just a sad little twisted fact of life.
I once missed a flight to NY and I knew it before I went to the ticket kiosks. I walked right up to a worker and all I told them was that I do not have the time to catch my flight. They asked me where I was headed and walked me to a desk a few paces away. Without discussing anything further, I was being handed a ticket on a different flight landing in the same airport that starts boarding in 30 minutes.
I am not a pretty woman, just tbh. My car battery died in a parking lot of a Starbucks and I had no phone and no way to call for a jump. I went into the Starbucks and asked for some help from several men, and they all said no, they don't have cables, and one guy just said, 'No, I don't give people jumps.' Okay, defeated. I go back to the parking lot and ask a woman (who happens to be really pretty) if she can jump me. She says she would, but she doesn't have cables. Let's go ask in Starbucks. I let her know no one did, but she looked at me reassuringly, saying, 'Let's try.' She walks in and asks the guy who bold-faced told me he doesn't give jumps. He instantly says yes, then when he saw me behind her, he looked so unhappy. I'll never forget the feeling. Got my car jumped, though. Beautiful lady saved the day!
I think for men, interacting with children in a completely normal way. If an ugly guy tries to interact with a child they're seen as a creepy pedo.
Read at BuzzFeed
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