How and when did the term " thick" become a complimentary term to describe a woman's body?

When Sir Mix-A-Lot made that song he basically taught mainstream America, AKA white people... stuff that black people knew years prior 👍🏽

Yes. As I have said so many fucking times in this thread, this is when I heard about it, and a lot of us white guys. That one asshole keeps trying to imply that I am saying something else. Fuck this thread, all the passive aggressive assholes in it (not you)
 
I was wrong about how long ago. I just posted, the first I heard of it was probably Sir Mixalot with Baby Got Back, and that was 28 years ago. So that would match up with you hearing about it when you were young.

Do I know black people? Yes. Am I immersed in black culture? No. I'll never claim to be, or make any pseudo-intellectual comments about why black men like thick women, or why they use certain words.
no it wouldn't because my relatives (and black culture) used it well before I was even born, when they were teens. so again, stop making assumptions. it's ok to not know something, concede, listen, and learn.

the fact that you have the audacity to dispute this is very telling, cuck.

This song came out BEFORE baby got back.
Talks about curvy women. it's where the term APPLE BOTTOM comes from.

******* that black people know 👍🏽🤣
 
Yes. As I have said so many fucking times in this thread, this is when I heard about it, and a lot of us white guys. That one asshole keeps trying to imply that I am saying something else. Fuck this thread, all the passive aggressive assholes in it (not you)
That ain't passive aggressive. You and Mr My terms just making all these generalizations and assumptions and both of you were way wrong. All @BBCBuff did was correct you.

"WHAT, YOU MAD BRO?" 😅
 

This song came out BEFORE baby got back.
Talks about curvy women. it's where the term APPLE BOTTOM comes from.

******* that black people know 👍🏽🤣

Was it you or someone else who mentioned the Commodores and Brick House? You know, that may be the first mainstream song I had heard about it. Us white guys really didn't think about it, honestly.
 
That ain't passive aggressive. You and Mr My terms just making all these generalizations and assumptions and both of you were way wrong. All @BBCBuff did was correct you.

"WHAT, YOU MAD BRO?" 😅

No generalizations in my posts. I have a lot of respect for you, but this thread is going downhill fast. I only talk what it is like as a white guy, not familiar with black culture. I have made zero assumptions or generalizations about black culture, black men, what black men like.
 
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