SPEAKER_02
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
C'était avec deux RB.
C'était avec deux RB.
On pensait le match de la relance où Marseille marchait sur le leader à ce moment-là en première mi-temps.
Donc le vélodrome permet ça aussi.
Ça peut être un motif d'espoir pour ce soir.
Alors tu parlais des annonces d'hier, donc on a le nom du successeur par intérim de Pablo Longoria jusqu'à la fin de saison.
A friend smirks at you and says, nice haircut.
Did you lose a bet?
Everyone laughs, but later at night you're staring at yourself in the mirror.
Is teasing a form of love amongst friends or can it be harmful?
Well, this topic hits home for me and we are going to discuss it with someone who has done research in this area.
She's a child and youth studies professor at Brock University.
Her name is Naomi Andrews.
Naomi, welcome to the show.
I've given this one a lot of thought because my friends and I use kind of mean spirited, but loving jokes as a way to kind of like transact in closeness, affection.
I think a lot of adults do this, don't they?
But of course, there's the line and the gray area.
And that's what I want to discuss tonight.
Let's start at the very young age when kids do it with each other.
Like, can you paint me a picture where it could be perceived as kids just being kids or something that's actually pretty hurtful?