Skip to main content

work with kathryn hahn

doing something with someone for the sole purpose of making out with them

comes from aubrey plaza saying she joined the mcu to work with kathryn hahn. their characters later share an intense kiss
person 1: why did you go with her to the movies when you don't like films
person 2: i wanted to work with kathryn hahn
work with kathryn hahn by elviri November 4, 2024

Work with Kathryn Hahn

Slang co-opted by queer women to indicate that one desires to engage in lesbian activities.

(inspired by actress and lesbian magnet Kathryn Hahn, who together with Aubrey Plaza gave us the first lesbian kiss in the MCU)
"I didn't really care about Marvel, I just wanted to work with Kathryn Hahn"

"This girl invited me over tonight, I think she wants to work with Kathryn Hahn"

"Do you listen to girl in red and would you like to work with Kathryn Hahn?"

National take jason to work with you day 

Take your boyfriend jason to work with you on December 19th
Tomorrow take your boyfriend to work with you because its National take jason to work with you day

i can work with that

pick up line for flirty, held back approval - can be ironic or sarcastic
ex) *snapchat of huge, juicy dick*

Eh, I can work with that

“I Work with Real Life, not Science nor Theory”

A broader, often First World political version of the previous fallacy, where one dismisses scientific findings, theoretical frameworks, and even well‑established social science by appealing to an idealized “real life.” This rhetoric typically surfaces in debates about climate policy, public health, education, or social welfare: “Real life isn’t a textbook,” “People in the real world don’t care about theory,” “Real life is more complex than your models.” The fallacy is that it positions the speaker as a hard‑nosed pragmatist while using “real life” as a rhetorical shield to ignore evidence that challenges their preferred policies. It’s a favorite of politicians and pundits who want to appear grounded while rejecting expertise that inconveniences them.
“I Work with Real Life, not Science nor Theory” Example: “When confronted with studies on housing affordability, the candidate said ‘I work with real life, not science nor theory’—dismissing decades of urban research to justify developer‑friendly zoning.”

“I Work With Reality, not Data”

A bias and fallacy common in Brazilian neoliberal and business circles, where one dismisses empirical evidence, statistics, and systematic analysis by appealing to a supposedly unmediated grasp of “reality.” The speaker claims that data is abstract, manipulated, or irrelevant, while their own personal observations, anecdotes, or “common sense” are direct contact with how things really are. The fallacy lies in assuming that rejecting data makes one more realistic, when in fact it abandons the very tools that correct individual bias. It’s a form of anti‑intellectualism dressed as pragmatism, often used to justify policies benefiting elite interests while ignoring contradictory evidence.
“I Work With Reality, not Data” Example: “The economist waved away poverty statistics with ‘I work with reality, not data’—as if his conversations in corporate boardrooms were more ‘real’ than millions of people’s living conditions.”