StudioTodd
StudioTodd
StudioTodd

A thought occurred to me at one point in the competition that altered my perception of Crystal’s performance forever after. I couldn’t see her any other way after it came to me. And now that the season is over, I’m thinking it wouldn’t be nasty to share it, since it couldn’t affect any outcomes (as if that was a

Gigi is a male, though, and taking over the male lead part while in drag makeup and dressed in an atypical drag costume that was not necessarily feminine (i.e., not a gown or dress) made a statement. Plus, that impressive set was homemade and created in her small apartment—that deserves an award unto itself, imo. I

I thought Crystal’s bird lip-synch, while a creative concept, got a little repetitive. And it needed some sort of reveal at some point—I kept waiting for her to come out from behind that curtain in some sort of show-stopping look toward the end. But no, she stayed hidden the entire time.

They are professional entertainers. Why shouldn’t their looks have the highest level of perfection they can get? I don’t understand the complaints about Gigi’s costumes. Are you put off by how well RuPaul is put together in each episode? Because she isn’t making her own costumes (or putting on her own makeup or buying

Gurl, all of them are wearing costumes! This isn’t Project Runway--it’s a bunch of guys in dresses.

No one has even mentioned the level of stupidity required for Diane and Julius to go in and present everything that they know about a conspiracy involving the richest, most powerful and most well-connected people at the highest levels of politics and the law to a POWERFUL, WELL-CONNECTED person at, not the highest,

The kid kept flinching the entire time she was sitting next to him, as though she were pinching him or sticking him with something sharp. If your kid behaves like that when you sit next to him, you’re probably not a candidate for Mother of the Year.

I don’t understand how Molly asking Andrew if there was anything he could do to help Issa out would put a strain on their relationship. Either he could or he could not. Either he would want to help or he would not. Molly could easily have made it clear that it would make no difference with regards to her feelings

I have never understood the “friend-zone” concept to be about some incel being angry that he can’t fuck anyone he wants...it’s just a classification a many people have about the people in their lives...some are friends and some are romantic interests. If a person you have a romantic interest in enjoys your company but

I don’t think Molly was trying to passive-aggressively place blame on Issa during the phone call. I think she was trying to help Issa figure out if there was something that could be done contractually to make the entertainer she hired follow through with his obligation. I think that’s what she was trying to get to

What are you really getting at? There’s something you are dying to say about this opinion of yours but you’re being coy about it. Spit it out.

You are inferring a meaning to the phrase that was never intended nor was it even hinted at. No one (most certainly I didn’t) said that women owe affection and sex to anyone. That is what “friend-zone” means—that sex and a romantic relationship is off the table. She doesn’t owe her friend sex or affection, but if she

Like I said, I happened to see a youtube video of his appearance on Colbert’s talk show and he spoke in detail about the game and his experience, so when the show switched to Jason instead of his character, and he started to act out exactly what he had spoken about in the video that I had just seen the night before,

“In my opinion he acted like a jealous asshole about Tripp and Pearl and how hard done by he was, when in reality Pearl had never actually given him any overt implication that she was interested in him.”

I can’t really understand the tears, hysterics and melodrama over Mia’s sale of that piece.

The finale was unnecessary for you, apparently, but very necessary for me. I’m hesitant to admit it, but I was having a very hard time trying to figure out what the point of this series was. I felt like I had lost the plot and didn’t understand what was going on about halfway through the series. In fact, up until

To clarify, I don’t think Lawrence is striving for upward mobility for Issa or to impress her in a romantic way. I think it is all to spite her. Like I said, I think he wants her to regret what she threw away, and he feels he can accomplish that and twist the knife a bit by becoming the success she didn’t believe he

Well, here’s a liberal who has nothing but contempt for Islam, Christianity, and any other bullshit belief system that is built on a foundation of fairy tales and oppression. Any religion that feels the need to dictate who you can love, who you should hate and who you should kill and cannot provide even a shred of

I’m glad to see some people coming around to my viewpoint about Lawrence. I don’t think he and Issa are done yet. I think all of the status-improvement he’s been doing is all to impress Issa and to prove to her (and himself) that she was wrong about him. Not that he would ever admit it—to himself or anyone else. Issa

I didn’t think she was spying for the police. I don’t know who she would be doing it for. It was just a sense I got from her probing and pushing--not just in this episode, but for a while.