I really like Cameron Diaz. She’s a very good comedic actress and just a likable human being. I’m also convinced that Bad Teacher is an unrecognized gem.
I really like Cameron Diaz. She’s a very good comedic actress and just a likable human being. I’m also convinced that Bad Teacher is an unrecognized gem.
Aww, Cameron Diaz. Miss her. Wish her nothing but the best.
FFS Jessie J does not look like Jenna Dewan. They are both attractive and have dark hair. Why does this site insist on pitting these two women against each other in some weird contest?
This. And I'm a science teacher. The fact that you remember the mitochondria makes me smile and weep at the same time.
Even before the claim of sarcasm, there were Facebook posts and articles about how this was all lamestream media taking Trump’s comments out of context/putting words in his mouth. One acquaintance argued he was talking about legit procedures (like intravenous Vitamin C ??), and saw an article on “All Sides” claiming…
Ah, America: you know you have sunk a little too far when other quasi-dysfunctional countries can look at you and say, “Well, at least we haven’t done that!”
If you are an adult of average intelligence (or maybe a little lower) ... and you think that ‘maybe I will try it’... and then you do... I’m ok with that.
The fact America still functions as the go to “fuck me, it really could be worse” is the only thing stopping me completely burning out at this rate. Sure our government can’t get testing off the ground still, got caught that not taking part in EU procurement schemes was a political decision, has a PM still AWOL yet…
Let’s pretend for a second that Trump was indeed being sarcastic as he claims (NOTE: He was not and if you believe he was, you are dumb. End of story) who in the hell thinks being sarcastic during a daily press briefing during a pandemic is a good idea?
That was exactly my thought when I watched this in the theater as a child - the math isn’t that hard Steve!
I was 14 when this came out. My dad was a very resentful and uninvolved parent. When I hit puberty, then he started paying attention to me because he really thought if I had sex that’s all I’d ever want to do and my life would be over.
But the point is that it should be novel or archaic, especially considering all the independence American women had in 1991.
Source or gtfo
I was 21, near the age of the bride, when the movie debuted and in grad school surrounded by feminists and progressive thinkers. The movie repulsed me for the above reasons, and also because the dad’s interest in the daughter came off as pervy-creepy, almost obsessive, to me. But then again, I was never a fan of…
One quibble: this movie isn’t about the “dissolution of power” but rather the dissolution of the illusion of power.
I don’t remember too much about this movie but I think I saw it when I was like 11 or 12 and even then I was like, this is really dated and weird (also I remember thinking 22 was too young to get married and adult women who call their father “daddy” skeeves me out). It But then the sequel where his wife and daughter…
It always bothered me that he clearly removed the “superfluous buns” from at least 2 packages of buns even though he could’ve bought 3 packages of hotdogs and 2 packages of buns and had 24 hot dogs and 24 hot dog buns.
These are all the right takes.
I was 18 when this movie came out. Even in 1991, it was obvious that this was a movie for middle aged men. The type of men who liked to joke about cleaning their guns in front of their daughters’ boyfriends. It sucked then and it sucks now. That being said, I can confirm that hotdog buns used to come in packs of 12.
I’ll see your Russel Crowe in Les Miserables, and raise you a Pierce Brosnan in Mamma Mia. Woof.