amessagetorudy
BedandBreakfastMan
amessagetorudy

and painted Will Smith in an unflattering light

I think I read her family asked that she NOT be included in that segment.

The thing about “unsolicited question” is that they tend to become solicited if you stop and permit yourself to be interviewed. It was like a minute and a half out of his busy life and, frankly, a part of the job.

https://www.alternet.org/lauren-boebert-comprehensive-ed/

At this point, it’s not reporting, it’s just spite.

I agree 100% And conversely, people can not like what they don’t like. So can I not like the deification of bad movies just for fact that it’s bad?

Weirdly, that’s the same question I had. Not about Netflix, but...

They should make a movie called “Shirts.” Animated, of course. With talking shirts. Like the sleeveless T-shirt can be a tough-guy called “T-dawg.” And the short sleeve shirt can be a nerdy shirt called “Shorty.” And the business shirt - “Tab Collar” - can be a stuck-up preppy jerk who gets his comeuppance.

I have to concur a bit. It seems like a lot of people are actively looking for bad films to tout. Which is unnecessary since there are so many “big budget” movies that are fucking horrible.

But on the bright side, the Numbers Queen of NY shooting her husband and almost killing him for allegedly cheating on her is “gangsta.”

I mean, OJ was acquitted.

When you start backing an (alleged) child molester over a guy who tells jokes (bad, good, whatever), you’ve gone a bridge to far.

This article is overlooking a lot of things...

for center-leaning left takes.

No worries about the double post. And THANK you for clearing that up for me. I completely whiffed on that one.

“...offering a captivating study on abuse of power pulled from our own society.”

And that it pops up on HBO Max precisely at 9 pm (eastern). We don’t have the cable channel, just the app and I thought we’d have to wait a day. Nope. Good times.

I can see right-wingers roll their eyes and say the very tired “w” word at Perry’s new, Japanese secretary.

Raymond Burr’s classic portrayal of the hard-nosed lawyer is a television icon thousand imitators that, for better or worse, simplified America’s understanding of the courtroom. In less than one hour, a lawyer backed by nothing but the truth could solve cases by squeezing a confession on the stand...