antisaint
ten17eighty1
antisaint

I can imagine Emma asking the detective to confirm that her mother is dead the way Lila did, as well as Dylan finding his mother the way Lila did.

TBH I am not much of a Rihanna fan (though I've developed an appreciation for Love On the Brain in the last week), but I think she's using her real accent here, i don't think she's trying to hide it. Slightly Americanized Barbados.

Because now that he knows for sure she isn't real he's in control of what he tells any non-townie passerby. Before she was a 'real' secret, he wws hiding that she 'wasn't really dead,' so he was lying to protect her. In telling Marion he lives with her, he's stepping into owning his own creation, which is what the

All the more reason for her to be confident that she 'wouldn't even harm a fly' because Norman is dead to rights on Sam. Not that he isnt om the others, but, you know.

She did tell him. It was in the message she left after he hung up on her.

He definitely used 'trannies' in the second set, but that was an older set. He didn't use that term in the first, newer one, and I'm guessing part of why he mentioned his wife's gay friends (as only he could) was to make sr smaller point that people close to him are helping him to understand and in effect better

Me! I saw the like hour-long show someone had posted from halloween 2015, which was almost the entire second special (and tbh I liked the delivery in that boot better overall) but yeah, I don't think I'll do that again. I didn't think at the time that he would ever put one out again.

I noticed in the first, newer special, he was using transgender instead of tranny, which supports your point, which I agree with. I loved both specials!

I think she was legitimately trying. Her facial expressions were great, but her voice is a somewhat flat.

You could feel how ridiculously clever he thought he was with that painfully revealing line, too, he was so smug about it!

The way I understand it, when we initially saw that bar, Norman and the bartender were the only ones there. I think Norma just went there for a drink initially, and it wasn't obvious that it was a gay bar. When Norman goes back, the bar is packed, so it's obvious, but Norma/n, believing herself to be a woman,

Yep, it's that she's not an actress.

The only thing I can fault about Susan's general portrayal of Jane is that she seems to play the film scenes very flat, like she was unwilling to take them to the level that Bette Davis did. Maybe it was to downplay the scenes from the movie in contrast to the story they are telling. But it does seem weird. I felt the

Plus while she didn't say those things to the paper, she did say those things, and she was likely correct that everyone knew it anyway.

LMAO @ Marrying Liza!

The presentation of Joan Crawford in 'Mommie Dearest was obviously over the top, but she was a legit force to be reckoned with IRL. Although this is likely a dramatized moment, I think it's an accurate representation of the force she was, and to some degree the lengths she would go to to make a point. this is also one

On a technical point, sure, but I meant more the idea that they were old Hollywood glamour and had to face the reality that they would potentially be seen as the thing they feared being the most.

If you know nothing about them I would question why you might bother watching, yes. You'd need to have your homework done to enjoy this, otherwise I can't see why anyone would care.

YES YES YES!!

I took it to be that they both saw the same thing in themselves on screen, the exact same thing, and each handled it in their own way. They realized they were visually putting their worst looks forward for the first time ever in an attempt to stay relevant, and this after a lifetime of being 10's on screen always.