I happened to watch Silver Linings Playbook this weekend without any prior knowledge of it. I liked it; the ending felt a little cheap, but still gave me the good kind of romcom chills. I might rate it 3 stars. Then I saw 8 oscar nominations. WTF?
I happened to watch Silver Linings Playbook this weekend without any prior knowledge of it. I liked it; the ending felt a little cheap, but still gave me the good kind of romcom chills. I might rate it 3 stars. Then I saw 8 oscar nominations. WTF?
The Drew Carey Show was where I first saw and heard Motörhead.
The kiss with Charles was exactly wrong in its timing. He had just been talking about her feelings in a way that was completely dependent on how much younger he thinks she is and how she has a different perspective because of it, and it took something possibly okay and really ratcheted up the creep factor.
I get frustrated with Younger for showing potential and often being let down by the writing, but I still enjoy it enough to stay on board and I'm thankful it introduced me to Sutton Foster. I've never seen Gilmore Girls but I think I'm going to start with the revival because the idea of Lauren Graham and Sutton…
* Denise starts gagging. *
Darryl: "We about to find out what you had for breakfast?"
* Silence *
Denise: "Oatmeal, just so you know."
I'm looking forward to Eugene's Snacks Review YouTube channel. "They're chewy."
He could've at least waited until after the raid, both because it was an unnecessary distraction for her and because he might get lucky and one or both of them could die.
I would think so, considering they're their own editors, fact checkers, bartenders, doctors, fluffers…
The Younger writers have no idea how to handle their author character arcs. This one and the male feminist never developed past the clichés and both ended in bad sex jokes, and the party girl millenial went from the main focus of two episodes to forgotten about before she left her last scene.
I was hoping the cliffhanger would be how a series-long monologue of variations on "Hey, Arnold! Hey, Arnold! Arnold, hey! Hey! Hey, Arnold! Hey! Arnold!" ends.
I finished drawing the final draft of my first shirt and have the poplin pressed and ready. It's been two years since I made my first muslin (practice garment) and started learning tailoring, so a finished product would be nice. The thing is I don't care much about button-up shirts, this is just a step in the learning…
In the second season almost all the other characters act like assholes at times, and Phil swings between. It makes everyone more well-rounded as characters, but it's still funny when Phil does something "good" and gets frustrated for not being recognized for it.
Several times I thought he was near being fired, but he was far from it. Over and over it was near… far, near… far.
She makes her own fonts, The Cure was her first concert, she puts flowers on Buster Keaton's grave, loves Alan Rickman, and is up for wearing JNCOs on a dare… all of the sudden, I've become a big fan of hers.
The first interview I ever saw with her was with Craig Ferguson, who asks her about her accent less than a minute into it. It is charming, plus it burns the online know-it-alls who like to call out people for having fake accents.
She never mentions being from Philadelphia, only New Jersey. Which maybe tells you something about Philly.
The scene with Abraham and Rosita in bed highlighted how his face and neck don't match anyone's skin color. His hair dye is spreading.
I never thought I'd see the day when nerds resorted to pedanticism.
I'm pretty sure that cover photo is the supper club a few minutes away from here. And the time I went there, on a whim I ordered an old fashioned for the first time ever to go with my orange duck dinner. Am I a really arcane Wisconsin stereotype?
Same Smits, different day.