Yes it can be traumatizing when that happens. The psychology book The Drama of the Gifted Child goes into a lot about that very situation. If you identified with that moment more than anything, it is the book for you.
Yes it can be traumatizing when that happens. The psychology book The Drama of the Gifted Child goes into a lot about that very situation. If you identified with that moment more than anything, it is the book for you.
Yes it can be traumatizing when that happens. The psychology book The Drama of the Gifted Child goes into a lot about that very situation. If you identified with that moment more than anything, it is the book for you.
I'm not sure if you object to the "dump" being a cliche of comfortable relationship humor or whether you think it's silly poop humor. If you think the latter, see the former. If you think the former, it's saved from cliche territory because it's related to the eating dates joke and that it'll take 25 minutes, giving…
I'm not sure if you object to the "dump" being a cliche of comfortable relationship humor or whether you think it's silly poop humor. If you think the latter, see the former. If you think the former, it's saved from cliche territory because it's related to the eating dates joke and that it'll take 25 minutes, giving…
"They have their own thing going on this week." - Jane to Dave, about Penny and Brad.
This is the line I never knew I always wanted.
On Happy Endings especially, because I feel like the group is so close but so often they have very separate storylines that cross over in the same locations (also this is a show I…
"They have their own thing going on this week." - Jane to Dave, about Penny and Brad.
This is the line I never knew I always wanted.
On Happy Endings especially, because I feel like the group is so close but so often they have very separate storylines that cross over in the same locations (also this is a show I…
Felicity, in their obligatory NYC "suck in the subway" episode, actually tackled the whole "are these even real problems?" issue head on and it was awesomely done and seriously handled.
Felicity, in their obligatory NYC "suck in the subway" episode, actually tackled the whole "are these even real problems?" issue head on and it was awesomely done and seriously handled.
It's definitely in the movie Tarnation. I think I remember hearing it in one other show recently, too, though. Kinda lessened the impact, felt done.
It's definitely in the movie Tarnation. I think I remember hearing it in one other show recently, too, though. Kinda lessened the impact, felt done.
Renaton, Romeo + Juliet was offered to Gellar first, as well as the role in Stardust, and both would have been better with her. Gellar has shown range in Cruel Intentions and The Air I Breathe neither of which have anything to with her TV/Buffy persona. Is she as good as Frances Conroy? No, but it's totally different.…
Renaton, Romeo + Juliet was offered to Gellar first, as well as the role in Stardust, and both would have been better with her. Gellar has shown range in Cruel Intentions and The Air I Breathe neither of which have anything to with her TV/Buffy persona. Is she as good as Frances Conroy? No, but it's totally different.…
From the GQ article: "She's a serial interrupter, Mira, who often takes on a correcting tone and seems to object when other people — friends, assistants, whoever, — demonstrate any personality in her presence, as if their becoming anything more than the mere Q in Q. and A. will diminish her shine."
This is consistent…
AFAIK Romanov cost too much money. And they had to reduce their budget significantly to keep the show going.
Not just written as "prick," but also performed. I remember it airing that way in my area, and being disappointed that even on Netflix it was changed. Is it even "jerk" on the DVDs? If so that makes me sad. Prick made it such a great line. Also I really love this episode. I liked all the meanings of Touched…
Felicity was four seasons, and about the four years of college. If that confuses you, yikes.
I think he means in the second season finale when Walt asks "which cell phone?" while drugged.
It's I think the most accurate description of the show I've ever read.
The latter. But moments of the former. But then again I think most of that comes in the fourth season, which everyone else supposedly hates?
You're a horrible writer, with nothing interesting to say. It's just… drivel. Please stop spamming.