Even though I'm convinced those twins are Roman's, I'm starting to wonder
Even though I'm convinced those twins are Roman's, I'm starting to wonder
OMG I never here anyone talk about City Guys. You might have just made my day. I'm still amazed by the Real World arc that show had.
Australia
I agree to a degree… in the first film those conversations were enraging (mostly due to Alex Prettyface and the wooden lead actress) where as in the sequel they were just boring.
It took cajoling (read: browbeating) but roommate 1 and I convinced roommate 2 to watch it with us. It's a very fun bonding experience. An improvement over the first to be sure, but IMO there were still too many conversations I couldn't care less about,
I still think that acting those scenes could take it's toll. It takes a toll on me and I'm only viewing it.
I've been trying to explain this to a friend of mine (for a linguist, I'm shockingly bad with words) and your comment articulates my understanding of Kilgrave very well.
I think it's a bit of both. In later episodes Kilgrave does express frustration at the fact that he has no idea if people would do things for him if they had the choice. On the other hand, he could very easily test this by being extremely careful with his wording but chooses not to, so it's clear his enjoyment of…
I'm usually the last person to ever comment about an actresses body, but I find Ruth Wilson's lack of upper lip so incredibly disturbing and it baffles me that you find it attractive. But to each their own, I'm not asking you to justify it to me. I'm just so bewildered I had to share.
I felt similarly at this point.
The fact that Petra is having twins now makes me almost positive that Roman "Zaz" Zazo us the biological father. It would also explain (I think) why the OBGYN wouldn't notice that Petra is further along than she should be if the baby was Raf's.
I was actually shouting, "¿¡Dónde está Luisa!?" at the television repeatedly during the Thanksgiving scene.
That was actually my first thought when the narrator spoke the line about Michael loving Jane until the day he died.
He attacked Raphael while he was holding Mateo! That broke my mind.
It is my sincere hope that this "Michael teardown" is actually the beginning of Jane putting Mateo first and not worrying about romance in her life (at this stage, not forever) rather than an opportunity to build her romance with Raphael. And I say this as someone who leans more Raf than Michael. Maybe I read too much…
Your response feels dismissive. Knowing something is in no way comparable to witnessing it (or, as the case may be, an engaging depiction of it). I'm not taken aback. That to me implies surprise. Racism, in it's many forms and fashions, does not surprise me. It disturbs me.
It was like google but on the phone over landlines right?
Sometimes I wonder if Lucy is the only single, non-sex working woman these men know in New York. She's got a gd suitor at every turn.
Always nice to be reminded that cis, straight white men have hated you for centuries!
/sarcasm
This is a sentiment I've actually been afraid to share. I know this is based on a telenovela and the romance will always be a part of the show, but it's honestly the least interesting story to me at this moment.