Some of them are working comedians who use Twitter and Instagram as a way to increase their popularity, along with the traditional rites of passage like being homeless and getting heckled by a live crowd.
Some of them are working comedians who use Twitter and Instagram as a way to increase their popularity, along with the traditional rites of passage like being homeless and getting heckled by a live crowd.
Fuckjerry is the other plagiarism account that spun its theft into profit.
I kinda want to click on the "7 people who used to be beautiful!" one but will inevitably be disappointed when the list isn't an existential statement on age and the fleeting nature of beauty.
Your friend should get a job before he makes analogies.
You do indeed have one downvote.
I watched a video of her dancing the Charleston and it was adorable.
I've yet to watch Mad Men (it's slated for after I finish The Wire and Deadwood) but your description of the clothing intrigues me.
He's married to Olivia Wilde and she's said in interviews that she doesn't need to exercise because the two of them have sex so often.
A substantial amount of that attraction, for me at least, relies on her personality and role on Community. She's beautiful, yes, but if she was the cofounder of Goop you wouldn't hear as much praise.
Lack of practice is likely the biggest contributor but weed and booze don't help. Whenever I'm in school my spelling improves, but since I've been out of school for two years due to a colossal fuck up, most of my practice occurs on the AV Club. Unfortunately, most of the time I'm on here I'm high or a bit drunk.
And even among those with a formal education spelling seems to take a sharp decline after graduation. Especially with the advent of spellcheck.
It might even inoculate Carrey from all the ill will he's accumulated in the years since his mercurial transition from Hollywood A-Lister to Twitter Preacher.
Many creatives are actually bad at spelling and grammar and rely on editors. Quentin Tarantino is famously terrible at spelling.
Of course. And it's not the writers who incessantly renew the series for another season, it's FOX and the producers who will never let this cash cow die.
Not sure if you misinterpreted my comment as an endorsement of his, but just to clarify, I was pointing out the flawed conclusion of the study he cites.
When something is released in a way which these guys would approve, I still see it being stolen online (such as In Rainbow's negotiable price, or Louis CK's cheap and DRM-free specials).
End the series.
Actually, I'm 28 and I listened to Portishead in high school, and recently I met a fan who couldn't have been a day over 21.
They're both terrible movies but at least B&R is memorably terrible.
Fantastic Four? More like [FARTS]!