Viva la vulva!
Viva la vulva!
@Scrawler2:disqus Your extrapolations are obnoxious and I believe you know it. They women are not outsiders. They are a part of the culture that pornography influences. They are not living in isolation making a movie on something that doesn't effect them. They are living in Detroit.
The subject isn't the "healthy"…
Liz was more gussied up than usual tonight, wasn’t she?
"Shrill"? Really?
A porn-watcher can only make a documentary about the subject or engage in the discussion of how porn effects society? Objectivity can still be had without engaging in the subject matter. And if you disagree with that, then wouldn't a porn-watcher be also be biased with the subject matter?
I completely disagree with…
Yvette Nicole Brown nailed her S. Epatha Merkerson impression.
Clueless, Philadelphia Story, "Bad Blood" episode of The X-Files, Zombieland, Flight of the Conchords: "Unnatural Love", Community: "Paradigms of Human Memory"
It is not a convoluted conspiracy theory. It is well written about phenomenon. I'm sure your two year experience in China has made you an expert on the topic. You are personalizing the issue due to your experiences and offering anecdotal evidence. That is understandable, but don't tell me how to converse. I will speak…
From what I understand, at least for films, is that the 90s had a more diverse representation of race than the last and current decade because studios rely more and more on international box office. Foreign movie-goers don't want racial diversity for some reason or another, or studio heads don't think they do.
"Problems of privilege" is the most apt term, not that I want to encourage this meme.
The Dominika ending was inevitable, but I still didn't like it. I liked her and wanted a better ending. I wasn't paying close attention and don't know a lot about the process toward citizenship. What happened? She was told to pick up her certificate of naturalization, right? So missing the meetings didn't matter?
I am glad someone else objected to the "perilously close to rape" comment. I had to read that part of the review a couple times to make sure I didn't miss something in the episode.
I loved this episode. I liked the focus on Liz, who has been just walking through scenes reacting to crazy lately. It seems like the season has been purposely Tina Fey-light. I liked that there no writers and, especially, no Pete. Yes, the plots were retreads of seasons past (Liz and her boyfriend, Liz and adoption,…
Dick Clark's hologram will host until the end of time.
I'm not denying that. It is why I have watched it too many times.
I've seen Lars and the Real Girl too many times and the sex doll-as-girlfriend is the only similarity. The psychologies are completely different. It isn't really a plotline that needed to be revisited, though.
Despite all the awesomeness of Britta/Gillian Jacobs, this episode was a little disappointing to me.
Let it rest, AV Club.
I can't read this. I skimmed the titles and saw Milo and Otis and now I'm depressed. Not the best way to go to bed to start the week.
That's been her major at least since she was Capricious Caroline from Texas.