What really steams #45 is that a gay woman is FAR, FAR more popular than he is.
What really steams #45 is that a gay woman is FAR, FAR more popular than he is.
They absolutely hate dancing. The only dancing they can stand is line dancing and the whitey shuffle.
It doesn't reach the heights of the first movie, but it's still damn. A few scenes in the middle could have been shortened so that it didn't drag so much, particularly on Ego's planet, but otherwise, it was great. Dave Bautista is so freaking funny. It takes great writing and great timing to upstage a lot of the other…
That face needs a lot of saving.
Each episode is incredibly well done and emotionally draining. I was glad to see June finally getting a snippet of rebellion to drive her, not just survival. At least that was my interpretation. It makes it easier to get through the rest of the unrelentingly brutal aspects of this show.
Why does everything have to be "tone deaf"?
Does Kirkman get the same kind of harassment?
Ryan can party as much as he wants, but the Senate is starting from scratch. That means that Paul Ryan is the leader of the kiddie table. Go back and eat your hot dog, Mr. Speaker, while the adults try to do something constructive.
"Today our sermon will be about… constancy. Sweet constancy."
Adam Sandler hasn't completely disappeared from Hollywood. Meyers has. I wish Adam Sandler would disappear.
Law of diminishing returns on the trilogy, but the first one still is very quotable. The best parts of the trilogy are those with Seth Green. Until his hair falls off in Goldmember.
Overkill. Just like Game of Thrones. Literally.
All you want is a Tingle,
What you envy's a schwang,
A thing through which you can tinkle,
Or play with, or simply let hang!
They are all victims, to a point, except perhaps someone like Aunt Lydia, who is leading the charge for this regime and is absolutely brutal in every way to the Handmaids. She's one of those truly sociopathic people who derives pleasure from the suffering of others.
I agree, though I think it makes sense to just focus on one kind of oppression, and not include the other. Part of not including the racial aspect is to provide a more diverse cast, from the Hollywood perspective. I'm glad of it, considering the quality of acting that we are seeing across the board.
Spicer seems a few cents short of a dollar, so there's good hope of him jumping off the deep end.
And she exists in a society where younger women are constantly being rotated in, she hasn't given up her job to someone less than half her age.
Still miss that beautiful voice doing Phillies' games. *sigh*
I feel like Spicer is going to be one of those people who is a good soldier during times like this, and will completely freak out after and write a tell-all book that tries to smooth everything over and place the blame solely on Obama.
That's two shits too many.