As a disabled person I sort-of get what they're saying. Unemployment rates among the disabled in general are high and if blind actors can't even get parts of blind people then that's kind of bad for them.
As a disabled person I sort-of get what they're saying. Unemployment rates among the disabled in general are high and if blind actors can't even get parts of blind people then that's kind of bad for them.
Old/young relationships seem to be going in an opposite direction than other kinds. At one time 16 was essentially "marriageable" age and it was largely just if you got under 16 it got weird for people. (And sometimes not even then.) Many songs from the 1960s and earlier are a grown man singing about a seventeen or…
I think there was a French movie like that. Like they keep doing awful dares on each other that endanger their own lives and sometimes others. And in the end they end up dead together or something. (I seem to be thinking Love Me If You Dare or "Jeux denfants.")
In "The Shop Around the Corner" I think it worked better. Was the woman's character in that even in a serious relationship at the time? And its Wikipedia page indicated they were more like co-workers.
Yeah. I like that movie, but they didn't seem particularly well-matched. (And yes I like the Siamese twins. It's blatantly Orientalist, but kind of catchy and Peggy Lee is a good singer. I think she might be an early case of getting a "celebrity voice" for an animated film.)
Yeah.
I sometimes wonder if the scene with the wife was partly a delusion. Like maybe they had actually been separated for some time or it just didn't go down like in his memories.
"These people do not know each other, and, on top of that, Annie’s done
some pretty darn unethical and, frankly, creepy things in the name of
meeting Sam over the course of the movie."
You really are dedicated to CBS.
Cute, but it doesn't work a 100%. Victor Davis Hanson has a PhD from Stanford. Mark Baurlein has a doctorate from UCLA with a thesis on, seriously, Walt Whitman. Peter Navarro has a PhD from Harvard and, odder still, ran for Congress as a Democrat in 1996.
Yeah. I hadn't watched it until that crossover Invader deal and now I've seen them all.
For winter's rains and ruins are over
I'd lean toward agreeing, but sometimes they surprise you. I never thought they would have the wherewithal to do the Sony Pictures hack. I mean they're so isolated in information sources I figured they would have no one skilled enough. But it's at least claimed they did.
Nothing much for me. I was even going to take the day off from here.
On the Carmichael Show a secret about Joe is revealed. (He has something in common with Blessed Franz Jagerstatter and it's not refusing to help Nazis.) Also Cynthia learns that the guy at the Bennihana-type restaurant has forgiven the woman he's with for a scandal.
Really? The TV section's decline is part of why I lost a bit of interest.
Yeah I'm largely doing Netflix of late. Sometimes shows I've seen before, which is maybe dumb of me.
Well they could speculate that progressive MSNBC fans would blame Trump if a Sanders supporter actually kills a Republican Congressman. We don't really know how people will react, with certainty, until they react. (And also a certain percentage of all groups will react insanely. Although I do think core Trump…
TV shows, then, that weren't even very successful had larger audiences than many shows now. There was much less in the way of cable shows and Netflix did not come out until 1997 it seems.
You'd think the other way round would make more sense seeing as Reagan was an actor. (Back when I was young actors and entertainers had to be Governor of a state before becoming President. Ah the good old days.)