eclipsy84--disqus
eclipsy84
eclipsy84--disqus

Acknowledging that she knew Rory was her daughter was a huge no-no. She revealed confidential info by doing so. I'm a therapist, so that totally took me out of the episode. Almost as much as Anna Kendrick sleeping with Joseph Gordon Levitt in 50/50. Goodbye license!

Similar experience, but it was my Jersey relatives that mocked my "awnt" pronunciation.

My train of thought went a bit darker. I could see the direct line that lead from the fluff to the death of Diana.

My father actually just wrote a book that featured John Brown. Maybe Hollywood will come calling.

I thought it was the best film portrayal of Lois Lane. Amy Adam's Lois was the only one I could ever actually believe was a investigative journalist.

Nothing in New England either. I think NJ is the closest for anyone in the Northeast.

I watched it right up until Matthew leaves the hospital. Then I turned it off and never returned. So in my mind the series finale was Matthew and Mary finally having their baby.

I seem to recall that she turns away from the audience so that she's not a recognizable figure, and can still live a fairly normal life on her down time. I never heard social anxiety mentioned as a reason.

I'd be more worried about the trauma that's inflicted by watching Dumbo be forcibly separated from his mother than the racism of the crows. That's a much more tangible issue for a young child than the the crows. Given that you questioned the appropriateness of the movie, I'm assuming that you will raise your daughter

Yes! I could never truly enjoy Christopher Reeve's Superman, because I saw Lois and Clark first (my first must-see show as a kid). I couldn't accept Clark Kent as a disguise after seeing Dean Cain make Superman the disguise. It was one of the (many) failures of Superman Returns, trying to go back to goof-ball Clark to

Sophia's storyline with her son has raised some interesting points for me. Sophia considers herself to be Michael's mother now, but continues to parent him in a stereotypically male/fatherly way - there's definitely been some "wait till your father hears about this" interactions during visits, and her dating advice

I have to admit to watching the show the first season it aired. It was probably because of the huge secret Caitlyn was hiding at the time, but she seemed incredibly uncomfortable having the cameras in the house. She was the constant butt of jokes by the rest of the family, honestly at some points it seemed like Kris

No, we also saw Bay's perspective - pushing Tank away when he tried to kiss her, sounding sad that she didn't know what was going to happen with her relationship with Emmett, and seeing the ceiling going in and out of focus. And I've known too many girls who have woken up knowing that something happened to their

There's a difference between being drunk and making a regrettable decision, versus being so intoxicated that your ability to make decisions is gone. There's a line. And for someone as small as Bay, who we haven't seen drink very often (versus former frat guy/footballer Tank), it could be very easy to pass over that

The reality of our biology is that many men (not all, but many) are both larger and stronger than women. This means a couple things. One, in situations involving force, men can usually overpower women MUCH easier than women can overpower men. And two, when drinking, men's larger bodies often give them a higher

I could see why you'd be disappointed by Luhrmann's interpretation of La Boheme, considering he was remaking Camille. That'd be a pretty big letdown.

So agree. Wilmore was the absolute last Daily Show correspondent that I thought deserved a show. Jessica Williams or Aasif Mandvi are so much funnier.

As an only child growing up in a rural area with minimal kids my age around to play with, Sesame Street was a sibling and a friend to me. Every time Grover cuddled up to a kid, it was like he was hugging me. Sesame Street also normalized diversity for me, something my all-white school failed to do.