Presumably they were swift enough to do this from a browser and IP with no existing Google history, and not logged in to any Google services. I think the benefit of the doubt is warranted.
Presumably they were swift enough to do this from a browser and IP with no existing Google history, and not logged in to any Google services. I think the benefit of the doubt is warranted.
It'll be just like living in a real state, only funner!
Fortunately for atheists, #CoolStoryBro!
*sigh* Yeah. Every once in a while, in some medium, somebody tries. In 2015 DC Comics launched Midnighter, the eponymous superhero protagonist of which happened to be a gay man. The book was unapologetically sex-positive and refused to pretend that Midnighter was a celibate monk, but for the most part his sexuality…
Writing on this topic in Variety two weeks ago, Brent Lang wrote:
Fridging doesn't explain it. It's definitely weird that The Blacklist lost (or fakeout-lost, who knows?) Liz almost exactly the same time Sleepy Hollow lost Abbie. (A much greater loss, that one, and admittedly precipitated by Nicole Beharie's desire to bail.) If ABC hadn't seen sense and axed it, we'd also have been…
Ryan Eggold's character has been the worst thing about The Blacklist since episode 1. I'm not claiming that's Eggold's fault, but if I were looking for a chance to carry my own series I don't think I'd want to be handicapped out of the gate by the fact that I'm playing a walking paper cut.
Und now is ze time on Shprokets when zis happens:
Alexander Skarsgård is off limits, though.
Careful, I think you just gave someone the idea to cast The Beef in a Prince biopic.
Left out of the timeline, here, is what was happening with gay comedies outside of Hollywood during the time of The Birdcage. Hollywood doesn't exist in a vacuum, it just likes to pretend it does. The mid-to-late 1990s weren't just a time of renaissance for mainstream gay comedy. The independent scene was booming, too.
Much less of a thing in Queens high schools, where Spidey is supposed to have grown up. (Though there are some parts of Queens which are practically suburban, it's true.) It still seems a strange pick for the title of the movie.
I don't see how the title of the movie ties it to high school at all, though. Maybe it's just because I went to an inner-city high school, but while I know there's such a thing as homecoming dances and etc., I always assumed they were mostly movie/TV fiction and not something people actually did, let alone immediately…
See, I only ever recognize Anthony Edwards from How I Got Into College. Curtis Armstrong, too. (And then I cast my gaze heavenward and shout "AHHHH-CAAADIA BIBLE ACADEMY!" real loud.)
His final directing job was for an episode of Sledge Hammer! in 1986.
Heh. "sexist". That Freud is a bastard!
Remember when @jamesxs:disqus posted this comment?
You're supposed to save those stories for the support group, you know.
Can you really call it "TMZ-like" when they're literally posting a TMZ video? It almost feels like comparing them to TMZ is giving them too much credit, somehow.