iamendlawyeregos
iamendlawyeregos
iamendlawyeregos

Yes. I came here to hate her response. But she is right. I live the dream of working in a white male dominated industry. We seem to have settle for this bargain given few options “bitchy or gofer subservient girl?”. And when I say “bitchy”I mean per male definition.

Aretha Franklin was notorious for being a controlling perfectionist.

I like the outfit but it just somehow doesn’t look flattering on her body.

Aeration is an important part of lawn maintenance.

I felt like there was still a lot unresolved with Camille, but I actually really liked the last scene and how it ended there. Made the creepy factor way more intense.

I think pigeonholing Sharp Objects and the original True Detective as “murder mysteries” is a bit reductive. I never thought either show was primarily about the murders, per se. These are shows that are essentially character studies; everything else is window dressing.

I felt like the Amma angle was practically shouted at me, but I ignored it because Amma is a young girl, and *that’s* the point.

They did foreshadow it in the show. Camille was talking to the cheerleader gf of John Keene about what was going on, and the cheerleader says something to the effect of “They did it to be popular. Why would anyone do something like that if not to be popular?” Amma was the most powerful girl in school because of her

I wholeheartedly disagree. As someone who didn’t read the book first (which is surprising, quite frankly, because I loved Flynn’s other two,) I was genuinely shocked by the twist ending and thought it was done perfectly. I was stunned into silence and nervous laughter. In that moment, I realized that the signs were

The thing is though, the mystery of who killed Ann and Natalie was always a mere excuse to bring Camille back to town for the real meat of the story the shared and passed-down traumas from Adora to her daughters and from Adora’s mother to Adora and the ways in which it destroys them all in different ways. That was the

I don’t agree with this take. I’ve never read the book and felt like it was pretty obvious that Amma was capable of the murders. She indicated that her friends would do anything for her, she’s manipulative and cruel often, and her motive is strengthened throughout the series. Think Calhoun day when she stops receiving

I thought it was pretty clear why Amma did it. Camille internalized the abuse by her mother, while Amma turned her pain and rage onto others. She was tied in a codependent relationship with her mother and jealous of anyone taking away Adora’s attention. And I already thought it was Amma since last week, when it became

re: this quote:

I.... no. Just no for several reason. I won’t list them because I want to stop thinking about this immediately.

I tend to agree with the substance of the criticism (to be clear: not the name-calling or other kindergarten tactics.) It is a fact: some people are generally sad whenever anyone dies: their family, their friends, people who benefitted from them in some way. That being said, I don’t see the point of offering more than

He regrets that Courtney Smith spoke and Brett McMurphy reported it.

I don’t think regret is even the right word.  I think he is mad at Courtney for what has transpired.  

requires US passport, drivers license and “a lot of courage”...  but “All work takes place at our offices”

Silent discos were huge when I was at uni 10 (ouch) years ago. One time i got bored and started doing the macarena and got amusement out of watching the people around me all start switching their headsets to try and get the macarena. The novelty does wear off, although having a choice of music channels to bop to is

Twitch. They just sit and watch people play fortnite all day.