Again, and this cannot be stressed enough when you see the KKK tag team: the real GLOW actually did stuff that was this bad. And on television!
Again, and this cannot be stressed enough when you see the KKK tag team: the real GLOW actually did stuff that was this bad. And on television!
The chick from Doctor Who and two Guardians movies isn't an overseas draw? All righty…
This looks fantastic. And as an added bonus, we'll get six months of The Rock destroying Kevin Hart on Twitter before the movie comes out.
"poor people shouldn't have phones" and "poor people should consider buying health care instead of the latest iphone" are not the same thing.
I think her realization that she needed a great heel wasn't simultaneously a realization that it was Ruth.
The best part is that he clearly thinks he has a whole gaggle of hookers living at his motel, and he could give a shit.
I've mentioned to my wife multiple times during this run that WWE has to have both eyes on this show. Then, last night on Smackdown, they actually showed one of the characters watching it. My curiosity is peaked.
Quick tip: for anyone who hasn't seen the GLOW documentary, the right time to appreciate it the most is right after watching the finale of the show. Come to think of it, you'll appreciate this show more too.
I'm pretty sure he offered her to the kid's mother.
Sure. But that's only because Vince thinks "Bennifer" and "Brangelina" are still hip and cool.
- Mojo never REALLY got a push- they just wanted Gronk involved at Mania.
Or James Ellsworth.
Yeah, I think I'll pass on getting my health care advice from Jim Jeffries.
I think they all found out in different ways, yes.
GLOW should do Lethal Leap Year!
Yes, but don't forget that the ASIAN-Asian character doesn't give a shit about anything other than working on her tan.
The highlight for me in this episode was Debbie realizing wrestling is a soap opera- great job of acting by Betty Gilpin as the look on her face said it perfectly right before she delivered the line.
I looked at that as just pure innocence.
I don't know how they did it, but more than anything else, this show has absolutely nailed wrestling psychology. Almost to a point where I question if all these novices could really be this innately where they are at this point.
The only single thing that's bugged me so far from a story telling standpoint is firing the original trainer played by John Morrison. I thought Sam's explanation was pretty lame- ironically, it reminded me of how bad WWE is at writing off characters at times.