“Why does Elizabeth always carry a purse around Buckingham Palace and what does she have inside of it?”
“Why does Elizabeth always carry a purse around Buckingham Palace and what does she have inside of it?”
Rot in hell Donald Trump.
What a shame. I liked checking out those pilots, even if the pretense that user reviews had anything to do with Amazon’s decisions was always a sham.
Very recently a friend of mine self-published a fantasy novel. It was absolutely terrible. I ended up buying sixteen copies.
Sherman-Palladino escaped to 1958 in the hopes that people will stop bugging her about cast diversity.
Project Veritas foiled by caller ID. I don’t know if this speaks worse for them or the folks they have managed to scam.
House of Cards is Netflix’s Sopranos, OITNB is Netflix’s Sex and the City, Stranger Things is their Game of Thrones.
Ok, but if we’ve learned anything from Lena Dunham, it’s “Well he was nice to me” isn’t a good enough reason to doubt victims’ accusations.
By those standards, the pilot was my finale.
Yeah, I felt it was a deeply emotional memory about the loss one feels when your child has gone beyond your control, out of your sight, and out of your protection.
Is it possible that MOG was part of the NY crew and just didn't get the word about the hit on Tony being off? Kind of like Bobby didn't get that critical phone call in The Blue Comet?
Me have always thought that whole point not whether Tony dies or not, although me think he didn't for reasons already laid out on thread. That clip Todd embed in article was most tension-filled thing me ever see on television, and me include events of 9/11 in that. You go into it knowing it last five minutes of Soprano…
He clearly died. Were you even watching? You are worse than Hitler.
Or you could argue it DID happen on screen just not in the way you would normally expect to see. You SAW it through Tony's eyes, carefully set up by a very deliberate point of view pattern. The 10 second black screen is the final SCENE of the series. It MEANS something. It SHOWS something. That being Tony's…
Seconded. I'm in the middle of reading his book right now, and I'm loving it except for those last two pages on The Sopranos' finale.
Christopher saying "and I could work on my screenplays!" may be my favorite moment of the whole series (it's that or the psychiatrist in "Second Opinion"). So much genuine hope in that moment, and so much distance between the hope and any chance it's gonna be fulfilled.
Oh, I think Carmela knew about Adriana for most of season six. She did, after all, decide not to call the PI after Tony gave into her demands regarding her spec house.
Come on, Boring 747. Did you not get it? I'm still laughing!
The scene where she comes down the stairs on that little motorized assist thing to interrupt Janice and Richie is one of tv's most horrifying comic moments.