I love the idea that Pete is getting all these women simply by having a personality and making them laugh.
Meanwhile, Kanye is probably like...
“I’m funny, dammit! I had the whole country laughing at me, let’s see you top that Pete!”
I love the idea that Pete is getting all these women simply by having a personality and making them laugh.
Meanwhile, Kanye is probably like...
“I’m funny, dammit! I had the whole country laughing at me, let’s see you top that Pete!”
He was “A” producer. One out of twelve and not in any way in charge of the operational side of filming and production.
And in regards to his monologue at the end of the episode – I could listen to Matt Berry read the phone book.
“The 1863 citizen’s arrest law was repealed in May of this year”
Imagine being that cop and learning WHO he hit? He was probably like,
If any part of you is “grinning,” I think you’re the complete asshole in this situation.
I can definitely understand Baldwin feeling a tremendous amount of guilt for this, but the rest of your statement makes no sense to me. Assuming he was using the weapon as intended in the scene, how is this his fault? I can’t imagine it’s standard practice for actors to safety check their props.
Jesus, that’s... horrible. Who the fuck brings live ammunition to a film set? Someone clearly didn’t do their job.
Got you, she was really accomplished. But she treated Steve so horribly from day one it annoyed me to no end.
How many racists have a “my black friend” to point to when accused of racism
“Chappelle shared a story about his friendship with Dorman, reminiscing on their shared sense of humor and her openness to talk about her identity”
I believe she even mentions that, too, saying that it came out well. But yeah, I feel like I would generally be on the director’s side in these things (typically against an actor being an asshole), but she has a valid point.
Honestly, I remember that episode and his direction was excellent. He directed the scenes leading up to the attack like it was a horror movie with a bunch of fakeouts before the big scene. Whatever things were like on the set, the finished product was damn good.
I feel like there are two things about this that might be relevant but people are ignoring in the comments I’ve seen (even the ones that aren’t blatantly misogynist):
Do the math folks: if ya don’t hire the blacks there can’t be racism. Easy.
Salli Richardson isn’t native, Mario Van Peebles was too pretty to be a cowboy and Stephen Baldwin was a token character. But Black folks still watched Posse and the movie made $18 million.
No one ever accused U.S. dollars of not being green enough.
I don’t understand why no one’s made a movie of Arcadia yet.
I had no idea Natalie Portman came back for Jane. I would've been fine either way.
I don’t know what that means, if anything, but I maintain my stance that some of these stories only work if you have the movie actors involved.