I also have always suspected that Nandor is also afraid of what Guillermo would be like as a vampire. Guillermo is deadly, capable, manipulative, feels no remorse and he’s a human.
I also have always suspected that Nandor is also afraid of what Guillermo would be like as a vampire. Guillermo is deadly, capable, manipulative, feels no remorse and he’s a human.
Guillermo has struggled a little bit with the fact that he’s an accessory to many murders, but he keeps pushing it down, and the main resentment that bubbles up isn’t about guilt so much as being kept an outsider. It’s interesting that Nandor has actually come out ahead of him in questioning whether vampirism is ultim…
I will send every one of my co workers to this place if it teaches people how to load a dishwasher.
For starters, I loved the rendition of the opening song. The way they’re playing with the intro (Lazlo playing them in on the piano was another favorite moment) is deeply amusing me.
No, we are definitely not better.
I guess it’s up to HBO Max, but “rom-com” is not a designation I’d use for The Player.
Personally, I find his work to be a bit juvenile. I will always love Buffy and Angel, but recent rewatches were slightly disappointing. The rhythms in the dialogue get grating after a while, and characters betray each other so deeply and ~dramatically that it’s an utter fallacy to expect half of them to still be…
AV Club mentioned this show when it was first announced, back before the whole Ray Fisher/ everything else fallout hit (I think his ex-wife had brought some stuff to light, but that was it). And even then, it sounded more like Whedon parody. Victorian London? Mysteriously super-powered ladies? Names like “Amalia…
And there’s a genetic component to it as well. I get really annoyed by the pseudoscience that people spew about cellulite. Like, no, it’s not caused by drinking carbonated drinks, did you even take basic biology? All the women on my mom’s side of the family had cellulite on their thighs by their late teens - yes even…
Thank you! My initial thought after reading everything was, “you need therapy, not filters". Like, this woman seems to be totally unaware of how mentally ill she has to be to do something like that. It's a PICTURE. Like, there are real life issues, and her breaking point was a PICTURE. Body dysmorphia, toxic familial…
My point is that what your trainer friend said was super critical and fucked up and unnecessary. This whole article is about why she wanted the photo taken down. Someone literally replied to your post “Well, if I didn’t hate my body before, I sure do hate my disgusting body now!” That complete takedown of how her…
Yeah, you can’t have products and brands the are supposed to “celebrate everyone’s beauty” or w/e and then get deeply hurt and offended when people say you look hot, fit, and normal. It’s like, does she have such bad self image that she just hates her body and needs it to be perceived in a certain light but genuinely…
This whole debacle has bewildered me but ultimately I settle on how sad it all is. It’s just sad. But also eff the KK’s in a big way concerning this issue particularly because as you said, they profit off of the insecurity of others and now Khloe wants sympathy because she’s insecure? Save it, honey.
Yes, and they are relying on Khloe being photoshopped to look like she’s in the shape that they want her to be in. Her actual body doesn’t look good enough. If their client’s actual human body isn’t in good enough shape to represent their work, that’s on them.
Which just feeds into the ridiculous diet-and-fitness-industry generated notions of what athletic, fit bodies look like. Top level female athletes still have pockets of subcutaneous fat and cellulite because these are normal biological structures of human bodies.
Yep, that’s the photo.
Seriously. It may look a little iffy here and there, but the technology exists. Let's use it for good.
Considering Johnny Depp and now Armie Hammer, Branagh’s Poirot films have a weird knack of SPOILERS FOR AN EIGHTY-ODD YEAR OLD MYSTERY NOVEL casting real-life Hollywood scumbags who end up getting their comeuppance at the end.
The book is kind of an oddball among Christie’s work, with the entire first half spent simply setting up the various relations among the characters before the murder happens, and the (awesome, by the way) 1978 adaptation keeps that pacing, so I’m guessing this one does too. And Hammer’s character is indeed the central…
except in your world apparently the rape victim. Please tell us how obvious it is what a victim went through based on a text message