Look at Aziz Ansari, you say? Okay, let’s look at the entire episode of Master Of None called “Indians on TV” which is devoted to the fact that this is a huge problem and that most Indian actors never have a chance to do anything about it.
Look at Aziz Ansari, you say? Okay, let’s look at the entire episode of Master Of None called “Indians on TV” which is devoted to the fact that this is a huge problem and that most Indian actors never have a chance to do anything about it.
The voice actor specifically said he did the voice as a way to make fun of an Indian shopkeeper he hated but sure, how could an Indian person have a problem with that?
Hari is already well known and respected.
I’m kinda wondering how many of the folks screaming “oh my god people are too sensitive and just get over it” actually read the article.
Kondabolu’s problem with Apu is less with Apu’s characterization than with the way Hank Azaria chooses to voice Apu—and this, given that Azaria was specifically told not to play Apu…
Translation; “this doesn’t affect me personally so I don’t care.”
You can mention the positives you think Apu represents without calling this “total bullshit.”
Because it’s 100% in character for her.
Apparently even fictional women are told they should smile more.
“Concept of a Doctor Strange poster by Tomer Hanuka. Marvel rejected it because they said he looked like an “alien giraffe.””
Her third sketch became this, which got much further in the process, but eventually someone said she should be smiling.
That is the most 20-something-boy bathroom I’ve ever seen.
Based on traditional British mythology and iconography and related to the crimes of incest between noble siblings? Oh man, this creature would have been such a perfect addition to the A Song of Ice and Fire series!
Now excuse me, I shall write a fanfiction where the crimes of Cersei and Jaime become well known in the…
Wow.
Chirin is a ram you don’t want to fuck with.
It is hard to believe that King is confused about all the attention that the tween orgy scene has received when the novel itself spends so much energy to buffer the reader’s reaction.
It’s clearly far more of a fairytale riff on Creature from the Black Lagoon than it has anything to do with Hellboy. But either way, it’s pretty much irrelevant to the movie itself, which is very clearly its own thing.
I can’t be the ONLY one who thinks this....can I?
Yes you can be.
Thing is, Lord of the Flies was a response to a particular conceit of British pulp novels which depicted young boys/men being stranded as a fun adventure with little internal conflict. Golding took the subject of entitled British boarding school boys and the kind of savagery he saw in how they acted with each other…
Also, given that you can’t understand the difference between debuts and continuations, the article clearly is talking about the former, not the latter. Maybe you need to brush up on your reading comprehension. I fully understood what you were saying. Because I have good reading comprehension skills.