She's a woman in the media. They're all 'role models for young girls' for some unfathomable fucking reason.
She's a woman in the media. They're all 'role models for young girls' for some unfathomable fucking reason.
Ah, the devastating revelations that she has a manager, a carefully-crafted image and a stage name, unlike every other pop star ever.
That criticism of Lorde also bothered me because it not only equates black people with hip-hop, it equates crap mainstream hip-hop with all hip-hop. It completely ignored the work of artists like Public Enemy, the Beastie Boys, the Coup, the Roots, Immortal Technique, Jurassic 5 etc. etc. who've been critical of the…
Really confused as to why this would be considered a plot hole. When there's an amazing new invention, do you think they get distributed around evenly to all the poor and needy in the world? Or are they a bit costly at first?
Sarah Jessica Parker met AnnaSophia Robb? Do they know nothing about the Blinovitch Limitation Effect?
I think in the right context, it could be a really good point, but when you're singing it as a duet with someone notorious for not waiting for permission before he does what he wants to women's bodies, it's all kinds of shit.
What if you're as yummy as brie? Because she is.
Have you read the fan sites? They go fucking apeshit if an actor is a different height to their character in the books. Change the race and you'd lose at least a third of your potential audience to spontaneous human combustion.
I love her Doctor Who reviews too! I like it when she gets all giddy every time the Doctor kisses Rory. Five years old and already a shipper.
I like how utterly misleading the cover headlines on these magazines always are, too. You just know that woman's arse suffered a nasty rash from her jeans, at worst.
God, I hate themed orgy parties. The last one I went to had a Golden Age Hollywood theme, so why were they all so upset when I turned up as Lassie?
There are some good points here, but all of them are outweighed by this: thanks to this movie, we got to see Benedict Cumberbatch pretending to be a dragon.
There's a terrific anecdote about Martin Bashir in Jon Ronson's book The Men Who Stare At Goats, where he's landed an interview with a man who's just been released from Guantanamo Bay. This is in about 2003, 2004. While his interviewee is getting ready, Bashir asks if he saw his interview with Michael Jackson. The…
As much as I'd like to believe it, I've heard it too many times from Tea Party-backed candidates who are all about job creation when they're running for office, then spend their time in office thinking of anti-abortion bills so horrifying they freak out hardened forced-birthers.
Do you even JLaw, bro?
Oh man, yeah. A feature film could really explore the ramifications of Amy Pond and Twelve being there, too.
SPOILER: It's a Paul WS Anderson film - there won't be a plot.
Your point is not improved by consistently getting the author's gender wrong. In fact, it's pretty revealing.
Exactly what I thought. Snyder was right to change it for the film, but wrong to change it to that. A fake Independence Day-style saucer blasting New York then teleporting away (or something) would have got the job done better.