Have you met AVClub? This is their MO. He failed the purity test, so they will shit on him until the end of time.
Have you met AVClub? This is their MO. He failed the purity test, so they will shit on him until the end of time.
I mean, when you have a chance to take a shot at a guy because he prays, you don’t let a little thing like a dead guy with a family get in your way. That’s just AV Club 101.
This seems like a weird headline, because it’s making the story about Chris Pratt’s reaction, rather than the actual story, which is the passing of Tony McFarr. It makes it seem like an excuse to take shots at Chris Pratt, as the scare quotes come across as sarcastic and insincere.
I know it isn’t a popular opinion in blog comments, but I’m a few years younger than Spacey and also from the south.
I at least appreciate that Neeson was ok making fun of himself on Atlanta:
Liam Neeson had almost managed to get people to forget about that time he talked about walking down the street trying to beat up black guys with a baseball bat. Don’t drag yourself into the negative spotlight for Kevin Spacey of all people, my dude!
I just figured there isn’t much of an audience today for shows with Kevin Spacey in a lead role. No one really wants to watch him, let alone work with him.
As things stand, Kevin Spacey has thus far been repeatedly found not guilty of anything. Now, you may disagree with that, and that’s fine. There’s plenty of smoke. Maybe there’s some fire there too.
If we’re going to run by the generally accepted Western standard of “innocent until proven guilty” however, then there’s…
Yet Kinja remains.
Meet the new owners, same as the old owners. It’s been really disappointing that Paste is still keeping all of the awful of the old AVClub between Kinja and the crap, clickbait articles and writing. Should’ve just kept on Barsanti if they’re just going to stick with the status quo.
I did say it was a rhetorical question!
Look, I’m glad they let you out the house to watch a movie, and that it had an impact on you, but I’m the head editor for a content writing agency in real life, and I swear, if an article like this crossed my desk it’d go straight to another writer to rewrite.
Based on the review, I can say for certain it’s a movie.
Sounds about right. It’s not boring, though, is it?
What on earth is the point in a documentary on an already-widely-reported subject that happened only about five years ago which practically everyone who would watch said documentary remembers and knows about?
Agreed, I had a free Paramount+ sub for a few months so I watched the specials and I found them to be between meh and just bad, not even funny bad just bad bad.
this is still on?
The last few specials haven’t been that great. They feel like the kind of thing that billionaires who’ve gotten old and lost touch with what “the kids are on about” would write. I don’t see any of these “specials” outliving their small cultural moment.
Winehouse was a big deal in the UK and Europe where she’s still pretty beloved, and with a lot of millennials as a whole. Not on par with Bob Marley obviously, but good enough that this movie will probably do pretty well. Especially as I said, once it goes on the streaming networks.
I think you answered your own question when you mentioned how well the Bob Marley and Elvis movies did despite being savaged by the critics. You can say the same for the Elton John biopic. This will follow the same trajectory and do even better once it hits streaming. The die hard fans will pay to watch, even the…