Because you're supposed to refer to trans people as their correct name and gender regardless of if your referring to them pre transition.
Because you're supposed to refer to trans people as their correct name and gender regardless of if your referring to them pre transition.
I don't see why it's hard to refer to a trans person as their desired name, even when referring to them pre transition.
What is your point?
I believe it's called "deadnaming", you're supposed to refer to Caitlyn as Caitlyn even if it occurred before her transition.
Probably, but I think they lose part of its hook if Annalise doesn't freak out and the show seem to care about having twists, turns, and hashtags than necessarily being consistent.
When they filmed Annalise looking under the sheet, it was just a wooden dummy because they didn't know who was going to die.
There was always a thread of her wanting a family, like kidnapping that kid and becoming very attached to their fake aunt. I think when she heard how her boyfriend's family accepted his brother's girlfriend when she became pregnant, she saw a way into a stable family.
I can kinda buy it in that Ian seemed to be more interested in earning money, doing drugs, and was going through mania. I don't find it totally unrealistic that he wouldn't be taking in much in regards to LGBTQ culture.
Yeah, it's kind of a repeat of the same joke.
I do wish they'd get rid of him. I can't see his comedic relief moments without thinking about how he ran an innocent person over because of daddy issues.
The Maltese Falcon with Bogart was the 2nd remake of that story.
That's how I feel. It's entertaining but I wouldn't really call it a great show. Sometimes the writing just has stuff happen for OMG moments and it doesn't always follow through. Viola Davis kinda creates a character out of nothing and the show does this weird moral judgment towards some characters but other…
S2 played like the writers thought they knew why S1 was such a hit and tried to give more of it, but they were incredibly wrong. I don't think the show was good because it was Quinn cackling like a mad scientist while she enacted unbelievable plots for the sake of ratings or because we just loved Chet being an asshole.
He does feel like a plot device and not a character. I never bought that he believed he and Connor were exclusive so the "You cheated on me!" stuff seemed unearned.
I think it's a problem with the show having to throw in murders to keep the drama high because you ultimately end up with a cast who has had a hand in murdering or covering up a murder.
According to Viola Davis, they didn't know who was going to end up dead so they had her act opposite a wooden dummy.
I find some of the character work on this show to be baffling at times. Oliver was doing the whole "I want to do something for me" last season when he suddenly quit his job. I don't know how I feel about him as a character because I found his "You cheated on me" arc in S1 frustrating since he and Connor never had a…
I thought it was Jamal's dad, because didn't his dad retroactively end up in the hospital because the past changed for no reason?
I think it's kind of like Catwoman has been a socialite, a prostitute, and a socialite pretending to be a prostitute. At least I think so.
I think it varies on the writer.