And even the strongest evidence won’t convince Trump fans, because they’ll just say it’s all fake news, doctored recordings/transcripts, etc.
And even the strongest evidence won’t convince Trump fans, because they’ll just say it’s all fake news, doctored recordings/transcripts, etc.
Dueling veneers!
Yeah. I could be wrong, obvs, but it doesn’t seem like she’s really enjoyed performing - or being famous - in years. I hope she has, and maintains, the mental/emotional stability and the legal ability to make whatever decision is best for her.
“Fleabag” is amazing and Waller-Bridge is terrific in the leading role. So I’m OK with that win. But I would dearly love to see “Schitt’s Creek” take home some awards for its final season next year. Yes, O’Hara is just brilliant on that show, turning what could have been a one-note character into a layered…
The novel is amazing. I was really disappointed in the Will Smith film. It turned the vampires into anonymous beasties. What’s so gutting in the book is that the vampires still have some vestige of their brainpower, but none of their true humanity, so at least some of them remember who they were and stay close to…
I thought the show hinted at the parents having sunk all their savings into buying Hill House (the scene right after Olivia’s death when Hugh’s lawyer is telling him he HAS to sell the house or else he’ll be utterly broke), and there are some hints that the aunt with whom the kids go to live isn’t the best caregiver…
Yes, she did. She specifically said their parents didn’t believe her. She said something similar to the doctor, too, in the present day, something about how she doesn’t expect him to believe her because nobody does.
I’m in recovery too, and this episode profoundly affected me. The actor gets it all just right: the hope, the fear, the shame, everything. I agree with a commenter above that the Floating Man - having reclaimed his hat - is a reminder to Luke that even though his dad told him ghosts weren’t real, even though his dad…
To me, the actress is so good, I can overlook the age discrepancy. And I thought her youth actually added to her character seeming so childlike and vulnerable.
We briefly see her booking a plane ticket online from LA to Boston.
She seems surprised when she looks at the clock and realizes it’s nighttime. And the sequence of her in the motel seems oddly compressed, time-wise. I thought the house had *made* her sleep all day, knowing she’d be more suggestible at night.
Gotta watch out for those violent toddlers. Take your eyes off ‘em for a moment and next thing you know they’ve shivved you with a sharpened teething biscuit.
Yes, IMO the incidents Kavanaugh is accused of are really bad, but what equally pisses me off is his lies, his indignation.
Sure it does. A guy isn’t going to do that because he thinks the woman will say “yay!” and commence to sucking. He’s going to do that because he knows it will make her uncomfortable. In this case, she’s saying that she felt Kavanaugh did this to flex his power over her - to say, “See, I can do this nasty, threatening…
I agree that high school/college students do stupid, and sometimes cruel, things, because they’re drunk or because they’re trying to show off how “cool” they are. I don’t think an incident like flashing should derail someone’s career.
When my sister and brother-in-law got married, she (stupidly) left me a key to her house while they honeymooned so I could bring in the mail, water the plants, etc. I did a few obvious pranks (like Saran Wrap on the toilet) to throw them off the scent.
I live in a deeply red state and I have no doubt there would be some violence. I don’t think it would be a huge tidal wave of violence - most people wouldn’t be willing to actually shoot someone over this issue - but some.
Well, Browne was running on empty back in the seventies and he’s still around. Dude’s got staying power.
Or a liberal.
That was the wording that got me, even more than “Melania’s got a son.” Who describes their child by saying “that’s a beautiful young man”??? That’s something you’d say about an acquaintance’s child. He describes Barron the same way he describes one of his hotels, or the chocolate cake they serve at Mar-a-Lago.