There weren’t any rootin’ neither, and barely any tootin’!
There weren’t any rootin’ neither, and barely any tootin’!
If I’ve learned anything, it’s that you should never, ever trust Kacey Rohl.
shooting his web on them ;)
It wasn’t until years after reading Interview that I read about her daughter who died tragically young and realized that the character of Claudia was clearly based on that experience and for whatever good or bad you might say about that book, that character and her arc absolutely stayed with you.
This story deserves to move to the head of the AMC development list.
Say what you will about how Kate sucks the air out of the room, I will never ever get tired of those specific-commercial sketches with Aidy (or Billie in this case). Every one of them lands for me.
Other musicians who’ve pulled double duty include: Chance The Rapper, Justin Timberlake, Harry Styles, Miley Cyrus, and Halsey. The most recent singer to do it was Nick Jonas.
I know I really should have learned my lesson by not reading reviews before I watch the show in question, but the off-handed way this review spoils Big’s fate is incredibly thoughtless.......Sorry, Gwen, but WTF? Not even a spoiler warning?
It’s nice to see them back in the saddle.
That article read like a dark comedy that would run on HBO. I’ve already fancast Ed Norton in the role of Jeremy Strong.
Ah yes, another bizarre and embarrassing instance of one writer for a website not being in lockstep agreement with another writer for another website, who have the same parent company and absolutely no other editorial overlap. Weird!!
“To me, the stakes are life and death,” he told me, about playing Kendall. “I take him as seriously as I take my own life.”
“When I told Strong that I, too, thought of the show as a dark comedy, he looked at me with incomprehension and asked, ‘In the sense that, like, Chekhov is comedy?”
Too bad a movie is not being made about Gene Kelly. Holland looks allot like him and the same height.
i loved jackie jormp jomp so i’ll probably love ned despair
Watch the sass box, mister.
My favorite Dole/SNL moment was when Dan Aykroyd played him during the run-up to the 1988 primaries. He was arguing with George H.W. Bush and calmly but pointedly said “George, how would you like me to stick this pen right in your neck?”
I don’t think it’s obvious to lots of people though. I watched with some older family who still have some firm rooted beliefs in toxic masculinity, and they didn’t see the ending coming at all. I think Campion just wanted to play with the subversive nature of queerdom and our only liberation from toxic masculinity is…
That new teardrop tattoo he got under his eye probably isn’t helping matters either.
Clem Hoately (Willem Dafoe)
My sincere hope is that Rob Marshall sees this movie and then travels to Spielberg's home where he commits seppuku in shame for all of his failures.