This:
This:
I’m not saying I’m happy about this, but I don’t think this affects his NFL prospects. He was suspended long enough from the team to give a lot of “he’s served his time, don’t you believe in second chances?” cover to NFL programs, and he’s really ridiculously good at sportsball.
It looked like they were arguing, she walks in wiping her face like she’s been crying. And then he comes right to the table and they’re clearly talking to each other. She shouldn’t have shoved him, of course. He responded with clearly disproportionate force IMO.
Why did she hit him? Who started it?
How did a copy/pasted email exchange between 2 other people involve any bias on the part of Rich?
I’m having difficulty understanding Margaret Cho’s perspective here. It sounds like Tilda was up front about the issues, expressed her desire to do something about it and sought advice from someone who is in a good position to provide it. And Cho’s responses were thoughtful and measured as well. Not sure what got lost…
Dumb. Taking shit out of context STILL does not make Swinton racist in this case.
I’m wondering if she was equally concerned that Baron Mordo was also played by someone of a different race than his source material.
There is a reason that Hollywood makes movies.
2016 won’t let us keep anything nice.
How coincidental, Triple H will be our bond rating after the Trump Presidency.
Agreed. Belichick routingely gushed over Moss’ intelligence while he was in New England, which probably caught some folks by surprise given Moss’ troubles in Minnesota and Oakland, but it was obvious watching him play (and now seeing him on TV) that he’s expectionally smart.
“Challenge accepted”
Most people I know would be thrilled to get a letter from the President elect.
“I’d been meaning to talk to him and I got tied up with a few things,” Bowles said of the failure to inform Fitzpatrick.
“For male showrunners, sexual assault is always the go-to when looking for ‘traumatic backstory’ for a female character.”