the-notorious-joe
The Notorious J.O.E.
the-notorious-joe

Wow...that’s too bad. :-( She was entirely too young. RIP, Alexis.

You beat me to it - I thought of this movie too. *shakes fist*

I totally agree (re: center of attention).

YES.

Is it wrong that, as soon as I heard this, I flew to this site in order to devour the deliciousness that is the comments section. Flew. Like a witch on a broomstick.

I’m not sure if the following is why, but I’d hazard it justifiably factors into it: he’s known for dating women who are just barely legal (Lindz & Demi Lovato) and notoriously played kiss/tell about his bedroom activities with the former (on Howard Stern, no less).

While I feel like Reynolds & Lively are (probably) perfectly nice people, I still get the sense they are exhausting to know in some unexplained way.

It’s two entirely different people who are being discussed: Jamie Clayton is whom challenged Bomer regarding accepting the role and Jen Richards who elaborated on the (presumed) impact of such casting. It seems as if people are conflating the two statements/actions to make their point.

I would’ve been able to take your statement about compassion and understanding at face value if the discussion with you hadn’t been framed by your initial following statement:

I’ve heard from multiple people that a genre-show actor can make a pretty decent living via cons*, irregardless if the person is from a ‘big’ or ‘cult’ show. But it is especially applicable to shows that are able to generate multi-generational fans (such as the Whedon-verse shows, Star Wars & Star Trek, and Doctor

If a person is willing to quit their job for a 1:20 chance of a relationship that (provided you even survive as ‘the final rose’) then has a 50/50 chance of being long-term or palatable (once the cameras stop rolling) should instead be making a stink about their life choices.

The tweets Marx & Sparks posted are not from the same Transwoman who was initially blocked by Bomer. Jamie Clayton was who was blocked by Bomer, but Jen Richards posted the series of tweets about violence to underscore Clayton’s point. Lastly, I don’t think either set of tweets were that extra; pointed, perhaps but

It’s non-empathic responses like yours that are the exact reason why folks with long-term/misunderstood illnesses are reticent in sharing their experiences. If you (and I don’t mean a general ‘you’…but you the commentor) are not a doctor nor had to deal with medical issues that have or will upend your life, perhaps

Once upon a time, I would’ve said ‘no’ but after what I’ve seen this past election season, I will say yes some people would think that. ;-)

Ha! It’s funny you bring that up as I *just* read an interview with Martindale where she said people now regularly think she's in prison and that her and her husband had to correct her Wikipedia page because it also stated it.

I was wondering when this tidbit was finally going to start getting mentioned.

This show could be deliciously awesome. I was OBSESSED with G.L.O.W. when I was a little chickadee. It was the only time I was interested in wrestling, and that was only because all the lady participants seemed immensely glamorous to me.

Fair enough. I wish he showed more savvy with his off-cuff remarks, because I feel his gaffes always overshadow his accomplishments.

“My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy”, the song productions he did with Jay Z, his commentary on Bush’s reaction to Katrina - are the ones I can think of off the top of my head.

I agree with you 100%. He really did seem to go off the rails once Donda passed. It irks me how people recognize that…it's so obvious.