It's strange to me that you know enough about the culture of football to understand a fantasy league joke, but not enough to understand why an ex-NFL star from Florida could quickly get a sales job in Florida.
It's strange to me that you know enough about the culture of football to understand a fantasy league joke, but not enough to understand why an ex-NFL star from Florida could quickly get a sales job in Florida.
Good lord that scene between Sally and John was horribly written. And I love this show, way more than I imagined I would. I'm glad the review grades sort of mirror my own thinking, as I thought that this one was probably the weakest in an otherwise really nice show.
In fact, I would argue that Don Draper fits the definition of antihero better than Tony Soprano and Walter White do.
antihero |ˈantēˌhi(ə)rō, ˈantī-|
noun (pl. antiheroes)
Mostly just hoping to get across that while I don't think I'm particularly pedantic, some baseline understanding of the word you choose is helpful.
Writes title "Don Draper is no antihero."
I've read maybe 4 of these, and it's interesting… at least in what I've seen, when Ms. Esposito speaks about women's issues she's met with a great deal of vitriol. When she speaks about LGBT issues, she's still met with criticism but considerably less anger and unbridled id.
Believe it or not, I have an acquaintance whose actual given reason for never watching The Wire (not sure on whether it's true or he thinks it's just a witty answer) is because he can't bear to watch all the SD.
It doesn't say whether he dies in the movie. He was a real person. Life doesn't need a spoiler warning.