Your survey asks if participants would consent to have sex with Liv Tyler. Are you sure you understand what rape is?
Your survey asks if participants would consent to have sex with Liv Tyler. Are you sure you understand what rape is?
"Guys will fuck anything that moves and 99% of them would be STOKED if Liv Tyler straddled them out of the blue. Men raping women is completely different, you'd have to bury your head in the sand to say they're the same."
Saying someone is "full of shit" doesn't win you any extra imaginary internet points.
I think that the specific gender politics of that scene would be vastly different if Meg were a man and Tom were a woman.
Seems like a misfire to me. Jarden wasn't considered special because of its water; the water was considered special because it was in Jarden. And the GR aren't known for their subtlety when it comes to public spectacles.
I figured the bird-in-a-box was her version of the goat slaughter or wedding dress.
To the GR I don't think pain or suffering counts unless it's directly from losing family in the Departure. Like Isaac said of Meg's mother's death: nobody cares.
I think the plastic explosives were a red herring. We're meant to think the barn, and then the trailer, is full of bombs. We're also meant to think the dudebro could have seen the bombs, because why would the GR assume he'd recognize the girls? And no bomb-making equipment or supplies are ever shown.
Having a reason for it doesn't make watching it engaging. It's not just her delivery, it's the scenes as written – she gets dialogue infodumps to tell us what she's doing or what's going on, rather than activity to demonstrate it. Imagine if Wolfgang's safe-cracking scene were written with him describing the…
They have had a few years to get used to the idea of all life dying out. (Though those whale carcasses looked pretty fresh…)
She was goddamn fantastic on Southland.
Username checks out.
Seems like those are plans they should have drawn up more than a year ago…
Aaron's the only Alexandrian worth a shit.
"Nope!" is a Simpsons reference.
I took the cheese progression in the background to serve as a calendar, showing that weeks were passing rather than days.
I doubt anyone was made more aware based on that scene.
Todd or someone mentioned a jar of something that had expired two years earlier, presumably post-outbreak. I don't think they've hammered down the year this is happening in, but they have established that the virus wiped out everyone a few years ago.
Stocks, then a shock collar, then speech control… I'm wondering whose fetish I'm watching infiltrate this show.