Literally nothing in Richard Curtis’ “Love Actually” makes sense if you stop and think about it for even a few seconds. The same could be said of Robert Iscove’s “She’s All That,” or Blake Edwards’ “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.” And yet, love always seems to add up in that ...
Billie was a strong FMC. She has a tough backstory, and you can’t help but feel for her. Vaughn is a bit tougher around the edges and a bit pricklier. Vaughn is also dealing with some stuff that makes him tough to trust and easy to judge. He judges Billie from the get go, but...
And that’s the point of all this. We haven’tlostin Iraq. Like Vietnam, we’ve simply taken on a project that we never could have won. That truth brings on board a more important truth: If you’ve never experienced combat, yet you still embrace the undefinedVictory-in-Iraqnotion, y...
I tried again. It was one ofDestiny’s no-bullshit group missions, where you can only resurrect if a team member revives you. If you all go down, it’s game over. We fought against the villain — some crazy wizard skull-looking thing in a room full of metallic scaffolding — and it...
Hughes makes use of a number of ghost story tropes in this first episode: dripping taps, a black and white photograph ripped down the middle, an old mill, and plenty of howling wind. That’s not to say that the story is as obvious as the devices used. In fact, after this first epis...
It’s a testament to what makes this show so good and so different. Holder is telling the story of the alternative black girls she herself always identified with —“the girls who love Weezer and never saw themselves in Lisa Turtle or Dionne fromCluelessor Lyn fromGirlfriends” —and then ...
Nobody else but you Goofy Oh, your moodiness is now and then, bewilderin’ And your values may be, so to speak, askew I love how it’s Max that makes the effort to go first and it takes him a few tries to get it going. Goofy and Max both have their differences, but none of ...
Love you Adam Carlsen, but Levi’s my baby daddy now。If I counted how many times I screamed into my pillow while reading Love on the Brain by our lovely Ali Hazelwood, you would think I’m crazy。 I wish I had the proper words to articulate all my feelings right now。 I mean ...
Roseanne: Ughh... that makes me really uncomfortable. Renee: Doctors have been done. I mean,Shorty Street. I didn't mean that they've been done well or anything. Roseanne: But no one has done doctors like you would do doctors.
“See I makes her laugh, don’t I?”, Derek says. “You do Derek, yeah,” Hannah replies.[10] In a similar way to the way that parents in Love on the Spectrum depict their children as funny, the character Hannah here sets the scene for viewers to regard Derek as funny, rather ...