The bitches plotting to get Manila. YOU NEVER WILL!
It's an adorable coming of age story. I was actually quite surprised because I'm not a big of Lena Dunham, but this was done in such an earnest and light-hearted way, any girl of any culture will be able to relate, even if the thing they must conform to isn't marriage. Because it doesn't matter where or when you are born, there's always something. Bella was brilliant, and it was a delight seeing Billie Piper playing the doting mother. Also, the photography was quite pretty, the dialogue was cheeky, the soundtrack decent, making this an overall delightful experience.
Some may say it's a cheap stunt and blah, but I bought EVERTYTHING AND LOVED IT.
Must specify my adoration for Farrah's outfit though. She was living the pop star fantasy to the fullest, and was great at it!
It's a weird experience to enjoy a show that can make you feel so uncomfortable.
GINA! I am so happy.
This movie has a great combination of a fun story, funny main character and a good message. I can't find a flaw with it, and I think it's not so much a rom-com parody, but a twisty rom-com, where romance happens not between two people, but between one person and herself. And yes, everyone has been saying this forever, but it has not really translated into movies, until these recent Netflix films (Nappily Ever After, Dumplin' and Isn't It Romantic). I like what they are doing, and I want more.
If you can't love yourself, how in the hell you're gonna love somebody else, right?
Kelsey and Liza are friendship goals <3
This episode featuring the impact of gender roles in education was just brilliant. I'm impressed Disney has brought this up at all, considering how very fond of gender stereotypes their shows tend to be. I just loved this little feminist note on the show. Very sweet.
Oh, my god. I nearly quit this show in the middle of the awful past season, but this episode was SO GOOD it basically made up for all the annoyance that came before.
"I am my ancestors' wildest dreams."
Seriously? Most people from outside the U.S. are familiar with American holidays, be it Columbus Day or Martin Luther day, or the biggest of all, Thanksgiving. But even though I have studied in an American university and have tons of American friends, I had never before heard of Juneteenth. The underrepresentation of the holiday seems pretty obvious. I think it must be very bold for the show to reivindicate it, and they did it beautifully. If there is one flaw to it, it is that they set an incredibly high bar for the rest of the season, the episode was amazing! And definitely very educational. Also, I loved Aloe Blacc's participation as a guest, he is a fantastic musician!
Brazil rarely produces sitcoms, but when it does, they tend to be pure gold and this one is my favorite of them all.
Fine, the story is not as good as the first, but it has great music that will have you singing along and it's just awesome fun! I absolutely loved it!
I did not think much of the first episode, but after this, I am hooked. I enjoy the pace and the length too, it's a new format for this genre.
Above all things, it's just very relatable.
Esse vídeo todo é fantástico, mas a polícia me fez rir alto!
This episode had so many things I had never thought about!
Aw, seriously. What an adorable episode. Brick watching Grandpa Big Mike was extremely adorable, and Sue making new friends thanks to Axel was great too. I really like the episodes that focus on their relationship, they're my favorite siblings on TV!
This episode may have been the cutest thing I have seen on TV, and it completely sustains my opinion that the addition of Mayim Bialik to the main cast was the best decision TBBT producers ever made.
Mark Hamill was super funny, and it was great to see him on TV, but I laughed the most at Kripke singing at the end, John Ross Bowie is just so hilarious! He had about 20 seconds of screen time, and still he managed to be unforgettable!
"My cousin Susan didn't realize she could sing until her 40s!" I don't know I thought this was so funny, but I did, ahahaha.
A lot of shade, a lot of drama, some very beautiful looks, and finding out Valentina is a sociopath - not an insult, just a fact.
I love how they're taking Ofglen and giving her a plot explored separately from Offred's. Everything in The Handmaid's Tale is Offred's own account, and other characters barely exist when out of her sight, so this was a nice way to add further depth to the story. Will they use Nick in the same way, I wonder?
As a fan of the book, I was only disappointed at how they had erased the killer's background, and consequently, the real reasons behind the murder, which were so much more complex than simply defending Celeste out of instinct. I enjoy the added touch of how the group comes to be close friends after, and that wonderful feeling of sisterhood, a great story of women coming together to fight oppression and win! This was something that did not happen in the novel, but it worked well with the TV series.
There are no words for how much I love this show, and this episode.
"Why are the hot ones always gay or nazis?" Hahahah.
The writing on this show is usually great, but this episode was particularly excellent. And without the questionable style choices from the previous episode, it delivered real quality! I love how they are going beyond the limitations of the "sitcom" label. Blackish is a true jewel in the ABC repertoire, and wow, does it shine!
My favorite episode of them all so far! Tammé is a great character, and the moment with her son was lovely, simple and heartwarming.
I love this series, and I wish it would get a few more episodes. I admire Amanpour very much, as she acts with genuine curiosity, rather than admonishment. She expresses how strange something sounds to her white western culture and rather conservative upbringing, without passing judgment on the more forward cultures or demonizing the more conservative or extreme ones. I like how she talks so naturally people in each country, always showing the two sides of women's lives and opinions, the ones who are conservative, and the ones who are progressive, and also the ones who found stability in the middle, and still making the whole thing very cohesive within each place's cultural context. Each episode is very well thought of, brilliantly written, and put together perfectly. Each minute of footage counts for the story being told.
Quite delightful! The music is beautiful, and sequences vary from funny, to interesting, to crazy weird but still funny. The featured singers are amazing and worth the watch. One of my favorite Disney oldies!
RuPaul! With a spiritual presence of Laganja and Alaska, ahaha. Love it!
Diana is my spirit animal.
From now on, I identify as age-queer.