morakot
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Posts posted by morakot
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On 12/10/2017 at 12:16 AM, Roccos Brother said:
I read that too, and was sadly not surprised.
This is re: Jet calling Jordan a homophopic epithet in front their mother. TBH I didn't see the story, and yes, he should have been more sensitive, but I doubt that it isn't part of the cultural language that he works in. That's not to excuse it but it might go some way towards explaining it. From what I saw on the show, the cowboys were far less likely to talk poop about the people around them than other teams.
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If someone like Mika is terrified of heights and water, why would she apply to go on TAR when, in almost every episode, people are in water or jumping from heights?
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In greater Seattle, supermarkets often have a British section next to the Mexican and Asian foods.
In return, my friends in my college town in Scotland say there is an American section in the local supermarket. -
On 3/31/2020 at 5:49 PM, vavera4ka said:
yup.
i'm out.
Monday evenings just opened up.
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I thought Q was supposed to be the heart of the show -- so I guess the show is just heartless now?
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On 3/28/2019 at 11:22 PM, ElectricBoogaloo said:
I laughed out loud at the portrait of Laura Bush hanging in Emmit's office while Zelda was snooping. Nice touch!
I guess she was a librarian herself. I did not know that until she appeared as a portrait.
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4 hours ago, Lemons said:I don’t see people on the subway knocking each other over with their puffer coats anytime soon.
At least the coats will keep people 6 feet apart. 🙂
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The riding crop, though it could be used for other things, was paired with the outfit he based on what horse jockeys wear in races.
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On 2/24/2020 at 2:35 PM, scruffy73 said:
Julian and Hayley should have sent down something with a SHIRT! I knew it wouldn’t work out when he was shirtless.
Just watching the episode now and Hayley clearly said, "You do the shirt and the accessories." So shirtlessness is on Julian.
I'm also wondering what Patrick (of Saville Row and Great British Sewing Bee) would say...
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22 hours ago, violet and green said:
None of these are wearing anything like the shape and style of Sergio's dress, as far as I can see. He had mentioned adding structures to the back (similar to quivers, scabbards, and flag holders?) but then did not. Japanese court ladies did have trailing outer kimono that acted like a train but they would be impractical for a warrior. As usual, he had a shape, and forced an idea onto it.
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Sergio's dress seemed to me to be more Tudor than Japanese. The conical bodice and full skirt with the white makeup looked like a fantasy Queen Elizabeth (who was also a warrior Queen and not a weak thing...
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5 hours ago, Ladyrain said:
The only thing I would add is that I'd be willing to bet that a goodly number of the apron wearing, traditional, stay-at-home moms were unhappy and frustrated and felt marginalized too. I was a child in the 50s, and I remember how boring, unexciting ans stifling a 'housewife's' existence seemed to even my little girl eyes at the time.
Betty Friedan wrote eloquently about this very thing in The Feminine Mystique.
OT: I can never remember Sergio's full name and end up referring to him as Sergio LamaDrama.
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It even has her "trademark" wrapped bodice!
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On 1/31/2020 at 6:34 AM, hookedontv said:
Hahaha. Karlie has such a weird way of speaking. Everything Karlie says, to me, sounds like she's announcing something versus just talking/saying her lines. And she has these weird hand gestures, again, like she's announcing.
Karlie reminds me of Alexis in Schitts Creek.
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You can read the original first chapters here (for free).
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Just FYI, here is Wikipedia's summary of Jane Austen's original fragment. It does seem plausible that Andrew Davies decided to allow his desire to add drama - and melodrama - to her story.
The novel centres on Charlotte Heywood, the eldest of the daughters still at home in the large family of a country gentleman from Willingden, Sussex. The narrative opens when the carriage of Mr and Mrs Parker of Sanditon topples over on a hill near the Heywood home. Because Mr Parker is injured in the crash, and the carriage needs repairs, the Parkers stay with the Heywood family for a fortnight. During this time, Mr Parker talks fondly of Sanditon, a town which until a few years before had been a small, unpretentious fishing village. With his business partner, Lady Denham, Mr Parker hopes to make Sanditon into a fashionable seaside resort. Mr Parker's enormous enthusiasm for his plans to improve and modernise Sanditon has resulted in the installation of bathing machines and the construction of a new home for himself and his family near the seashore. Upon repair of the carriage and improvement to Mr Parker's foot, the Parkers return to Sanditon, bringing Charlotte with them as their summer guest.
Upon arrival in Sanditon, Charlotte meets the inhabitants of the town. Prominent among them is Lady Denham, a twice-widowed woman who received a fortune from her first husband and a title from her second. Lady Denham lives with her poor niece Clara Brereton, who is a sweet and beautiful, yet impoverished, young lady. Also living in Sanditon are Sir Edward Denham and his sister Esther, Lady Denham's nephew and niece by her second husband. The siblings are poor and are thought to be seeking Lady Denham's fortune. Sir Edward is described as a silly and very florid man, though handsome.
After settling in with the Parkers and encountering the various neighbours, Charlotte and Mr and Mrs Parker are surprised by a visit from his two sisters and younger brother, all of whom are self-declared invalids. However, given their level of activity and seeming strength, Charlotte quickly surmises that their complaints are invented. Diana Parker has come on a mission to secure a house for a wealthy family from the West Indies, although she has not specifically been asked for her aid. She also brings word of a second large party, a girls' school, which is intending to summer at Sanditon. This news causes a stir in the small town, especially for Mr Parker, whose fondest wish is the promotion of tourism in the town.
With the arrival of Mrs Griffiths at Sanditon, it soon becomes apparent that the family from the West Indies and the girls' school group are one and the same. The visitors consist of Miss Lambe, a "half mulatto"[3] rich young woman of about seventeen from the West Indies, and the two Miss Beauforts, common English girls. In short order, Lady Denham calls on Mrs Griffiths to be introduced to Miss Lambe, the very sickly and very rich heiress that she intends her nephew Sir Edward to marry.
A carriage unexpectedly arrives bearing Sidney Parker, the second eldest Parker brother. He will be staying in town for a few days with two friends who will join him shortly. Sidney Parker is around 27 or 28 and Charlotte finds him very good-looking with a decided air of fashion.
The book fragment ends when Mrs Parker and Charlotte visit Sanditon House, Lady Denham's residence. There Charlotte spots Clara Brereton seated with Sir Edward Denham at her side having an intimate conversation in the garden and surmises that they must have a secret understanding. When they arrive inside, Charlotte observes that a large portrait of Sir Henry Denham hangs over the fireplace, whereas Lady Denham's first husband, who owned Sanditon House, only gets a miniature in the corner — obliged to sit back in his own house and see the best place by the fire constantly occupied by Sir Henry Denham.
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I'm deciding to view this as a modern Regency romance by Andrew Davies "inspired by Jane Austen".
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I thought Anne was made aware of the possibility that her parents hadn't died, as she had been made to believe, but that they had left her at the orphanage because they didn't want her. (The man leaving his children behind specifically said "Tell them I'm dead", as I remember.) She was upset because suddenly it felt as if she had always been living in a fantasy world, thinking parts of it (like having parents who were in love and loved her) were real.
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The time shift bugged me too. Are we to understand that in eight months or so (from New Year's to harvest time) that Jerry has no memory of these guys as his attackers? And the attackers don't worry that he might actually remember them?
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We saw at least one designer with his stocking in the studio -- the bald man emptied it out to see what treats there were. I would assume the other designers were encouraged to bring them with them anyway. It was not about going back to the apartment - it was about using what they had already brought.
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Designers took their own stockings to the studio -- apparently they had candy or other treats in them. Sergio asked the designers to let him have the bells that were on each stocking.
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I only found out we had a contestant from Seattle in the show this afternoon -- and, oops, there, she's gone, pink hair and all!
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On 11/30/2019 at 12:06 AM, Ms Lark said:
Yes, I found that very odd. J.K. Rowling was very strict in that only British actors (even the children) were cast in Harry Potter movies. So, nope! Writers should have picked a different movie.
The only non-British child was American director Chris Columbus's daughter. She was the person who persuaded her father to take the project as she was a fan of the books.
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2 hours ago, kicotan said:
Just curious, but what made you make that assumption?
If that’s all he wanted, why try to bribe a bouncer to get him into a strip club and just go to the beach?
She was in her scrubs and ready to go into surgery. She would most likely have on a bra under that thin fabric.
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The Cast: Stunt Casting, Bickering Couples, Ditzy Girls, Alpha Males
in The Amazing Race
We did have the lesbian ministers -- they didn't last long though.