For seventeen years, investigative journalist Billy Jensen focused his writings on unsolved murders and missing persons. After hundreds of stories that never found resolution, he turned his attention to solving murders and seeking out the missing. His investigative work, combined with the trade insights he’d acquired reporting crime have brought him success in his investigative endeavors. Mr. Jensen has contributed to locating missing persons and solving ten homicides.
They finally decided to give Gigi's story a title.
I do not know how anyone feels about the Friedlands anymore -- a good initial meeting but maybe everything went sour after that? -- but apparently SE and TE are still a couple.
As a producer for Politically Incorrect in the 90’s, Scott Carter dealt with both liberal and conservative voices. Here he talks about what he learned during that time and how he tried to represent both sides fairly.
seen a couple people running to that "is it bad writing or do you not understand genre" post in regards to the ofmd upset. and let me remind people that this show was marketed as a romantic comedy, ESPECIALLY this season!
In that regard, I found an article/blog post that directly addresses the question "can you have character death in a romantic comedy?" And it really hits the nail on the head.
Even if you were to make the argument "well it's a dark comedy!" or "its a pirate show!" there's still a balance that needs to be met if you don't want to alienate your audience.
People are going to argue that the death was earned because they spent the entire season building up his character and "completing his arc". Well, I'll argue that they DIDN'T complete his arc. In fact they took about twelve steps back in his death scene by seemingly ret conning his progress and having him center Ed's feelings on his literal deathbed. So it really feels a lot like fridging, because that's exactly what it was. Izzy's death was for Ed's arc, not his own. And they spent so much time focusing on Izzy all season, focusing on his growth and giving him such a specific arc about queerness and recovery, that yeah, his death feels like a slap to the face and not a tragic story beat that makes the story all the richer.
I am honestly so happy for him because he’s really been delivering kickass projects from Tu Hai Mera Sunday to Asur (and we all know he wasn’t quite recognized as “actor” in IPK despite giving a great performance opposite the absolutely amazing and stellar Sanaya Irani).
So I’m just happy that once again it’s been proven that Indian Television has a fab assortment of actors and the film industry needs to give them a chance - a chance outside their tiny pool of network.
Cause from SRK to Ram Kapoor - all these actors have had their humble beginnings from a small telly.
Especially when actors can perform under rigorous pressure and changing scripts - you can imagine what they can deliver in a controlled environment with a watertight script.
i'm a big advocate for allowing people to consume "problematic" media or whatever. i believe that no media is ideologically pure. but. it's still crazy to me that south park, the most transphobic show on mainstream television, attracts such a big lgbt+ gen z fandom.
I think the people who hate on Andor for being boring or confusing are the ones that are so fully engrossed in the marvel mindset that if they think about the shows message and themes for more than a second, their minds will implode upon realizing they live in a capitalist death machine. Haha. Or wow lightsaber go brrrr ! Not enough explosions >:(
Billy Jensen has a master’s degree from the University of Kansas and began his writing career as a side project and creative outlet during his time running the family painting business. He began his own zine, The Fight Card. His efforts were noticed by the Village Voice, and he was offered a single story in the first issue of their Long Island edition. From there, Billy continued writing and launched a career that would lead to national acclaim.
Here are 10 things you should know about Ida Lupino, born 106 years ago today. She enjoyed success as an actress, director, producer and screenwriter in film and television.