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see yours sounds like it could actually be interesting (not to me personally since that's not my scene, but to somebody, somewhere). which is why i know in my heart of hearts that my guess is closer
i bet it's a super bowl ad
Finally!
eeek
yiiikes
justice for the english dept, who are ALWAYS the ones having inappropriate relationships in these things. i'll have you know the teacher at my HS who got busted was an econ man and the prof at my college notorious for sleeping w female undergrads was a law guy
vladimir is a show about how some women would rather project all of their deepest needs and fears and regrets and insecurities onto Leo Woodall than go to therapy
it took me until maybe S1E6 to get really into it, so maybe it'll grow on you. or maybe it won't and that's ok too! life's too short to force yourself through a show you're not enjoying
they sure do!
(i like all of these shows and all of them are obv much more complex than a flippant little bluesky post can encapsulate! i'm just reflecting on my experience of watching every Rich Businesspeople In Glass Skyscrapers prestige drama du jour)
Billions (2016-2023): "rich people! so crazy and terrible but also smart and kinda cool am i right"
Succession (2018-2023): "rich people! so crazy and terrible and stupid and uncool but aren't they just so sad"
Industry (2020-): "β¦ and in conclusion, that's how you get a Ghislaine Maxwell"
wow she absolutely nailed it
I know journalism is a rapidly deteriorating industry, but it also feels like fighting a losing battle when folks on here are mostly sharing articles to dunk on them, rather than solid pieces from journos and critics out here trying our best every day to stay working and writing
I think depressingly they did and the only thing they got out of it was "ooh, fun games and a distinct aesthetic! this would be a great thing to cash in on." even more depressingly i guess it has worked for them
ah yes the VIPs, everyoneβs favorite part of Squid Game. the people have for sure been clamoring for more of the VIPs.
yes it's just good marketing but i am not above admitting i was charmed by eric nam's traitors-but-make-it-country music video
nodding in agreement w @quinciwho.bsky.social on a paradise s2 storyline i lowkey hated sorry
is life just a series of days where you're tired in the afternoon and wide awake at night, running behind on weekly deadlines, and seeing pants get slim and big and then slim again over the years until you die?
interviewed mickey down and konrad kay about a heckuva INDUSTRY season!! variety.com/2026/tv/news...
"As someone whose kids wonβt die fighting in the war, itβs important that you understand the flimsy, morally bankrupt justifications for war, and why itβs vital for you to throw more of your children's lives at this one."
www.mcsweeneys.net/articles/the...
"American innovation" now refers to making a kind of atrocity cronut by combining insider trading with war crimes.
The only vows colum you ever need to read. They can retire the concept now. www.nytimes.com/2026/02/24/s...
the fact that Rob is like seven years younger than everyone else in the Traitors castle β¦ these geriatric Millennials and Gen Xers are getting fooled by a child
Aw, now I feel bad for making fun of this guy. (I bet yours has YOUR NAME, though.)
why is this character even carrying around his before-times student ID three years into the apocalypse? also unclear
does it ACTUALLY matter? no. is it the kind of inexplicable baffling detail that makes you wonder maybe NOTHING here makes any sense? yes
sorry but I am never going to stop complaining about the scene in Paradise S2 where a character shows an ID card that has only his photo but not his name, which is the entire point of an ID card
at what point did Logan Marshall-Green morph from Tom Hardy into Jon Bernthal
After the arrests of powerful men across the world, you might be asking why the US has so much trouble holding its leaders accountable for lawbreaking. Since Nixon, all three branches of government have worked hard to ensure they can break the law with impunity www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/0...