BritBox will bring the story of "The Other Bennet Sister" to life this May.
@lacymb
β¨ You ainβt ever gonna burn my heart out. β¨ Freelance writer & editor for hire | Bylines: Den of Geek, Jezebel, Nerdist, Tell Tale TV | Former Paste Magazine TV and Books editor | Ninth Doctor evangelist | Cat lady πββ¬ | #wahoowa
BritBox will bring the story of "The Other Bennet Sister" to life this May.
Sarah J. Maas, the author of the wildly popular βA Court of Thorns and Rosesβ series, reveals the dates for her next two books during her highly anticipated appearance on the βCall Her Daddyβ podcast.
βIn the end, is truly what Fennellβs films do best: make us argue with one another,β writes Lacy Baugher about the need for more filmmakers like the WUTHERING HEIGHTS director.
And, of course, that's all part of the larger conversation about who gets to make art, and the dwindling amount of working class actors and writers who get a chance to make movies at all.
This is a very fair point, and I think it intersects with many of the conversations we have about who gets to make films and tell stories. Fennell's got a safety net many artists (especially women) don't, but also AS a woman, I feel like she gets backlash over things men get a pass (or praised!) for
We turned away from the light when we invented a way to go online without the computer screaming in warning.
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Read before commenting please
Alright People Magazine I was unfamiliar with your game.
National Theatre at Home brings back "Take Your Seats," with Ncuti Gatwa's 'The Importance of Being Earnest' streaming free on YouTube.
Because I relish the prospect of being dragged to hell on the internet, I wrote about Emerald Fennell, #WutheringHeights, and why we need a lot more filmmakers just like her --- whether you hated the movie or not --- for @ebertvoices.bsky.social:
I realize her films aren't for everyone (although I love them), but we absolutely need more people with vision making art and taking big swings. (And thank you!)
Because I relish the prospect of being dragged to hell on the internet, I wrote about Emerald Fennell, #WutheringHeights, and why we need a lot more filmmakers just like her --- whether you hated the movie or not --- for @ebertvoices.bsky.social:
I wrote this knowing full well what I was inviting --- standing in my truth, lol! ;)
I wrote about the first national book banning bill, which effectively seeks to erase trans people. At the end I include a link to let your reps know that you oppose this bill and all it stands for. lithub.com/why-we-must-...
generally speaking, leave Britney alone
Somehow Telly Visions has returned. (Just kidding, this is a lot of work and a labor of love and weβd love it if youβd subscribe and support us as we try to make this an independent source for British TV fans!)
Sorry I'm not more open-minded about LLMs, it's just some fucking maniacs shoveled out a bunch of useless bloatware featuring that technology, did not give me any chance to opt out, reorganized the entire economy around it, zeroed out gains made by green energy, and made it impossible to buy RAM
the two phases of writing: (1) writing and (2) wandering aimlessly like an unmoored ghost and complaining about not writing
God this speaks to me on a spiritual level.
David Tennant: Michael Sheen No. 1 Fan π
Excited to be making my debut at @ebertvoices.bsky.social, but I deeply wish it was because I was writing about a better show. Apple TV's "The Hunt" squanders an extremely interesting premise on paper-thin characters and a sadly predictable plot. My review:
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It's the end of #MissScarletPBS as we know it, and I feel fine.
People that push up behind you to avoid paying their fares on the metro are maybe my most peak Boomer transit complaint.
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Congrats to @anibundel.bsky.social and @lacymb.bsky.social on relaunching Telly Visions alive as an independent outlet.
Give them a follow, your e-mail address, and your money, if you love British TV: www.tellyvisions.org#/portal/signup
This woman would have been such a great president and Iβm never going to be over it.
Art matters. And what do we do with things that matter? We protect them.
Here is information about H.R. 7661, a US book banning bill that explicitly targets books about trans people, and what you can do right now to help stop it.