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  • TRUCK

    Janelle Monae

    Anne Hathaway

    Social dog media

    Recife, Brazil

    VOLVO

    15 August 2023

    Hilary Duff

    The Last Discussion

    LARGE RED DILDO

    Spaghetti


  • Kara Del Toro

    Margot Robbie

    Kaitlyn Dever

    Alison Brie

    Halle Berry

    Rachel Brosnahan

    Virginie Efira

    Kaitlyn Dever

    Alison Brie

    Jane Seymour, 1970s

    Ann-Margret, 1960s.

    Taylor Swift

    Bianca Belair

    Olivia Rodrigo

    Superman Wall

    “Green Zone” Review

    Green Zone: Directed by Paul Greengrass. With Igal Naor, Said Faraj, Faycal Attougui, Aymen Hamdouchi. Discovering covert and faulty intelligence causes a U.S. Army officer to go rogue as he hunts for Weapons of Mass Destruction in an unstable region.

    Matt Damon plays a good military guy fed up with the bullshit of bad intelligence, bad treatment from his superiors, and given a glimpse of being able to get something done in a war torn country that’s not really open to the idea of “getting things done”. It’s a bit of a wish fulfillment at the end with Damon’s character saying all the things that we wanted to say at the end of the actual invasion of Iraq, but as with reality, by the time this confrontation happens, it’s far too little and too late to actually have an impact on the events.

    Buy On Amazon!

    “Superman & Lois Season 3” Review

    Superman & Lois: Created by Todd Helbing, Greg Berlanti. With Tyler Hoechlin, Elizabeth Tulloch, Alex Garfin, Erik Valdez. The world’s most famous superhero and comic books’ most famous journalist face the pressures and complexities that come with balancing work, justice, and parenthood in today’s society.

    In an ongoing effort to catch up on my television watchin’ from my time in school, Season 3 of “Superman & Lois” was a frustrating slog to get through, There’s no fault to be had in any of the performances, Tyler Hoechlin is still a great Superman, Elizabeth Tullock is about a perfect Lois Lane as we’re ever going to get, and the supporting cast is still aces in my humble opinion. There’s some obvious budget cuts to the show with fewer super-antics and more angst inspired by real life topics li cancer, getting a double mastectomy, and recovering from chemotherapy. Add to all this, Jordan Elsass, the actor who played the non-powered son of Superman, left acting to pursue mental health wellness, so the first few episodes for me were getting to know the new version of the character, now played by Michael Bishop. Both actors are great in the roles, but there’s always going to be a slightly different take and it’s noticeable and takes me right out of the experience. I would honestly have preferred they send him off to Metropolis and maybe have him on the phone every now and then.

    The rest of the season is filled out with the delicious deviousness of Bruno Mannheim as played by Chad Coleman, who gives me the impression of one of those types of weight lifters that look like they’re fat dudes wearing a jacket, but then it turns out they can deadlift a thousand pounds. I’m a huge fan of the storyline with the families of Mannheim and John Henry Irons and wish we had more of that instead of the way too close to home storyline of people getting cancer and having to amputate large parts of their bodies to survive it.

    Buy On Amazon!

    Kate Mara

    Revy [2870×5100]

    Cat [2048×2048]