You'd think with the lack of promo for #BridgertonS2 & #Kanthony, the staff didn't know what they were doing. But this is SL, with 20 yrs of experience. There's no way they didn't know how to hype up the season more 🙄
I'm glad I'm not the only one who noticed this. Also, didn't P think that if she reported it so quickly, people would deduce that some1 from the #Bridgerton or 🪶fam would be LW? 🧐https://t.co/famg6sJT09
@sophiechaelas Which is why it makes no sense, that the very next season, they marginalized an Indian, dark-skinned family of women for a white family. They could've done so much more for Indian representation, but they pushed them aside 🙄
8 yaşındaki İranlı küçük bir çocuk, ailesiyle birlikte Çin’de yaşıyor ve orada okula gidiyordu.
Tatil için İran’a gittiğinde beklenmedik bir şey oldu… Savaş patlak verdi.
42 gün boyunca ne okula gidebildi, ne de arkadaşlarıyla iletişim kurabildi. Çin’deki sınıf arkadaşları ise ondan uzun süre haber alamadı.
Kimisi “Acaba ne oldu?” diye merak ediyor, kimisi de en kötüsünden korkuyordu.
Sonunda çocuk Çin’e geri döndü ve okula gittiğinde sınıf arkadaşları onu gördü.
O anki sevinç, şaşkınlık ve duygusal kucaklaşmalar…
42 gün süren belirsizlik ve korkunun ardından çocuğun sınıfına dönmesi, hem onu hem de arkadaşlarını derinden etkiledi. ❤️
@sapphicbaek Here's the part I don't get: Kate was a straight shot. Y was Edwina acting so innocent and naive? Seemed like she was no better than Cressida, FGS. U'd think she'd want to be more like Didi, right? At least, she was in the📚
So, I read that QC's 3rd daughter Elizabeth felt suffocated by society standards, nor did she like living in the palace under strict rules. Sound familiar?😉If the writers had done their research, Elizabeth and Eloise could've been friends. Ah, what could've been...😪#Bridgerton
A young girl waits outside her home after learning that her delivery driver is deaf. She has practiced a few words of sign language from school. When he arrives, she signs to him, and his face softens with surprise. Now every time he comes, they greet each other that way. She is learning more signs just to talk with him, and he helps her in return
1st Regency rom author I ever read was Stephanie Laurens. If SL wanted a dramatic romance, they should've adapted Stephanie. She blends romance with mystery. #Bridgerton is about romance, not drama. No need to "increase the drama" 😠 https://t.co/kfI7B25fSk
@blondchameleon And if you can't write regency romance, don't write regency romance. Don't try to "amp up the drama" or suspense. It's a regency romance, not a suspense drama
SL should've stuck to the genre. They only know how to write suspense drama, not regency romance. Idk why they tried to write a new genre when they inserted what they already know 🙄
JQ said how C, E & F's stories occurred around the same time by accident when she wrote them. Was it so hard for writers to instead make them occur in simultaneous years, given they already had the framework for the stories? The things they could've done 🙄
Anonymous
My daughter is in fifth grade. Came home yesterday with a story. New girl in class. Immigrant family. Speaks limited English. Sits alone at lunch. Nobody talks to her. Not mean. Just easier to stick with friends you already have. My daughter sat with her.
Didn’t speak the same language. Used Google Translate on her school iPad. Typed messages back and forth. Laughing at the translations. Learning words from each other. Sharing lunch. Making it work.
Other kids noticed.
Started sitting with them. Whole table now. Mix of kids learning words in different languages. Teaching each other. That specific chaos of children making friendship out of nothing but willingness.
Teacher called me. “Your daughter started something beautiful. That new girl was shutting down. Now she’s opening up. Learning faster. Smiling. All because someone sat with her first.”
Asked my daughter why she did it. She looked confused. “She was alone. Nobody should eat lunch alone.”
Said it like it was obvious. Like basic human math. Person alone plus empty seat equals sit down.
Ten years old teaching the rest of us what we forgot somewhere along the way. That language isn’t the only way to communicate. That loneliness is louder than any words. That sometimes the most important thing you can do is just show up and sit down.
Sometimes fifth graders understand kindness better than the rest of us combined.