🚨 UPDATE: There was a SHOOTING and 5 police cars were SMASHED in NYC after the Knicks won the Finals
People even attacked POLICE HORSES in the streets
"At least 63 ARRESTS were made."
Multiple fires broke out, 5 buses DESTROYED
Mamdani's NYC is a 3rd world nation, with no ability to rein in law and order!
what you need to understand about recommending a show to me is that no matter how much we both know I'll like it, I can't watch it until the Neurodivergence Department in my brain approves it. I don't know when that will be, and I don't have any more control over it than you do.
I LOVE Obsession but that movie has TikTok just making the most outrageous theories or just making people think they are geniuses for pointing out obvious shit.
MOANA live-action remake, starring Dwayne Johnson, has had a terrible start in pre-sales.
Costing $200M+, it might be a surprising bomb this summer. Its release date, too close to TOY STORY and MINIONS, isn't doing it any favors.
Sebastian Stan is rumored to actually be playing Victor Zsasz in ‘THE BATMAN: PART 2’.
Brian Tyree Henry is rumored to be playing Harvey Dent.
(Source: https://t.co/LcHKkZE4YY)
The scariest part of Obsession to me was that his best friend was hittin the woman he was in love with and was helping him practice confessing his love to her lmao real sicko
We’re about to witness an indie horror film directed by a youtuber make 400x its budget and he’s talking about how nostalgia baiting is the only form of cinema dominating the box office. When he’s also about to direct an American Psycho remake. This is outrageous delusion.
Luca Guadagnino says ‘TOP GUN: MAVERICK’ is a “very bad movie.”
He says people liked it “because the economy of nostalgia right seems to be the only commodity that can be dominated by all types of markets.”
(Via: https://t.co/cCRBiiRYun)
I’ve been hearing this movie was actually quite solid and a really fun time at the movies, but why the hell did they make the budget so massive? This is the problem with modern Hollywood.
“Masters of the Universe” debuted with a soft $29.3 million in North America.
It’s a slow start for a movie that cost nearly $200 million to produce, not including the marketing budget. It’ll require substantial staying power to justify its price tag, considering that theater owners get to keep roughly 50% of ticket sales. https://t.co/0MUQc0idcf