Someone called 911 on two young brothers selling lemonade at their lemonade at their lemonade stand. The Police and Fire Department showed up.
Watch what happened next:
Kimmi and Tisha are perfect examples of how bad company affects you. They are both married to manipulative gaslighting men that they don’t have enough self esteem (or money) to leave so they do the same effed up things to people they think they can get away with doing it to.
This also one of the main reasons it’s hard for me to stay in close proximity to women who are in miserable relationships. Because they want to direct all the energy they scared to give their ugly ass man your way and expect unlimited grace. FOH with that
why is amc “releaunching” iwtv with tvl? its not a relaunch. its a continuation. there is no need to paint s1/s2 as a failiure or to attract those who were repelled by s1/s2 (and for what? because the narrative was black-centered? because it was queer?) what are you even saying
genuinely insane of amc to burn through this much audience goodwill and torpedo their own show's reputation in the process of chasing approval from book loyalists and whitecentric viewers who rejected s1-s2 and who still won't be happy with the show after seeing s3
chief marketing officer of amc admitting that it’s okay to disregard the first two seasons of iwtv which had a Black lead and they promoted tvl as a new show for people who may not vibe with the first two for certain unknown reasons
They are (rightfully) getting dragged for this. Especially after the success of season one and still a lot of crickets for season two in terms of promo and marketing.
it’s crazy that they’re not doing the angle of “u found tvl thru our marketing? great! now u have 2 amazing seasons of a show to watch that are readily available!” no, instead they’re not standing by their own show & have execs saying iwtv s1-2 may not be for u but tvl can be.
Between “secondhand lonely” and “third beer” my brain was permanently rewired. Literally altered the lens through which i approach being in relationship and community with men.