They're doing more harm than good and making it impossible to be color blind. Beck is not allowed to see Kanye as a man and an artist and freely respond as he would to any man or artist, white or black. He is forced to see him as a BLACK man and a BLACK artist and adjust his response to that color. They're creating a bigger divide between the races.
Instead of worrying about Beck or Iggy, they should focus their energy on those white cops who strangled that black man for no reason. Whatever happened to that? But since it doesn't affect their careers...
IKR? why are some of these SJWs acting like Igloo murdered 100 black men and enslaved their offspring? she's a ****ing rapper or whatever she is.. why arent they focusing more on what truly hurts them? like the cops or racist hicks? not an albino rapper from australia.. idgi
Ed Sheeran makes me want to vomit. His try hard, opportunistic, hipster ******** really irritates me. Of couse he had to be friends of Elitist Swift, someone who is as interesting as a cat meme.
The giant bath with taps and a shower head and a toilet at the side
Proper choreography
The Batman-esque costume
Non-pretentious use of a piano/soft section seguing into a huge chorus
Ed Sheeran makes me want to vomit. His try hard, opportunistic, hipster ******** really irritates me. Of couse he had to be friends of Elitist Swift, someone who is as interesting as a cat meme.
But mostly her Oscar victory makes me happy because it’s a chance to take a moment and appreciate the quiet miracle that is Julianne Moore. Moore has been so good, for so long, in such a variety of better-than-average movies—is there any other A-list actress who’s chosen her roles with such consistently excellent taste, or collaborated with as many ambitious young directors?—that it’s easy to take for granted her steady presence in some of the best American cinema of the past two decades. Now that, after five nominations, that prestige-conferring hunk of gold finally vindicates what her viewers have seen all along, let’s take a moment to reflect on the glorious career of one of America’s smartest, bravest, and most self-effacingly brilliant actresses.