Against Me! frontwoman Laura Jane Grace is releasing a memoir titled Tranny: Confessions of Punk Rock’s Most Infamous Anarchist Sellout. Grace worked on the book with Noisey editor Dan Ozzi, who told EW, “The book mixes narrative about Laura’s life — growing up with dysphoria and playing in our generation’s most influential punk band — with amazing journal entries she’s been keeping since she was a kid.” After Grace came out as transgender in 2012, Against Me!
Andor Aldhani Season 1 Episode 4 Editor’s Rating 3 stars *** «Previous Next» « PreviousEpisode NextEpisode » Andor Aldhani Season 1 Episode 4 Editor’s Rating 3 stars *** «Previous Next» « PreviousEpisode NextEpisode » Welcome to Andor, season one, phase two. Director Susanna White (semi-recently of the FX series Trust, among many other shows) and writer Dan Gilroy (brother of series creator Tony, auteur of Nightcrawler, creator of the character Roman J.
Andrew Rannells. Before he broke out on Broadway in The Book of Mormon and on TV in Girls, Andrew Rannells arrived in New York from Omaha, Nebraska, and spent years trying to make it as an actor. His memoir, Too Much Is Not Enough, chronicles stories from the time before Rannells became famous, mostly his life in New York, but with a few glances back at Nebraska. In one passage, excerpted below, Rannells describes what it was like to grow up as a closeted gay kid in the Catholic church, including life as an altar boy, the priest who would force kisses on him, and when he knew it was time to leave the church.
In this corner of Sam Levinson’s debut feature Another Happy Day, you’ve got Ellen Barkin, who’s heading to her oldest son’s wedding after springing his younger brother (Ezra Miller) out of his fourth stint in rehab. In this corner, you’ve got Demi Moore, now married to Barkin’s ex (Thomas Haden Church) and fending off family rumors that she’s a former stripper. Who wins when you toss these two into a wedding (alongside Kate Bosworth and Ellen Burstyn) and let them fight it out to be the alpha female?
The Busth Theatre production of Nassim. Earlier this year, Barrow Street Theatre lost its lease to the Greenwich House Theater, a space it had occupied since 2003, but the producers behind it have announced that the Off Broadway company will live on, now as Barrow Street Theatricals. Original Barrow Street producers Scott Morfee and Tom Wirtshafter will partner with producer Jean Doumanian on the American premiere of Iranian playwright Nassim Soleimanpour’s and London’s Bush Theatre production of Nassim, written by Soleimanpour and directed by Omar Elerian.
Below Deck Mediterranean Running Aft-er Time Season 9 Episode 6 Editor’s Rating 3 stars *** «Previous Next « PreviousEpisode Next Episode » Below Deck Mediterranean Running Aft-er Time Season 9 Episode 6 Editor’s Rating 3 stars *** «Previous Next « PreviousEpisode Next Episode » This episode should have been called “Trauma Dump,” because that is what we got from the crew members.
One of the most infamous rape scenes in film history comes from the 1972 erotic-drama Last Tango in Paris, in which Marlon Brando’s character uses a stick of butter to anally rape another character played by Maria Schneider. Prior to her death, Schneider had spoken out about how she felt “humiliated” and “a little raped” while filming the scene — which wasn’t in the original script — despite acknowledging what Brando “was doing wasn’t real.
Better Call Saul Axe and Grind Season 6 Episode 6 Editor’s Rating 4 stars **** «Previous Next» « PreviousEpisode NextEpisode » Better Call Saul Axe and Grind Season 6 Episode 6 Editor’s Rating 4 stars **** «Previous Next» « PreviousEpisode NextEpisode » We have now had two cold opens of Better Call Saul that flashback to young Kim Wexler and her mother, and together, they tell a story.
History will say they were friends. Lil Nas X and Dominic Fike play lovers on a road trip, courtesy of Brockhampton for their new music video “Count on Me.” Directed by Kevin Abstract and Dan Streit, Nas X and Fike barely make it to a secluded forest before hallucinations get so weird you’ll question your own sobriety — colors are more colorful, faces look like cartoons, everything and nothing is hilarious.
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