styofa doing anything

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Sade Olutola
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i don't do bad sauce passes
One Nice Bug Per Day
tumblr dot com
todays bird
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Janaina Medeiros
we're not kids anymore.
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sheepfilms
dirt enthusiast
AnasAbdin

Andulka
d e v o n

Product Placement
YOU ARE THE REASON

seen from Malaysia

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@fuckyeahalbertbrooks
“Wouldn’t this be a great world if insecurity and desperation made us more attractive?”
— Albert Brooks - Broadcast News (1987)
you’re in their dms. i’m scrolling the abandoned fuckyeahalbertbrooks tumblr blog. we are not the same.
PLEASE 😭🙏🏻🥺
I forgot that this existed ☠️
you’re in their dms. i’m scrolling the abandoned fuckyeahalbertbrooks tumblr blog. we are not the same.
Modern Romance, 1981 (dir. Albert Brooks)
Unused Poster Art for Real Life (Albert Brooks, 1979) by Michael Kanarek.
Happy Fourth of July! Celebrate with this clip from The Flip Wilson Show featuring Albert Brooks at his best, creating a new National Anthem.
get to know me → [1/20] films: my first mister
Why can’t you be like other kids? Stand in line at clubs, smoke cigars, dance, experiment with bisexuality. You know, teenage stuff.”
Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983)
Highlights From My Life.
SEE: “Mother” starring Albert Brooks and Debbie Reynolds
I love Albert Brooks. I want to have his babies. I love that Brooks has always written what he knows — thus in practically every movie he seems to play either a writer or an advertising guy. (I am exaggerating of course. Check out Brooks in “Drive” and “My First Mister” for proof that the man can really act!)
In “Mother,” Brooks plays a neurotic, twice divorced sci-fi writer who decides to move back home with his mom so he can work on some of his own personal issues. What he doesn’t realize is that (a) you never really can go home and (b) your mother is actually a real live person with a personality and friends and interests other than that of her children.
"Mother" might be dismissed as fluff but it is prime sentimental satire with both Brooks and Reynolds playing their roles to a tee. Their subtle smart performances result in snappy cringeworthy banter. I guess I connect with this movie so much because I can see a lot of me and my own insecurities in Brooks’ character — and how he treats/reacts to his mother sort of makes me think that I might look at my Dad in some of the same ways.
Happy Mother’s Day Dad! And Happy Mother’s Day to my wife Kerry — May Abi not see us through Albert-coloured-glasses in ten-years!
Watching Lost in America
"My wife and I just dropped out of society and we’d like to get a hotel room" “Did you make a reservation?” “No we dropped out of society”
God bless this movie