Iron Fist actor Finn Jones weighs in on that heavy moment in Episode 3.
Okay...for the sake of Finn Jones’ career, can ya’ll stop interviewing him, please? I mean wow.

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from France
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from Netherlands
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from China
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
Iron Fist actor Finn Jones weighs in on that heavy moment in Episode 3.
Okay...for the sake of Finn Jones’ career, can ya’ll stop interviewing him, please? I mean wow.
It's a win-win.
Historically, polyamory has been seen as a surefire sign of a failing relationship: If you partner is sleeping with others, even with your permission, your relationship is fizzling towards its demise. If you couldn’t satisfy your partner, your relationship was doomed. But of late, polyamorous relationships — sometimes referred to among married people as “open relationships” — have gotten a boost of recognition as a viable, healthy way to maintain commitment. And a study published earlier this summer in PLOS One suggests that polyamory actually forms the foundation of stronger primary relationships It’s a conclusion that is at once surprising and revolutionary, mostly because polyamory is a practice that’s almost universally stigmatized as “not normal,” and in fact, detrimental to the success of a relationship. But modern society is becoming much more accepting of non-monogamous relationships, says co-author Justin J. Lehmiller, director of the social psychology graduate program at Ball State University. “I don’t think it’s because polyamory is more accepted,” he tells Inverse, saying there continues to be a pervasive bias about the nature of and reasoning behind polyamory. “People are more interested today with consensual non-monogamy.” That openness has allowed Lehmiller and his colleagues to collect information from 3,530 self-identifying polyamorists, over half of whom were American. Lehmiller points out that polyamory has various definitions. The standard definition of consensual non-monogamy — what we call polyamory — is a relationship in which partners agree that they and/or their partners can enter a romantic or sexual relationship with a third party. What complicates this definition is whether the relationship veers from romantic to sexual and whether one or both partners are polyamorous, extending from just one other partner to a “network” of partners.
It's safe, natural, has no side effects, and works — even after conception.
This is pretty awesome. All natural, no side-effect plant based birth control
More and more research backs up banning personal tech.
... and tablets and smartphones
The biggest name in comics had a rough weekend.
You've probably heard this one before.