fuckin love you woody
Three Goblin Art

Discoholic 🪩

@theartofmadeline
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

izzy's playlists!

★

Andulka
Not today Justin
$LAYYYTER
tumblr dot com

No title available
Mike Driver
trying on a metaphor
No title available

JVL
hello vonnie
Stranger Things
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

No title available
taylor price

seen from T1
seen from Poland
seen from United States

seen from India
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Australia

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Oman
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Algeria
@woww-e4
fuckin love you woody
Hello lovelies,
If any of you learned or are learning Portuguese as a second language and have less than 10 minutes to spare, PLEASE help a sista out and fill out this quick survey for me :)))
Any stage of Portuguese is fine – from beginner to advanced – but please do not fill this out if you are fluent in Spanish.
Thanks a ton, really appreciate it :D
“I wasn’t prepared for you.”
What a show.
Last October, Sergio profiled a new British TV comedy series titled “Chewing Gum”, which premiered on the UK’s Channel 4 network; Sergio emphasized the fact that the series is created by a black woman comedian, whose routine is generally what he described as “graphic, lowdown sexual humor,” the kind that “goes there.”
That black woman comedian, as well as actress, writer and performer, is Michaela Coel. And the TV series is based on her 2012 one-woman show, “Chewing Gum Dreams,” in which the 26-year-old played a teenage version of herself, as she related past experiences growing up in the working class London neighborhoods of Hackney and Tower Hamlets, with her very religious mother, all while she became very acutely aware of her own sexuality, unprepared for the realities of sex and gender that she would face in the real world.
As Coel said when the TV show launched last fall, she wanted her show to reflect “the sort of life you don’t see very often on TV,” adding that the “sexual naiveté” of the character she plays reflects her own celibacy between the ages of 17 and 22, as a member of what she called “a massive conversion to this very Pentecostal, demon-exorcising church.”
“Psychologically, I was in a whirlwind,” she said.
Seven months since the show’s premiere, it’s been a hit in the UK, and, last night, earned Ms. Coel the BAFTA TV award (essentially the UK’s equivalent of the Primetime Emmys) for best actress in a comedy series.
I’ll have to research BAFTA TV history to find out if this is some kind of history-making event (as in the first black actress to win in this category, or something to that effect). Thus far, none of the UK media websites have mentioned this, so I’m assuming that maybe it’s not a history-making event. But I will still investigate for myself.
Sergio summarized “Chewing Gum’s” genesis in his October post, as follows: After winning a scholarship to the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, where she was the “first black girl they’d had in five years and the only person in [her] year whose parents weren’t homeowners… ‘Chewing Gum Dreams’ was originally conceived as her graduation piece, but after it became a smash hit at a local theater, the play moved to the more prestigious National Theater in London. Shortly afterwards, Coel was approached about turning it into a TV series, however she was reluctant at first of her abilities to play the role on television. But after appearing on another Channel 4 TV series, “Top Boy,” the positive responses she got for her work on that show convinced her that “Chewing Gum” could work as a series. However, Coel doesn’t see “Chewing Gum” as simply about a young back girl trying to find her way to adulthood. She says the overarching themes in the show are about “class and community.” “On my estate, everyone’s different racially but economic circumstances give people a particular culture. I know Tower Hamlets is one of the poorest boroughs in the UK, but I’d rather write about all the great stuff than the misery. I wanted to make the estate a place where people would want to live. I loved my estate!” she exclaimed.
Congrats!
Fucking faves
this is Pandora’s Unseen Skins episode.
don’t know why they didn’t add this story line into the actual episodes. PandaPops needed some air time too
(if you haven’t seen any other unseen episodes, i suggest you search up Unseen Skins on youtube. you’re welcome ;]..)
Me at parties
I’m only here for ONE drink, nothing more.
*3 hours later*
I’d like to say how much I love you guys
Is that a yes?
mmomg, otp fo sho