L (@leago_km) 's Twitter Profile
L

@leago_km

I just tweet about movies and books, please don’t stress me out

ID: 222378167

calendar_today03-12-2010 07:10:47

71,71K Tweet

988 Takipçi

204 Takip Edilen

Nahu (@nahuutwm) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Más allá del premio en sí, me emociona pensar la cantidad de personas que van a empezar a ver las películas de Paul Thomas Anderson después de estos premios. A veces la vida es justa

Ụlọma (@ulxma) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This expectation that every black female character must act as a moral arbiter or exemplary figure for black girls reflects internalised racism. They should be allowed the full range of complexity which includes being messy, flawed, or even evil. Fictional characters are not

Ashley Reese (@offbeatorbit) 's Twitter Profile Photo

People keep making comments like this and it’s not based in reality anymore. Some black women who won GGs for best supporting actress since 2016: Viola Davis (Fences), Regina King (Beale Street), Angela Bassett (BP), Da’vine Joy Randolph (Holdovers), Zoe Saldana (Emilia Perez)

Caroline Renard (@carolinerenard_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

They can’t sit with discomfort and they project everything onto fictional characters while making it everyone’s problem. Watching TV and movies is supposed to be fun.

boyega (@bxyega) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We’ve cultivated a culture where discomfort lies on a moral line rather than being taken as the complex and nuanced feeling that it is. Essentially “bad feelings=bad/good feelings=good”. Directly hinders ppl’s ability to meaningfully engage with art and media.

JJ (@ladydragonjj) 's Twitter Profile Photo

they hate conflict. hate discernment. they hate watching in CONTEXT. it has to be explained, clearly communicated, virtue signaled. characters cannot be people. Either self inserts or the "evil other" that falls in a PERFECT binary of moral vs immoral. boring ass anti art people.