âi donât understand whatâs happening in palestine so i wonât comment on itâ of course you donât understand. most of us will never understand what itâs like to go for months without electricity, without water, without literal food. most of us wonât understand what itâs like talking to loved ones at lunch and then having to witness their bodies in body bags by dinner. no, you will never understand what that feels likeâbut that doesnât mean you shouldnât care. that doesnât mean you shouldnât educate yourself. that doesnât mean you shouldnât donate. thereâs only one thing uglier than willful ignoranceâand thatâs willful ignorance borne from selfishness and a severe lack of compassion. if you care anything about humanity as a concept, palestine should be your problem regardless of who you are, where you live, or where youâre from.
i hate the "you'll always have the memories of them" response to grief like no!! that's not fucking true!! time and youth and age and disease can all conspire. quicker than we want to admit. and it makes me fucking crazy
one of the middle schoolers on the team i coach is very into being "random" right now and he was like "coach am i random" and i said "you would have done great in 2010." and then i had to explain that
Stills from We Are Lady Parts season 2, coming May 30
A NOTE FROM NIDA MANZOOR (CREATOR/WRITER/DIRECTOR/EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) IN PEACOCK'S PRESS RELEASE:
Making season one of We Are Lady Parts was immense for me. It was a trial by fire, but I found my voice, my style and my confidence in creating this show. Most importantly, I found my tribe - from actors and crew to producers and studio execs. So, coming to season two, I was galvanised. The characters, the world, the tone - it was all there, established, and ready to go. Now it was time to turn things up to 11. I wanted to go bolder, sillier, darker and deeper and that is exactly what we strived to do.
In season two, we explore the interior lives of each of the women in more depth. Each of them facing new, existential challenges with all the silliness, pratfalls and banter of season one. The music is bigger too - more wild original tunes (penned by me and my siblings) and dare I say it, even better covers. The season overall asks the question of success. What is success? For a punk band - is fame, stadium shows and major record deals the answer? I wanted to explore the uncomfortable tension between art and commerce and ask how much compromise is too much. I'm really proud of what we achieved, and can't wait to share it with old fans and new.
i simply don't understand why you would create an organization that makes up all the rules and forms and policies and then forbid that organization from answering any of your questions about how to follow tricky parts of the rules and forms and policies
taxes evil. gonna get a witch to turn me into a goofy airheaded dog.