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Cary Grant in Bringing Up Baby (1938) dir. Howard Hawks
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Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
1953|directed by. Howard HawksI have forgotten how much I love this movie. It’s a wonderful female buddy film.
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You may be eligible to participate!
If you have more than 5 of these symptoms or problems:
- trouble breathing
- diarrhea
- muscle tension
- abdominal hurt
- head ache
- fatigue
- armpit cramp
- butt muscle
Have you, in the last year, been to Australia or any surrounding continents or planets?
Have you in the last 30 days been to a super market or walmart?
Do you own a hot glue gun? Because I want to superglue my sisters ears to her head
(via fibromyalgiasucks)
Posted on January 8, 2019 via with 1,036 notes
- trouble breathing
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The Winnipeg Tribune, Manitoba, March 24, 1942
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Picturegoer Vol. 24 No. 918 December 9, 1952
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(via kitschatron)
Posted on March 23, 2017 via Kitschatron with 76 notes
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Graves of a Catholic wife and Protestant husband, date unknown.
via reddit
(via historicaltimes)
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(via kitschatron)
Posted on March 22, 2017 via Kitschatron with 116 notes
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Posted on February 5, 2017 via with 407 notes
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Julia Louis Dreyfus breaks from her SAG Awards speech to protest the immigration ban
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npr:
Mary Tyler Moore, who died Wednesday, wasn’t just beloved. She was the kind of beloved where they build you a statue. Moore’s statue is in Minneapolis, where her best-known character, Mary Richards of The Mary Tyler Moore Show, worked for the fictional television station WJM. She’d already won two Emmys playing Laura Petrie on The Dick Van Dyke Show, but Moore cemented her icon status when Mary Richards walked into that job interview. Even if she got off to a rough start with Lou Grant, her soon-to-be boss, who kept a bottle of whiskey in his desk. He wanted her to join him for a drink. She asked for a Brandy Alexander.
He didn’t mean a Brandy Alexander.
Mary Richards was not TV’s first working woman, or its first woman on her own. But before Mary, if you saw a woman without a partner at the center of a TV comedy, she was probably a widow, like Diahann Carroll’s single mom on Julia or Lucille Ball on the show she did after I Love Lucy, which was, perhaps unsurprisingly, called The Lucy Show.
Mary didn’t have a living husband, a dead husband, an ex-husband, or even a permanent boyfriend like Marlo Thomas did on That Girl. It wasn’t that she didn’t want one. Jennifer Keishin Armstrong wrote Mary and Lou and Rhoda and Ted, a history of the show. And in 2013, she told NPR how Mary stayed single for so long: The show tried out some possible boyfriends, but “no one was good enough for her.”
Mary Tyler Moore: On Her Own, Single And Singular
Photo: CBS Photo Archive/Getty Images
(via npr)
Posted on January 29, 2017 via NPR with 467 notes
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I love these memes.
Never not reblog sassy-sarcastic Jesus lovingly putting people on the right track.
“Christians” : but Jesus what about the gays?
Jesus: Did I fucking stutter??
(via tomservoindrag)









