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Power Book III: Raising Kanan If Y’Don’t Know, Now Y’Know Season 2 Episode 10 Editor’s Rating 5 stars ***** «Previous Next « PreviousEpisode Next Episode » Power Book III: Raising Kanan If Y’Don’t Know, Now Y’Know Season 2 Episode 10 Editor’s Rating 5 stars ***** «Previous Next « PreviousEpisode Next Episode » One way to measure the quality of a season finale is to consider how long you were sitting at the edge of your seat.
Jamie Dornan continues to enthrall us with his latest foray onto our screens, The Tourist, a BBC TV thriller series set in the Australian Outback. After the success of the The Fall – where Dornan played a brooding serial killer – the Fifty Shades actor is back for a doozy of a six-part drama. Thriller fans, here is your next binge watch. It's got car chases, twists and turns and many mysteries to be solved.
Dell Curry made Stephen Curry watch the NBA action up close since he was a toddler. Watching his dad nail down tough jumpers made for a brilliant study. The father and son duo has thus shared many moments during his formative years. Apart from two, mother Sonya, sister Sydel, and brother Seth have also been the constants through this journey. Hooping has indeed been the central bonding mechanism. They have seen their son battle an eye ailment and work his way up.
Early in the movie named after him, Cyrano de Bergerac — played by Peter Dinklage — is talking with his friend and fellow soldier. A fiddle player noodles something folkish in the background when Le Bret (Bashir Salahuddin) says: "May I ask you a question?" "Anything," Cyrano replies. "It's a little personal," Le Bret warns. Cyrano: "I have no secrets from you." Le Bret: "Are you in love?" Cyrano hedges, but quickly spills his guts.
Don't let the name of Issa Rae's HBO hit fool you. While she created and stars in a show called Insecure, the 33-year-old actress is anything but. "Confidence comes from knowing your sh-t is good," she tells Cosmopolitan for its July 2018 issue. "I'm for sure confident when it comes to work and trying to fulfill my dreams. Socially, the confidence has teetered, but that's growing as I'm coming into who I am.
Iron Ocean Productions, the production company of Jessica Biel and Michelle Purple, has inked a two-year first-look deal with Paramount Television Studios. The deal covers scripted television projects. Iron Ocean’s previous shows include the critically-acclaimed drama “The Sinner” for USA Network, in which Biel also starred in the show’s first season.
Gridiron Football achieved two firsts in Arizona during the past weekend: first, a coaches conference and showcase only for females flag football; and second, a youth football competition for flag and 7v7 teams. Among the noteworthy figures that joined them were Trey McBride, starting tight end for the Arizona Cardinals, Lyndsey Fry, who won a… ncG1vNJzZmidkae5urnEpqaroZGhwG%2BvzqZmrqSRYremrc1mpJ6sqqGys3nOm6CtrZGnxm6vx56poquYmrFuscOumpqsn6d6orrDZpqorZ6pxm6vzqakoqujnryvsdFmn5qrXZm2prCO
It all began in 1989’s Say Anything, when Lloyd Dobler demonstrated the depth of his feelings by lifting a boom box toward the sky. That bold move was hardly the first over-the-top demonstration of love in a rom-com, but it was a defining one for the genre in the contemporary era. When Lloyd blasted a Peter Gabriel song in the direction of Diane Court’s window, giving Generation X its version of a Romeo just beyond Juliet’s balcony, Say Anything permanently established the power of the grand romantic gesture in the modern rom-com.
The French used to call them pommes d'amour: apples of love. The Italians named them pomi d'oro: golden apples. Maybe they were thinking of the golden apples of the Hesperides, given by Gaia, the Earth mother, to Hera, queen of the gods, and grown in a garden at the edge of the sunset. After all, tomatoes came from the mystical West, where the Aztecs cultivated them and ate them mixed with chiles.