The Act: Season 1, Episode 7 “Bonnie & Clyde” – Recap, Review (with Spoilers)
Joey King shows herself as one of the most talented young actresses out there as Gypsy Rose bounces from manipulative to fool.
Amari is the founder and head writer of Wherever-I-Look.com and has been reviewing media since 2010. He approaches each production with hope, rooting for every story to succeed, and believes criticism should come from unmet potential, while praise is reserved for work that meets or exceeds expectations.
Joey King shows herself as one of the most talented young actresses out there as Gypsy Rose bounces from manipulative to fool.
On top of a lot of fun sex talk, The Bold Type gets real about consent and women being pressured into sex – with Alex being the one focused on.
The team gets framed for a robbery and it leads to not only some of the best writing in a while, but one person’s job on the line.
In preparation for the full-length Netflix release, we checked out the See You Yesterday short available on HBO until May 1st.
Natasha finds herself stalked by Daniel, yeah it’s one of those books, but he might just be growing on her.
The reunions continue as Jamie reunited with friends, families, and former foes before the white walkers attack.
Kevin and Brandon FINALLY reconnect as Ronnie is hoping he can get out thanks to Detective Cruz rushing to close Coogie’s case.
Murphy is facing one of the toughest challenges of her life – being someone’s girlfriend. As Darnell tries to keep Nia happy.
His Father’s Voice is the rare ode to the influence a father’s love has on a person, as well as the richness of Indian culture.
One of two things comes from Someone Great: Wanting to call your best friends and say you love them, or wishing you have best friends you could call.