Smart, Funny, and Black (The Lituation 101 Tour) – Recap/ Review
Smart, Funny, and Black, the brainchild of multihyphenate Amanda Seales, has such appeal that it makes you wish there was a Black network that would make this into a staple series.
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.
Smart, Funny, and Black, the brainchild of multihyphenate Amanda Seales, has such appeal that it makes you wish there was a Black network that would make this into a staple series.
Outside of two moments in which the lead is sexually assaulted, and the protagonist being Black, The Darkest Minds is as generic as they come.
The combination of modern technology with classic characters makes Christopher Robin feel like a true Disney classic vs. exploiting nostalgia.
The woman who haunted Shio gets revealed, as does a little bit more information about Satou’s aunt.
A small glimpse into Zach’s childhood saves yet another asinine episode of Angels of Death.
Kind of sappy, with a little bit of humor, Like Father presents just enough to get in your feelings and be worth your time.
If you enjoy the humor of past Mila Kunis movies, and the antics Kate McKinnon are known for, prepare for that plus a high-quality action movie.
Rather than press forward to the Elven kingdom, we are introduced to the Lord of Faltra and the Imperial Knight Alicia.
The nuclear button gets tapped a few times and while it’s mostly by Vi, it isn’t like she wasn’t provoked.
You know how people go see Beyoncé shows and say they feel cleansed? For a much cheaper price, Chloe x Halle did that for those at their Bowery show in NYC.