TV Series Collected Quotes & .Gifs: Dear White People
In this post, you’ll find collected quotes, and .gifs, from the Netflix program: Dear White People.
In this post, you’ll find collected quotes, and .gifs, from the Netflix program: Dear White People.
Best Of Dream big, they say. Shoot for the stars. Then they lock us away for 12 years and tell us where to sit, when to pee, and what to think. […] Then we turn 18 and even though we’ve never had an original thought, we have to make the most important decision of our…
Um, I’m starting to think Netflix isn’t that good at making season finales that can actually feel like a period or exclamation mark rather than an ellipsis.
Coco once more is the focus and, unlike Lionel, we get to complete her storyline of going from insecure to some form of self-actualized.
In our 2nd Lionel episode, the focus is him truly getting to know Troy and how his journalism career is going.
Gabe gets his own episode and, like mostly every other character, it is all about his relationship with Sam.
When your victimhood is politicized and popularized, what time or ability does that give you to grieve? That is the question posed as Reggie deals with the aftermath of having a gun pointed at him.
Reggie found the perfect woman for him but she belongs to someone else, a white guy, and that hurts his ego so much it clouds everything else.
Colorism is one of the main focuses of Coco’s episode and damn if the display of it may not bring you to tears.
Troy takes center stage and his storyline is sans a white girl and plus Nia Long.
The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.