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ORSON WELLES WAS A HOLLYWOOD ICON

“I passionately hate the idea of being with it; I think an artist has always to be out of step with his time.”

He was immense. He was impressive. He was tall and big. He was a genius.  Everything has been said and written about Orson Welles. You probably already know everything about him and have watched all of his films countless times. If you haven’t, watch his movies now: his filmography is only composed of great, intriguing, sometimes underrated films and some masterpieces. Honestly watch them. All of them. Not only Citizen Kane- which I hoped you already saw. Watch The Trial. Watch Mr. Arkadin. Watch Touch of Evil and The Lady From Shanghai. Watch Othello and Macbeth. Watch F For Fake. The Magnificent Ambersons, The Stranger… And be in awe. Then, watch all the films he starred in without being the director, because he was a wonderful actor even when directed by others. Start wit The Long, Hot Summer…
So, I am not going to tell you about Orson Welles. I am going to tell you what he means to me. And for lack of a better word, I’d say: everything. Orson Welles was a genius. Orson Welles is a genius. He convinced all of America extraterrestrials were invading our planet by reading fiction on the radio. His first film is unanimously considered the best film of all times. His stentorian voice gives me chills every time I hear it. His eloquence, his erudition, his guts amaze me. I wanted to grow up becoming Orson Welles. Now, I’m old enough to know I won’t. There can only be one Orson Welles and he lived already. And he lives on in his remarkable legacy and I guess, in every one who is crazy enough to want to make films. He is the reason I want to make films, he is the reason I believe there is a possibility to captivate audience with craftily arranged images and sound as beautifully as Literature does. He is the reason Cinema is Art. He made Cinema Art. I am in awe of him. I think this man deserved more recognition than he received. I wish he knew he has my eternal, unbound admiration. And that I’m but a drop in a ocean of gratitude for his talent, his body of work and his very being. 
Because Orson Welles was extraordinary. He was not big; he was huge. He was an individual who walked ahead of his time, called himself a progressive and influenced the world he lived in. With a camera. I miss him tremendously -even though I wasn’t born when he passed. He was what the French would call a “monstre sacré”, a sort of god among humans. He was a tremendous, enormous, immense human being. He still is. And I love him.
Happy Birthday Orson Welles!!
ORSON WELLES WAS A HOLLYWOOD ICON

“I passionately hate the idea of being with it; I think an artist has always to be out of step with his time.”

He was immense. He was impressive. He was tall and big. He was a genius.  Everything has been said and written about Orson Welles. You probably already know everything about him and have watched all of his films countless times. If you haven’t, watch his movies now: his filmography is only composed of great, intriguing, sometimes underrated films and some masterpieces. Honestly watch them. All of them. Not only Citizen Kane- which I hoped you already saw. Watch The Trial. Watch Mr. Arkadin. Watch Touch of Evil and The Lady From Shanghai. Watch Othello and Macbeth. Watch F For Fake. The Magnificent Ambersons, The Stranger… And be in awe. Then, watch all the films he starred in without being the director, because he was a wonderful actor even when directed by others. Start wit The Long, Hot Summer…
So, I am not going to tell you about Orson Welles. I am going to tell you what he means to me. And for lack of a better word, I’d say: everything. Orson Welles was a genius. Orson Welles is a genius. He convinced all of America extraterrestrials were invading our planet by reading fiction on the radio. His first film is unanimously considered the best film of all times. His stentorian voice gives me chills every time I hear it. His eloquence, his erudition, his guts amaze me. I wanted to grow up becoming Orson Welles. Now, I’m old enough to know I won’t. There can only be one Orson Welles and he lived already. And he lives on in his remarkable legacy and I guess, in every one who is crazy enough to want to make films. He is the reason I want to make films, he is the reason I believe there is a possibility to captivate audience with craftily arranged images and sound as beautifully as Literature does. He is the reason Cinema is Art. He made Cinema Art. I am in awe of him. I think this man deserved more recognition than he received. I wish he knew he has my eternal, unbound admiration. And that I’m but a drop in a ocean of gratitude for his talent, his body of work and his very being. 
Because Orson Welles was extraordinary. He was not big; he was huge. He was an individual who walked ahead of his time, called himself a progressive and influenced the world he lived in. With a camera. I miss him tremendously -even though I wasn’t born when he passed. He was what the French would call a “monstre sacré”, a sort of god among humans. He was a tremendous, enormous, immense human being. He still is. And I love him.
Happy Birthday Orson Welles!!
ORSON WELLES WAS A HOLLYWOOD ICON

“I passionately hate the idea of being with it; I think an artist has always to be out of step with his time.”

He was immense. He was impressive. He was tall and big. He was a genius.  Everything has been said and written about Orson Welles. You probably already know everything about him and have watched all of his films countless times. If you haven’t, watch his movies now: his filmography is only composed of great, intriguing, sometimes underrated films and some masterpieces. Honestly watch them. All of them. Not only Citizen Kane- which I hoped you already saw. Watch The Trial. Watch Mr. Arkadin. Watch Touch of Evil and The Lady From Shanghai. Watch Othello and Macbeth. Watch F For Fake. The Magnificent Ambersons, The Stranger… And be in awe. Then, watch all the films he starred in without being the director, because he was a wonderful actor even when directed by others. Start wit The Long, Hot Summer…
So, I am not going to tell you about Orson Welles. I am going to tell you what he means to me. And for lack of a better word, I’d say: everything. Orson Welles was a genius. Orson Welles is a genius. He convinced all of America extraterrestrials were invading our planet by reading fiction on the radio. His first film is unanimously considered the best film of all times. His stentorian voice gives me chills every time I hear it. His eloquence, his erudition, his guts amaze me. I wanted to grow up becoming Orson Welles. Now, I’m old enough to know I won’t. There can only be one Orson Welles and he lived already. And he lives on in his remarkable legacy and I guess, in every one who is crazy enough to want to make films. He is the reason I want to make films, he is the reason I believe there is a possibility to captivate audience with craftily arranged images and sound as beautifully as Literature does. He is the reason Cinema is Art. He made Cinema Art. I am in awe of him. I think this man deserved more recognition than he received. I wish he knew he has my eternal, unbound admiration. And that I’m but a drop in a ocean of gratitude for his talent, his body of work and his very being. 
Because Orson Welles was extraordinary. He was not big; he was huge. He was an individual who walked ahead of his time, called himself a progressive and influenced the world he lived in. With a camera. I miss him tremendously -even though I wasn’t born when he passed. He was what the French would call a “monstre sacré”, a sort of god among humans. He was a tremendous, enormous, immense human being. He still is. And I love him.
Happy Birthday Orson Welles!!
ORSON WELLES WAS A HOLLYWOOD ICON

“I passionately hate the idea of being with it; I think an artist has always to be out of step with his time.”

He was immense. He was impressive. He was tall and big. He was a genius.  Everything has been said and written about Orson Welles. You probably already know everything about him and have watched all of his films countless times. If you haven’t, watch his movies now: his filmography is only composed of great, intriguing, sometimes underrated films and some masterpieces. Honestly watch them. All of them. Not only Citizen Kane- which I hoped you already saw. Watch The Trial. Watch Mr. Arkadin. Watch Touch of Evil and The Lady From Shanghai. Watch Othello and Macbeth. Watch F For Fake. The Magnificent Ambersons, The Stranger… And be in awe. Then, watch all the films he starred in without being the director, because he was a wonderful actor even when directed by others. Start wit The Long, Hot Summer…
So, I am not going to tell you about Orson Welles. I am going to tell you what he means to me. And for lack of a better word, I’d say: everything. Orson Welles was a genius. Orson Welles is a genius. He convinced all of America extraterrestrials were invading our planet by reading fiction on the radio. His first film is unanimously considered the best film of all times. His stentorian voice gives me chills every time I hear it. His eloquence, his erudition, his guts amaze me. I wanted to grow up becoming Orson Welles. Now, I’m old enough to know I won’t. There can only be one Orson Welles and he lived already. And he lives on in his remarkable legacy and I guess, in every one who is crazy enough to want to make films. He is the reason I want to make films, he is the reason I believe there is a possibility to captivate audience with craftily arranged images and sound as beautifully as Literature does. He is the reason Cinema is Art. He made Cinema Art. I am in awe of him. I think this man deserved more recognition than he received. I wish he knew he has my eternal, unbound admiration. And that I’m but a drop in a ocean of gratitude for his talent, his body of work and his very being. 
Because Orson Welles was extraordinary. He was not big; he was huge. He was an individual who walked ahead of his time, called himself a progressive and influenced the world he lived in. With a camera. I miss him tremendously -even though I wasn’t born when he passed. He was what the French would call a “monstre sacré”, a sort of god among humans. He was a tremendous, enormous, immense human being. He still is. And I love him.
Happy Birthday Orson Welles!!
ORSON WELLES WAS A HOLLYWOOD ICON

“I passionately hate the idea of being with it; I think an artist has always to be out of step with his time.”

He was immense. He was impressive. He was tall and big. He was a genius.  Everything has been said and written about Orson Welles. You probably already know everything about him and have watched all of his films countless times. If you haven’t, watch his movies now: his filmography is only composed of great, intriguing, sometimes underrated films and some masterpieces. Honestly watch them. All of them. Not only Citizen Kane- which I hoped you already saw. Watch The Trial. Watch Mr. Arkadin. Watch Touch of Evil and The Lady From Shanghai. Watch Othello and Macbeth. Watch F For Fake. The Magnificent Ambersons, The Stranger… And be in awe. Then, watch all the films he starred in without being the director, because he was a wonderful actor even when directed by others. Start wit The Long, Hot Summer…
So, I am not going to tell you about Orson Welles. I am going to tell you what he means to me. And for lack of a better word, I’d say: everything. Orson Welles was a genius. Orson Welles is a genius. He convinced all of America extraterrestrials were invading our planet by reading fiction on the radio. His first film is unanimously considered the best film of all times. His stentorian voice gives me chills every time I hear it. His eloquence, his erudition, his guts amaze me. I wanted to grow up becoming Orson Welles. Now, I’m old enough to know I won’t. There can only be one Orson Welles and he lived already. And he lives on in his remarkable legacy and I guess, in every one who is crazy enough to want to make films. He is the reason I want to make films, he is the reason I believe there is a possibility to captivate audience with craftily arranged images and sound as beautifully as Literature does. He is the reason Cinema is Art. He made Cinema Art. I am in awe of him. I think this man deserved more recognition than he received. I wish he knew he has my eternal, unbound admiration. And that I’m but a drop in a ocean of gratitude for his talent, his body of work and his very being. 
Because Orson Welles was extraordinary. He was not big; he was huge. He was an individual who walked ahead of his time, called himself a progressive and influenced the world he lived in. With a camera. I miss him tremendously -even though I wasn’t born when he passed. He was what the French would call a “monstre sacré”, a sort of god among humans. He was a tremendous, enormous, immense human being. He still is. And I love him.
Happy Birthday Orson Welles!!
ORSON WELLES WAS A HOLLYWOOD ICON

“I passionately hate the idea of being with it; I think an artist has always to be out of step with his time.”

He was immense. He was impressive. He was tall and big. He was a genius.  Everything has been said and written about Orson Welles. You probably already know everything about him and have watched all of his films countless times. If you haven’t, watch his movies now: his filmography is only composed of great, intriguing, sometimes underrated films and some masterpieces. Honestly watch them. All of them. Not only Citizen Kane- which I hoped you already saw. Watch The Trial. Watch Mr. Arkadin. Watch Touch of Evil and The Lady From Shanghai. Watch Othello and Macbeth. Watch F For Fake. The Magnificent Ambersons, The Stranger… And be in awe. Then, watch all the films he starred in without being the director, because he was a wonderful actor even when directed by others. Start wit The Long, Hot Summer…
So, I am not going to tell you about Orson Welles. I am going to tell you what he means to me. And for lack of a better word, I’d say: everything. Orson Welles was a genius. Orson Welles is a genius. He convinced all of America extraterrestrials were invading our planet by reading fiction on the radio. His first film is unanimously considered the best film of all times. His stentorian voice gives me chills every time I hear it. His eloquence, his erudition, his guts amaze me. I wanted to grow up becoming Orson Welles. Now, I’m old enough to know I won’t. There can only be one Orson Welles and he lived already. And he lives on in his remarkable legacy and I guess, in every one who is crazy enough to want to make films. He is the reason I want to make films, he is the reason I believe there is a possibility to captivate audience with craftily arranged images and sound as beautifully as Literature does. He is the reason Cinema is Art. He made Cinema Art. I am in awe of him. I think this man deserved more recognition than he received. I wish he knew he has my eternal, unbound admiration. And that I’m but a drop in a ocean of gratitude for his talent, his body of work and his very being. 
Because Orson Welles was extraordinary. He was not big; he was huge. He was an individual who walked ahead of his time, called himself a progressive and influenced the world he lived in. With a camera. I miss him tremendously -even though I wasn’t born when he passed. He was what the French would call a “monstre sacré”, a sort of god among humans. He was a tremendous, enormous, immense human being. He still is. And I love him.
Happy Birthday Orson Welles!!
ORSON WELLES WAS A HOLLYWOOD ICON

“I passionately hate the idea of being with it; I think an artist has always to be out of step with his time.”

He was immense. He was impressive. He was tall and big. He was a genius.  Everything has been said and written about Orson Welles. You probably already know everything about him and have watched all of his films countless times. If you haven’t, watch his movies now: his filmography is only composed of great, intriguing, sometimes underrated films and some masterpieces. Honestly watch them. All of them. Not only Citizen Kane- which I hoped you already saw. Watch The Trial. Watch Mr. Arkadin. Watch Touch of Evil and The Lady From Shanghai. Watch Othello and Macbeth. Watch F For Fake. The Magnificent Ambersons, The Stranger… And be in awe. Then, watch all the films he starred in without being the director, because he was a wonderful actor even when directed by others. Start wit The Long, Hot Summer…
So, I am not going to tell you about Orson Welles. I am going to tell you what he means to me. And for lack of a better word, I’d say: everything. Orson Welles was a genius. Orson Welles is a genius. He convinced all of America extraterrestrials were invading our planet by reading fiction on the radio. His first film is unanimously considered the best film of all times. His stentorian voice gives me chills every time I hear it. His eloquence, his erudition, his guts amaze me. I wanted to grow up becoming Orson Welles. Now, I’m old enough to know I won’t. There can only be one Orson Welles and he lived already. And he lives on in his remarkable legacy and I guess, in every one who is crazy enough to want to make films. He is the reason I want to make films, he is the reason I believe there is a possibility to captivate audience with craftily arranged images and sound as beautifully as Literature does. He is the reason Cinema is Art. He made Cinema Art. I am in awe of him. I think this man deserved more recognition than he received. I wish he knew he has my eternal, unbound admiration. And that I’m but a drop in a ocean of gratitude for his talent, his body of work and his very being. 
Because Orson Welles was extraordinary. He was not big; he was huge. He was an individual who walked ahead of his time, called himself a progressive and influenced the world he lived in. With a camera. I miss him tremendously -even though I wasn’t born when he passed. He was what the French would call a “monstre sacré”, a sort of god among humans. He was a tremendous, enormous, immense human being. He still is. And I love him.
Happy Birthday Orson Welles!!

ORSON WELLES WAS A HOLLYWOOD ICON

I passionately hate the idea of being with it; I think an artist has always to be out of step with his time.”

He was immense. He was impressive. He was tall and big. He was a genius.  Everything has been said and written about Orson Welles. You probably already know everything about him and have watched all of his films countless times. If you haven’t, watch his movies now: his filmography is only composed of great, intriguing, sometimes underrated films and some masterpieces. Honestly watch them. All of them. Not only Citizen Kane- which I hoped you already saw. Watch The Trial. Watch Mr. Arkadin. Watch Touch of Evil and The Lady From Shanghai. Watch Othello and Macbeth. Watch F For Fake. The Magnificent Ambersons, The Stranger… And be in awe. Then, watch all the films he starred in without being the director, because he was a wonderful actor even when directed by others. Start wit The Long, Hot Summer

So, I am not going to tell you about Orson Welles. I am going to tell you what he means to me. And for lack of a better word, I’d say: everything. Orson Welles was a genius. Orson Welles is a genius. He convinced all of America extraterrestrials were invading our planet by reading fiction on the radio. His first film is unanimously considered the best film of all times. His stentorian voice gives me chills every time I hear it. His eloquence, his erudition, his guts amaze me. I wanted to grow up becoming Orson Welles. Now, I’m old enough to know I won’t. There can only be one Orson Welles and he lived already. And he lives on in his remarkable legacy and I guess, in every one who is crazy enough to want to make films. He is the reason I want to make films, he is the reason I believe there is a possibility to captivate audience with craftily arranged images and sound as beautifully as Literature does. He is the reason Cinema is Art. He made Cinema Art. I am in awe of him. I think this man deserved more recognition than he received. I wish he knew he has my eternal, unbound admiration. And that I’m but a drop in a ocean of gratitude for his talent, his body of work and his very being. 

Because Orson Welles was extraordinary. He was not big; he was huge. He was an individual who walked ahead of his time, called himself a progressive and influenced the world he lived in. With a camera. I miss him tremendously -even though I wasn’t born when he passed. He was what the French would call a “monstre sacré”, a sort of god among humans. He was a tremendous, enormous, immense human being. He still is. And I love him.

Happy Birthday Orson Welles!!

My Most Beautiful Queens of Comedy 2013: And the Queen is…
1. Lizzy Caplan, 30

“I think I have a good sense of humor about things. I enjoy making people laugh, and being made to laugh even more. I think that’s sort of harder to do, though — I’ve been told I’m a hard laugh. I guess ever since I was a little kid, I was considered the funnier kid in the family – but neither one of my siblings ever gave a shit about that.”

So, Lizzy is my most beautiful this year, which will surprise none of you given how much I gush over my wife. It wasn’t easy calling it between her and Kat (second wife) though. I just remembered that this is about being my Queen of Comedy. And Lizzy, ah Lizzy was in Party Down. And in The Class. And in Bachelorette. And in Related. And in New Girl. And in Mean Girls. And in all those Funny or Die videos. The woman has made me laugh constantly since 2004. And she is gorgeous. And witty. And hot. 
My Most Beautiful Queens of Comedy 2013: And the Queen is…
1. Lizzy Caplan, 30

“I think I have a good sense of humor about things. I enjoy making people laugh, and being made to laugh even more. I think that’s sort of harder to do, though — I’ve been told I’m a hard laugh. I guess ever since I was a little kid, I was considered the funnier kid in the family – but neither one of my siblings ever gave a shit about that.”

So, Lizzy is my most beautiful this year, which will surprise none of you given how much I gush over my wife. It wasn’t easy calling it between her and Kat (second wife) though. I just remembered that this is about being my Queen of Comedy. And Lizzy, ah Lizzy was in Party Down. And in The Class. And in Bachelorette. And in Related. And in New Girl. And in Mean Girls. And in all those Funny or Die videos. The woman has made me laugh constantly since 2004. And she is gorgeous. And witty. And hot. 
My Most Beautiful Queens of Comedy 2013: And the Queen is…
1. Lizzy Caplan, 30

“I think I have a good sense of humor about things. I enjoy making people laugh, and being made to laugh even more. I think that’s sort of harder to do, though — I’ve been told I’m a hard laugh. I guess ever since I was a little kid, I was considered the funnier kid in the family – but neither one of my siblings ever gave a shit about that.”

So, Lizzy is my most beautiful this year, which will surprise none of you given how much I gush over my wife. It wasn’t easy calling it between her and Kat (second wife) though. I just remembered that this is about being my Queen of Comedy. And Lizzy, ah Lizzy was in Party Down. And in The Class. And in Bachelorette. And in Related. And in New Girl. And in Mean Girls. And in all those Funny or Die videos. The woman has made me laugh constantly since 2004. And she is gorgeous. And witty. And hot. 

My Most Beautiful Queens of Comedy 2013: And the Queen is…

1. Lizzy Caplan, 30

“I think I have a good sense of humor about things. I enjoy making people laugh, and being made to laugh even more. I think that’s sort of harder to do, though — I’ve been told I’m a hard laugh. I guess ever since I was a little kid, I was considered the funnier kid in the family – but neither one of my siblings ever gave a shit about that.”


So, Lizzy is my most beautiful this year, which will surprise none of you given how much I gush over my wife. It wasn’t easy calling it between her and Kat (second wife) though. I just remembered that this is about being my Queen of Comedy. And Lizzy, ah Lizzy was in Party Down. And in The Class. And in Bachelorette. And in Related. And in New Girl. And in Mean Girls. And in all those Funny or Die videos. The woman has made me laugh constantly since 2004. And she is gorgeous. And witty. And hot. 

My Most Beautiful Queens of Comedy 2013

2. Kat Dennings, 26

“[Max is] the girl who can hang with dudes and hold her own but not have to be sexy. I hate that. I’ve always hated that, when I read scripts about, like, how a girl uses being a girl to get her way, or she’s trying to be sexy for men. ‘Cause all women are sexy—the end. And you can use that power if you want to, but there’s a certain even more powerful element to not using it; just leading with other things—how smart you are, how funny you are. So I think that’s very empowering for women, and I think it’s really good for men to see a girl like that on TV.”

And that’s what makes her incredibly sexy —she doesn’t try, she’s just being herself -and exudes confidence. And confidence is sexy.

Girl (Crush) of the Month: Troian Bellisario

image

I watch Pretty Little Liars, and I love it! Here, I said it. To me, Rosewood is sort of like the Upper East Side (Gossip Girl’s, that is) minus all the wealth and plus all the murders. A place I go to enjoy pure entertainment, channel my inner Jessica Fletcher trying to guess who the fuck is A -right now I’m more confused than ever- and forget the unlikeliness that all those secrets, gory murders and downright awful parents (I love Ella, Ashley, Virginia and Pam but how come none of them realized their daughters were and still are bullied by a psychopath?). Besides, so many murders in a town as tiny as Cabot Cove also was unlikely and I still look up to J. B. Fletcher when it comes to sleuthing and happily watch reruns! So far, PPL hasn’t screwed up the way GG did mid-season 4 and all season 5. And I love Blake Lively, she was last year’s March Girl Crush and I think she has a lot of potential as an actress, but Gossip Girl didn’t always showcase it (looking at you awful season 5). And God knows how much I loved S. I think it is different with Pretty Little Liars. And as I watched the second half of the season this month (I was too busy before), I realized how talented Troian Bellisario is and how wide the range of her acting is.

I don’t know much of her really. And I don’t know much of her acting besides PPL. I only vaguely remember she played McGee’s sister Sarah on NCIS (her dad’s show); and learned very recently that she thus actually was Sean Murray’s (half-)sister. But as Spencer Hastings, she is quite fine and she amazes me! I thought she played her character’s meltdown very well and with a surprising but welcome subtlety. And it’s not easy, playing a meltdown: over-the-top will antagonize the audience that will only see the exaggeration. She hit the all right notes to me and it made me more invested in her character than ever. I can’t wait to see what the June season 4 premiere will reserve and I look forward to see her in a feature film. I can tell she has a great career ahead of her. I’ll wait trying to find a way to watch her many, many shorts and with my guilty pleasure that Pretty Little Liars is.

Also, if I may add, I think she’s very beautiful. She has what people often describe as “aristocratic” features, enhanced by the mystery of her gorgeous name! Troian Bellisario: it’s basically music to your ears.

My Most Beautiful Queens of Comedy 2013

4. Tina Fey, 42

Somewhere around the fifth or seventh grade I figured out that I could ingratiate myself to people by making them laugh. Essentially, I was just trying to make them like me. But after a while it became part of my identity.”

My Most Beautiful Queens of Comedy 2013

9. Lisa Kudrow, 49

“I started watching reality shows and being horrified at people signing up to be humiliated in front of the entire country. I saw one show, The Amazing Race, in which people were eating spicy soup and vomiting and crying. Why would you do that? Also, I was fascinated by these actors and actresses who would sign up to be followed around by cameras in their life. You become a celebrity, not because of your work or what you do, but because you have no privacy. I’ve been careful to keep my life separate because it’s important to me to have privacy and for my life not to be a marketing device for a movie or a TV show. It’s worth more than that. I’m worth more than that.

So true.

My Most Beautiful Queens of Comedy 2013

11. Alison Brie, 30

“O-o-o-kay here we go

We’re talkin ‘bout Community

And you’re gonna laugh so much

You won’t have immunity

You’re catching a comedy cold

‘Cause we’re bold

If you ain’t sold

Well now you’ve been told

About Troy and Abed

Gettin inside your head

Taking sheets from your bed

To make a fort

If you don’t watch the show

I’m takin you to court

My name is Ally Brie

I’m on Community

Thursday nights on NBC!”

Freestyle rapping on Jimmy Fallon

My Most Beautiful Queens of Comedy 2013

12. Ellen Degeneres, 55

Most comedy is based on getting a laugh at somebody else’s expense. And I find that that’s just a form of bullying in a major way. So I want to be an example that you can be funny and be kind, and make people laugh without hurting somebody else’s feelings.”


This is why I love her!

My Most Beautiful Queens of Comedy 2013

16. Whitney Cummings, 30

I have girlfriends who will text message naked photos of themselves to their man. Which, I guess the whole point of that is, to be like, ‘Here’s what’s waiting for you at home, big boy.’ If I was to do a ‘here’s what’s waiting for you at home’ photo shoot, I would take some pictures of the frigging dishes, the bills right now. My vagina’s not waiting for you at home at all.”

Preach gurl, preach!!!

My Most Beautiful Queens of Comedy 2013
17. Jane Lynch, 52

“Making people laugh is a really fabulous thing because it means you’re getting deep inside somebody, into their psyche, and their ability to look at themselves.”
Zoom Info
Camera
Nikon D3
ISO
500
Aperture
f/8
Exposure
1/250th
Focal Length
300mm

My Most Beautiful Queens of Comedy 2013

17. Jane Lynch, 52

Making people laugh is a really fabulous thing because it means you’re getting deep inside somebody, into their psyche, and their ability to look at themselves.”

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