Charlie Puth -- Meghan Trainor Makeout Was Real and Spectacular
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Meghan Trainor looked fabulous at the 2015 AMAs. Not only did she look amazing in her black gown, her manicure was so cool and glamorous! Thankfully, Meghans manicurist gave us instructions to get her exact look!
Meghan Trainor, 21, looked absolutely amazing at the 2015 American Music Awards. It was such a big night for the songstress as she won awards and had amazing performances. What caught our eye, though, was her glitzy and glamorous manicure. Luckily, her celeb manicurist dished on exactly what she did to get that color! Get Meghans look here.
Celebrity Manicurist, Michelle Saunders, did an unbelievable job on Meghans nails and luckily for us, she told us exactly how to get Meghans dazzling manicure, just in time for Mani Monday! Meghans mani was the perfect shade of metallic and sparkle, but wasnt too overboard. So we are dying to know what her manicurist did so that we can try it this upcoming holiday season!
Michelle described her inspiration behind the manicure she gave. The lyrics in one of Meghans hit songs inspired her glitzy nail look I found myself dreaming in silver and gold. I started with essies penny talk for the base and then dipped each nail tip in a glitter mixture of three essie luxeffects shades, including: a cut above, set in stones and rock at the top. Ultimately it made for the perfect stand-out, sparkly combination. Are you kidding me that is amazing!
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It is so much fun to layer on different color polishes to give you a cool effect, but we didnt know that four different polishes could give you such a cool finish!
We are obsessed with this manicure and cannot wait to try it for our next holiday party or vacation.
What do you guys think of Meghans mani? Do you love it as much as we do?
NASCAR Victory Lane: Jeff Gordon - Martinsville 2015
Jeff Gordon"s parents, Carol (left) and John Bickford, will have an emotional finale, too, as the driver retires.(Photo: Getty Images for NASCAR)
HOMESTEAD, Fla. Now it all makes sense. Wonder Boy, as Jeff Gordon was often called in his early NASCAR days, was a product of Wonder Bread.
Seem silly? Trace the steps.
Gordons mother, Carol, was no more than 12 years old, maybe 13, when her father, Pat, worked for the Continental Baking Company in Vallejo, Calif. Pat delivered bread Wonder Bread, mostly to various businesses in the community, most without fanfare, but one captured Carols attention.
The house phone would ring on a Saturday night, with something ofa food emergency on the line. Vallejo Speedway, which featured the racing of hard-top cars as they were still called in the 1950s, would be so crammed with race fans that it would run short on hot dogs and hamburgers, and it needed help. Buns, specifically.
Off Pat would go, Carol in tow.
Carol freely admits she wasnt much help because she was mesmerized by the action at what was billed as the fastest quarter mile in the West. The cars were loud, fast and while not necessarily sleek, they had a beauty about them, and she was smitten.
I loved going out there, she said, reminiscing this week.
Which sets the scene for what happens Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway (3 p.m., WTHR-13, NBCSN) when Jeff Gordon goes for another Sprint Cup Series championship in his final stock car race.
Years later, as a divorced mother of two young children, Carol agreed to a date with colleague John Bickford, the designer at the hospital supply company where they worked. On the side, John was a builder of race cars and a crew chief,and their first date was at that same Vallejo dirt track at Solano County Fairgrounds.
Carol had again found love in that noisy, dusty place.
A footnote to the date was that Carols children, Kim and Jeff, were in tow. Jeff doesnt remember it he wasnt yet 2 years old but there was something symbolic of his first night with John. They would have many, many, many more in racing in the years to come. John is the longtime president of Jeff Gordon Inc., responsible for everything involving Jeff, including the Italian-made inscribed gifts Jeff on Saturday gaveto every other driverin Sunday"sSprint Cup Series field.
The rest, of course, is motor sports history. John and Carol married, and soon after Jeff learned to walk, he learnedto ride a bike at Johns side. By age 4, Jeff was racing boys twice his age in BMX, and before long it was time for the quarter-midget racers John brought home for the kids.
Were talking the mid-1970s here, which speaks to the amount of time and energythe family has invested in racing.
Truly, all these years our lives have been planned around a race, or the race, or around people coming to town to see Jeff race, Carol said. People would stay with us when we moved to Indiana. They went to sprint car races with us. They scraped mud off the side of race cars.
She laughs.
When he came down here (to NASCAR), we didnt have to scrape mud anymore, she said.
Jeff has gone on to become one of the most successful race car drivers in U.S. history, winning four Cup championships and collecting93 race wins, including three Daytona 500s and a record five Brickyard 400s. He has won millions of dollars in prize money and collected countless more in salary and endorsements. His first year in Cup, when he wasnt yet 22 years old and still looked like a student attending Tri-West High School in Lizton, he was paid $1 million by Hendrick Motorsports.
Its fair to say Gordon has been stock car racings most recognizable face since Dale Earnhardt was killed in 2001. He has been admired and adored, and the cameras will be focused on him throughout the Ford 400. He starts fifth.
Carol knows how big this moment is she still goes to the grocery store after all, and his face adorns magazine covers at checkout lines.
I told him the other day,"Ive seen a lot of you lately," she said.
The move to Pittsboro
John has received so much of the credit for Jeffs success, and rightly so. He guided his stepson through the earliest days, all the way up to through that first Cup championship. But Jeffs sister gets some credit, too.
Kim graduated from high school in Vallejo just as Jeff was showing significant signs of becoming a legitimate race car driver. She chose to attend San Diego State, which obviously wasnt close to the familys home northeast of San Francisco.
For any suspicion that John pushed for a family move to the Midwest, where Jeff could race sprint cars at an earlier age, Carol said Kim had an influential voice. Kim could see the opportunity available to her kid brother of four years, and it wasnt like she was going to be home much anyway. Go for it, she suggested.
They say timing in life is everything, right? Carol said.
Jeff had raced one summer in Ohio, but because the family had racing friends in Indiana the Osbornes and Easts, to name a few the decision was made to make that their new base. Appropriately, John and Jeff were off racing that 1986 season when Carol flew to Indianapolis to select and purchasewhat became their new Hendricks County home southwestof Pittsboro.
As crazy as it sounds," Carol said of the transition,"it made sense."
As crazy as this sounds, Carol wasn"t even present for Jeff"s first big racing achievement. She was inSan Diego visiting Kim when Jeff won the 1989 Night Before the 500 midget race at Indianapolis Raceway Park. That race was a first for Jeff on so many levels his first time in a midget, his first pavement race, his first drive for car owner Rollie Helmling but it was also something of a first for Carol.
She didnt know anything about the Night Before the 500, ashort-track racingjeweltelevised by ESPN.
I was like, Oh, thats great, she said of the winning news delivered by telephone. He was excited, and I was excited for him, so that was enough.
So many more nights like that were to come, of course.
Buy Photo
Jeff Gordon with his wife, Ingrid Vandebosch, and their children Ella and Leo met with Ron Howard in 2012, the year he drove the pace car for the Brickyard 400 at The Indianapolis Motor Speedway.(Photo: Kristin Enzor/ For The Star)
It was about this time last year that Jeff decided he wanted to quit driving stockcars to spend more time with his wife, Ingrid, and their children, Ella and Leo.That set in motion a series of activities building toward Sundays green flag. One of those was knee replacement surgery for Carol; she had it after the Brickyard 400 in order not to miss hometown races at Sonoma Raceway (in June) and Indianapolis Motor Speedway (in July).
Jeffs retirement also meant the familys last official race at their latest home track, Charlotte Motor Speedway. They had watched so many of his Cup races overlooking Turn 1in a condominium owned by Ken Barbie, the man who owned the apparel company first outfitting the would-be champion.
Barbie had long vowed to sell the condominium when Jeff retired, so at last months race, the friends went through the necessary festivities, goodbyes included.
I cant imagine why I would go back, Carol said. Ill be watching (on TV), probably watching races forever, but I wont go. Why would I?
John has a reason, maybe several. For one, Jeffs 2016 retirement tour will require the attention of various business endeavors, so John will oversee them.John also has a nephew, 17-year-old James Bickford of Napa, Calif., who is a promising young race car driver, having won two races in NASCARs K&N Pro Series West series.
He looks really good, so Ill help him where I can, John said of James. Plus, I get a lot of calls from moms and dads who want to see their children do this.
But John acknowledges changes are coming for those who have been with Jeffall these years.
Its been a h**l of a trip, he said, exhaling. But the rides not over.
Follow Curt Cavin on Facebook and Twitter: @curtcavin
SNL Host Matthew McConaughey Tells Adele and Cecily a Quick Story
A weak monologue was followed by one of the seasons strongest hosting performances
Matthew McConaughey said in his opening monologue on Saturday Night Live that it had been 14 years since the last time he was on the show. This isnt true. He hosted in 2003, and the last time we checked, that was only 12 years ago. But that was about the only thing that McConaughey did wrong Saturday evening.
The cold open began with the old reliable Fox and Friends. Sure, its formulaic, but since were living in a news cycle that has forced us into election season way too early, its refreshing to see Taran Killam, Vanessa Bayer, and Bobby Moynihan skewer the extreme right. Best lines from the sketch included Bayers Elizabeth Hasselback angry about Black Friday: All Fridays matter! Also noteworthy was Jay Pharoahs Ben Carson: Im like a koala bear. On the outside I seem nice, but on the inside, Ive never held elective office.
McConaugheys monologue was a recapping of how he first came to utter the alright, alright, alright that has been his catchphrase since his screen debut in Dazed and Confused. He told the story without many laughs, but with the engagement of a guy that youre a few beers deep with at the bar. Not that funny, but it was entertaining just the same.
Also Read: "SNL" Pays Tribute to Paris After Deadly Terror Attacks (Video)
The first sketch after the monologue will be the one that everybody is passing around for the next week. It was a pre-taped vignette of a Thanksgiving meal where the different generations clashed in their political views and lifestyle choices, but just as things started to get really heated, a young girl pressed play on a boombox. As soon as Adeles Hello came through the speakers, everybody at the table became lost in the moment, singing, growing totally enraptured and slowly becoming Adele. Jay Pharoah for the win again as he held his painted nails to his face with his long, silky hair blowing in the sepia-toned wind.
Next up was Kenan Thompson leading a band at Charlies Blues Shack. McConaughey played an out-of-tune bluesman sitting in with a New Orleans house band whose blues dont go much deeper than having a sucky fantasy football team. The game was established early, and they did a good job heightening it, but they werent able to take it beyond soft laughs.
Cecily Strong set up the next sketch, leading a presentation about a company called Bio-Print, which figured out how to use a 3D printer to create a human man. She invited audience members to guess which of the three men onstage is not a real human. Without giving away too much, this sketch is full of some of the most quotable SNL lines since the 90s, with the character who may or may not be the 3D printing of a man saying things like youre making a sunglasses guy like me laugh hard from my face.
Also Read: Olivia Wilde"s Childhood Chris Farley Story Will Warm Your Heart (Video)
The highlight of the show was a pre-taped bit with J.J. Abrams introducing screen tests for the new Star Wars. Its an easy joke, and one SNL has done before, most magnificently with Kevin Spacey playing Christopher Walken reading for the part of Han Solo. This one was just as funny, with Cecily Strong killing it as Sophia Vergara and Aidy Bryant nailing a highly improbable audition from Wynona Judd. Famous cameos abounded, most notably Jon Hamm, saying hes reading for the part of Hamm Solo.
Adeles musical performance was as amazing as the world needs it to be right now, as evidenced from the first filmed sketch of the evening. At this point in the show, we were still hoping that shed also do a comedy cameo, as more than 11 million have already seen what she did with Graham Norton earlier this week.
Weekend Update focused mostly on American politicians hypocrisy for refusing to allow Syrian refugees into the States, especially timely given the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday. The best lines included Michael Che saying, my ancestors werent exactly immigrants. We were more like invited guests and Colin Jost saying, Do you know how easy it is to lie about being Christian? I do it every time I go home for Christmas. Che and Josts biggest asset is also their biggest downfall: They always seem like theyre performing primarily for each other. Cameos from Vanessa Bayer as an aspiring Update anchor and Kenan Thompson as David Ortiz helped minimize this though.
Also Read: Larry David Hasn"t Collected $5,000 Reward for Calling Donald Trump Racist on "SNL"
The game show medium is hit or miss on SNL, and this one was kind of a miss. It was a good premise; a game show called Should You Chime In On This? Again the focus was American ignorance, where participants gave their opinions on matters they have no knowledge about. Not even Kate McKinnon as Hillary Clinton could save this though.
Kate McKinnon dis indeed save the next sketch though. It was Bright Side of the Bed, where Strong and Taran Killam play married morning talk show hosts. McConaughey played Buster Little, a hirsute creole cook who tells jokes he doesnt even get. This bit is moderately funny, but Killams character cops too much of his persona from Dana Carveys Lyle the Effeminate Heterosexual. But it was McKinnons Ed Sheeran impersonation that tied this installment together.
Adeles second song was flawless. It really is great to be living in an age where a contemporary singer is still releasing her best material.
The show closed with one of the funnier moments. McConaughey played a character at a small town meeting who speaks out and gets hung up on what everybody else has that he doesnt have (a college education, shoes, a real hand etc.). His performance here almost made up for the fact that he didnt do a True Detective parody. Almost.
We joined current and former cast members, hosts and other Saturday Night Live mainstays for Sundays bonanza celebrating 40 years of the NBC sketch comedy show
"SNL 40": Dave Chappelle, Adam Sandler, Sarah Palin Reminisce Over Favorite Moments, Chris Farley
MADDEN 16 GAUNTLET MODE CHAMP | HIGHEST SCORE EVER | VS SEAHAWKS ALL MADDEN
The Arizona Cardinals went off script. As a result, they walked away from Sunday night"s showdown against the Seattle Seahawks with a 39-32 victory and a three-game lead in the NFC West.
It wasn"t supposed to go that way for the two-time defending NFC champions, especially after they battled back from an early 19-0 deficit and took the lead in the fourth quarter with two consecutive strip-sacks of Carson Palmer that led to touchdowns. The defense was flying around and creating turnovers, the "12s" in CenturyLink Field were roaring and everything was going according to plan.
Then Palmer, Andre Ellington and the Arizona offense punched back with two straight touchdown drives of their own to stake their claim as the best team in the division and perhaps the entire conference.
Palmer hit tight end Jermaine Gresham for a touchdown to take the lead in the final quarter, and Ellington sent the Seattle fans home with a 48-yard scamper on third down with less than two minutes remaining. Rich Eisen of NFL Network noted it was heartbreak as usual for Seahawks fans this season:
ESPN Stats & Info emphasized how the Cardinals are the one team that doesn"t seem to be intimidated by the venue or moment in the Pacific Northwest:
Despite the back-and-forth second half, the Cardinals controlled the early proceedings and jumped out to a 19-0 lead. While the offense did plenty of work in the opening two quarters, the defense established the initial momentum with a safety, as the NFL shared:
From there, Palmer hit Michael Floyd with two touchdown passes, one from 27 yards out and one from 35 yards out. The Arizona Cardinals passed along the first connection:
Bill Barnwell of ESPN highlighted theanomalous nature of the Seattle deficit:
The Seahawks bounced back with a touchdown late in the second quarter when fullback Will Tukuafu scored from a yard out. John Boyle of Seahawks.com reacted to the play:
The Cardinals added a field goal as time expired in the second quarter to take a 22-7 lead into the locker rooms, but the scariest moment of the first 30 minutes came when Arizona guard Mike Iupati was taken off the field in an ambulance.Sports Illustrateddescribed the development: "Iupati slammed his head into Kam Chancellor"s shoulder. Went down right away. Sending most positive thoughts for his recovery."
The Cardinals said the guard went to the hospital with a neck injury and had feeling in his extremities, while Tony Softli of Sports Radio 950 KJR in Seattle shared the scene:
The Seahawks went uptempo to start the second half and drove into the red zone with relative ease. However, the Cardinals forced a field goal to keep the lead at 22-10.
Seattle"s momentum came to a halt on its next possession when Russell Wilson overthrew an open Doug Baldwin and Arizona safety Tyrann Mathieu picked off the pass. The Cardinals took advantage with a field goal to open up a 25-10 advantage, and Matt Bowen of ESPN praised the defensive back who made it happen:
Interception or not, the Wilson-Baldwin duo was far from done. The two connected for a 32-yard touchdown on the ensuing drive to help cut the lead to 25-17.
Sports Illustratedanalyzed the drive:"Wilson had two clean pockets and two big pass plays on that drive. This is not a coincidence."
Gregg Bell of the News Tribunepointed to the unfortunate turn of events for the visiting Cardinals:
Seattle got the ball back and elected to go for a critical fourth down in Arizona territory. Tukuafu converted, but Cardinals coach Bruce Arians used his final challenge on the spot. The play stood, although Adam Green of ArizonaSports.com thought Arians had a case:
The Seahawks kept possession, but Arizona held strong after the conversion and forced a punt, taking the ball and the eight-point lead into the fourth quarter.
However, picking up that first down on the challenge allowed Seattle to pin Arizona back on its ensuing punt. Cliff Avril sacked Palmer and forced a fumble on the ensuing drive, and K.J. Wright scooped it up to set the Seahawks up at the 3-yard line.
Jayson Jenks of theSeattle Timesimplied it was business as usual for Avril:
Marshawn Lynch ran it in for a touchdown, but the Seahawks failed on the two-point conversion and still found themselves trailing 25-23. Gregg Rosenthal of NFL.com harkedback to the first half and Arizona"s failure to secure a significant lead before the stretch run:
Things continued to tumble downhill for Palmer and the Cardinals offense on the next possession. Wright sacked Palmer and forced another fumble, and Bobby Wagner ran it in for a touchdown. The Seahawks once again couldn"t connect on the two-point conversion, but they were suddenly ahead 29-25. The NFL shared the play:
Jenks highlighted the biggest issue for the Cardinals:
To Arizona"s credit, it marched down the field following the consecutive strip-sacks and finished an 83-yard drive with the 14-yard scoring strike from Palmer to Gresham. Just like that, the Cardinals held a 32-29 lead. The NFL passed along the most important throw of the night for the USC product, even though he tallied 363 passing yards and three scores:
Ian Furness of Sports Radio 950 KJR pointed to a crucial illegal-contact penalty on Wagner that kept the drive alive:
Arizona managed a defensive stop on the next possession and faced a 3rd-and-4 with just more than two minutes left. Rather than going for a first down with a short throw at the sticks, the Cardinals ran a draw with Ellington.All he did was take it 48 yards to the house to bust open the game at 39-29.
Doug Farrar ofSports Illustratednoted the play call set the stage for the dramatic score:
Art Thiel ofSportspress Northwestdid not paint a pretty picture for the Seahawks" immediate future:
Seattle added a field goal with 58 seconds remaining to trim the lead to 39-32, but it failed to recover the onside kick and left the stadium with a three-game deficit in the division and a stunning head-to-head loss against the team it is chasing.
What"s Next?
The Seahawks still haven"t been over .500 all season, and they are running out of time if they plan on making a playoff run down the stretch after reaching the Super Bowl two years in a row. The good news is that the schedule becomes more manageable with four more home games in the last seven, including winnable contests against the San Francisco 49ers and Cleveland Browns within the next five weeks.
The Seahawks also travel to the 2-7 Baltimore Ravens later in the season. The opportunities will be there, but this team is 4-5 and hasn"t looked anywhere near the dominant force it has been over the past few seasons.
As for the Cardinals, they are in the driver"s seat in the division at 7-2 and still have the rematch against Seattle at home in the final regular-season contest. However, Palmer and Co. face the undefeated Cincinnati Bengals next and still play the 7-2 Minnesota Vikings and 6-3 Green Bay Packers.
The Cardinals also have difficult road games against the St. Louis Rams and Philadelphia Eagles, which underscores why Sunday"s victory was critical in terms of creating breathing room in the playoff race. Even with a difficult slate, it would take a collapse at this point for Arizona to miss the postseason.
Postgame Reaction
There were a number of concerns from Seattles perspective after the game, including the slow start, the sheer number of penalties and the teams inability to get off the field when it mattered most.
Carroll summed up the start of the game in simple terms, per Liz Mathews of 710 ESPN Seattle: We did terrible in the first half.
To Seattles credit, it battled back, but the 14 penalties for 131 yards proved too much to overcome. Carroll said, "We didn"t play that game the way we wanted to because of all of the penalties, per the Seahawks.
Carroll at least made sure to point out that readiness was not an issue for his club, per Bob Condotta of the Seattle Times: Our guys were jacked. They were so fired up to play this game.
The Seahawks may have been fired up, but the defense appeared to lose its will in the final minutes when Arizona bled the clock away before Ellington busted loose for the decisive score. Part of the issue was the time of possession, which the Cardinals won 38:52 to 21:08.
Avril put it bluntly when asked about the defense being on the field for nearly 40 minutes, per Condotta: That sucked.
As for the Cardinals, they deserve plenty of praise for overcoming the emotional roller coaster of blowing their early lead. They came back and earned recognition from Arians, per Peter King of Sports Illustrated: Never been prouder of a group of guys, to weather the kind of storm they weathered.
The Ellington run was the biggest play of a back-and-forth contest, and Mathieu commented on it in the aftermath, per Kyle Odegard of AZCardinals.com: That play that Andre made? Amazing.
The play was amazing, but so was Arizonas ability to overcome a hostile crowd and beat the two-time defending NFC champions the way it did.
Solid chat today. Some coach talk. SomeFrank Beamertalk. An unscriptedM.C. Hammerappearance. Read a replay at the bottom of this post.
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Jessica Jones First Impressions VS. Grodd Returns to Flash! #SHRoundup
Marvels Jessica JonesEpisode 1.1 AKA Ladies NightCreated by Melissa RosenbergStarring Krysten Ritter, Mike Colter, Rachael Taylor, Carrie-Anne Moss, David TennantNetflixPremiere date: November 20, 2015
Marvels Jessica Jones starts off with a dramatic bang. Taking place in the same dark Manhattan of fellow Netflix seriesDaredevil that contrasts so heavily with the New York that Iron Man and the Avengers saved just a little while ago, the grit and overt noir feels more like something out of Christopher Nolans depiction of The Dark Knight. The difference here is that Raas Al Ghuls Detective is 59, female, and doesnt need a mask to intimidate the baddies.
The first episode, AKA Ladies Night, does some interesting things when it comes to its depiction of women. Jessica Jones takes place in a womans world. The first ten minutes of the show is bereft of male-speaking roles. The next five introduces a father trying in vain to cope with his daughters missing status by attempting to fix a door, while his wife, deals with the business. The next male character you meet is likewise neutered: hes a video artist. Number 3 is a pathetically portrayed Alpha Male contrast that with the title super heroine in Krysten Ritter, a woman running the board room in Carrie-Anne Moss top-rate lawyer, and the missing females mother, whos clearly running things at home. This is a wholly different paradigm for the Marvel Cinematic Universe that started off with the male chauvinist Tony Stark in Iron Man less than a decade ago. As comic book content goes, its a whole new bag.
On the surface, Jessica Jones is the love child of Buffy Summers and Veronica Mars. Shes a hard-headed, superpowered private eye with a calling and a mission. But theres more here. Ritters long played the outsider, the rebellious femme, the one who doesnt go along to get along, and in Jessica Jones, she brings the lessons from her earlier that thespian oeuvre to bare, while adding just enough vulnerability for a mainstream audience to find her human (enough) to bear. Its worth noting that this vulnerability doesnt come from some feminine mystique or general girl next door vibe. Its tied to Jones PTSD for an as yet uncovered trauma. Shes a superheroine and her vulnerability is literal, rather than figurative. Its her weakness.
As is important when it comes to comic book and other fiction that depicts the supernatural, theres good foundation built around her abilities, so when she uses them, youre more delighted than you are surprised. And thats good. It something that Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. could certainly learn from with its consistent Deus Ex Machina twists. Then again Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. is for kids and Jessica Jones is certainly not. Its smarter than the work Marvels distributing on ABC and though theres less in-your-face violence than something like Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., and its certainly more horrifying. Viewers will find themselves wholly disturbed when Jessica walks into a posh hotel room as part of an investigation and is confronted by a truly frightening scenario.
Its not all awesome though. The writers seemed to require an obligatory s*x scene in the pilot in order to garner viewers and proverbial water-cooler talk. The love scene, while free of nudity, is interracial, and its got some level of scandal based on its noisy vigor and innuendo about *breaking things* but it doesnt add to the episode at all, and how we arrive at the scene is, well
JESSICA: I dont flirt. I just say what I want.LUKE: And what do you want?[Cut to loud and somewhat raucous love scene]
Give me a break. That sort of laziness is what gives comic books a bad name in the mainstream.
Still, its far from exploitive. Jones is a small-business owner in the criminal justice system, and is the walking embodiment of noir, even if the character herself is too cool to participate in the genre because she is indie to the core. That independence is attractive, because so much of this show breaks away from the Marvel of the big screen. Like Daredevil before it, it provides deep focus on the needs of just a few characters lives. That focus drives intimacy, and that intimacy makes me want to crawl under a blanket and watch the rest of the season in one sitting. Geeks and mainstream viewers are gonna be compelled to do the same. And thats exactly what Netflix and Marvel want.