#dailyreblogs

LIVE

I admire you. You hit dead end after dead end, but you still keep on searching. Doesn’t deter you. In fact, it only drives you to try harder.

You know, I always thought it was strange that you didn’t wanna become God. I mean, you’re responsible. You’re kind, compassionate. You’re the most wonderful father. I just can’t think of another angel that I would trust with making the world a better place for our children.

I don’t want you to worry about me anymore. You’ve come so far. What does that mean? It means that you have been beholden to me and my needs for far too long, and I’m sorry that I’ve always made it about me. Okay? Lucifer, this life, this family I found, I wouldn’t have any of it if it weren’t for you. Consider us even. After everything you’ve done for me? We’ll never be even.

 “We know who we are,” Page says. “People cling to these firm ideas [about gender] because it makes  “We know who we are,” Page says. “People cling to these firm ideas [about gender] because it makes  “We know who we are,” Page says. “People cling to these firm ideas [about gender] because it makes  “We know who we are,” Page says. “People cling to these firm ideas [about gender] because it makes

“We know who we are,” Page says. “People cling to these firm ideas [about gender] because it makes people feel safe. But if we could just celebrate all the wonderful complexities of people, the world would be such a better place.”

ELLIOT PAGE for Time Magazine // March 2021


Post link
Tran says the whole [Star Wars] experience felt like she “fell in love very publicly and then Tran says the whole [Star Wars] experience felt like she “fell in love very publicly and then Tran says the whole [Star Wars] experience felt like she “fell in love very publicly and then Tran says the whole [Star Wars] experience felt like she “fell in love very publicly and then

Tran says the whole [Star Wars] experience felt like she “fell in love very publicly and then very publicly had an embarrassingly horrible breakup.” She leaned on her tight-knit pre-fame circle of friends, including the members of her all-Asian American female improv troupe Number One Son, and went to therapy, where she learned, “If someone doesn’t understand me or my experience, it shouldn’t be my place to have to internalize their misogyny or racism or all of the above. Maybe they just don’t have the imagination to understand that there are different types of people living in the world.”

Kelly Marie Tran for The Hollywood Reporter // March, 2021


Post link
loading