if you think you know more about a character than the author you’re wrong.
unless it’s glee
unless it’s glee.
if you think you know more about a character than the author you’re wrong.
unless it’s glee
unless it’s glee.
Does anyone have a link to the scene where Kurt confesses to throwing the Defying Gravity diva-off? I haven’t been watching Glee this season, but I’m kind of curious about that scene.
Can a gleek help a former gleek out here?
Is his battlecry “Come away, come away”?
#musicjokes #Pleasetellmesomeonegetsthis
WE HAVE THE BOX (scene).
Now that we’ve reached the end of the season and eagerly await the next step in Kurt and Blaine’s journey, The Box Scene presents an interesting, riveting, and moving perspective not only of the relationship of two boys in love, but also of a show and the viewers it serves.
It changes everything.
rachel bombs her nyada audition
kurt doesn’t get into nyada at all
(Source: mickmilkovich)
Just *why* was that last song not a montage.
Five minutes of Rachel wandering around New York with her suitcase was not necessary for the effect they wanted.
End the ensemble show with clips of the ensemble. Mike dancing with Tina watching, practicing for Chicago. Kurt and…
THIS IS ALL I WOULD HAVE ASKED FOR
You’ve managed to wrap up the storylines of even the most minor senior characters while completely neglecting even the slightest bit of closure about any aspect of the life of the one character that has made your show beloved, interesting, heck, the only thing that made it even watchable at times this season. You’ve completely failed at keeping any of the promises you made about the character this season, including treating his relationship with equal parity to straight relationships of the show. Way to ignore your best asset in favor the same cliche you pushed at the end of at least half the episodes this season. Super well done.
I’m SORRY, but you don’t give a major character a serious heartbreaking plot point and then just ignore it as though nothing more needs to be said about it. That’s disrespecting your characters, it’s disrespecting your audience, and it’s just all-around lazy writing. If you wanted that scene to have emotional impact, then GIVE it emotional impact! Show us how it affected him! Give us a real sorrowful gut-punch, or a cathartic acceptance. Don’t just throw that shit at us and then drop it!
You’re lucky I have all summer to try and find forgiveness towards you. I’m going to need it.
Yes, Kurt, being gay doesn’t necessarily mean you like to wear dresses
But damned if you wouldn’t have looked smokin’ hot in it.
(Additonally, yesterday was International Men Can Wear Dresses Too Day!)
(Source: osointricate)