Television
Tranna Wintour joins Melanie to talk coming of age with Carrie Bradshaw and how it feels to look back on some of her more problematic moments.
Melanie has a chat with Chad Anderson about season 2 episode 16, wherein Carrie dates an alcoholic. How realistic is the portrayal, and is it true that who we are in bed is who we are in life?
What does Stanford Blatch bring to the table? Find out as Melanie and Sean, or "Rugged Fox," discuss Sex and the City, gay best friends, and dreaming in pimento green.
Anjali Sandhu discusses twenty-something girls, going to the Hamptons of Manitoba, and why Charlotte York was the most relatable character on Sex and the City.
"Why didn't you say this to me when I was alive?"
When I was younger there was one thing that always bugged me about television shows. It seemed like every show had to go out of its way to preach some kind of a positive message. I found this to be especially intrusive in sitcoms.
Angie St. Mars and Melanie Dahling discuss bisexuality. Is that a problem? One might ask. Miranda Hobbes seems to think so. But we couldn't help but wonder why.
From good to bad, from bad to worse.
After taking the life of another hunter, Mary Winchester's next target is none other than Sheriff Jody Mills. Meanwhile in the bunker, time is running out for Sam, Dean and Tony after being sealed in by Ketch. At the rate they are going, they might have three days of air before they die.
Two comedians, with a side of single. Ashley and I discuss Season One Episode Three of Sex and the City entitled Bay of Married Pigs. Are single and married people in a cold war? And what's with Peter's penis anyway? Burning questions.
Mary Campbell: natural born killer.
After arriving at Mary's hotel, the Winchesters find it empty and their mother nowhere to be found. Moments later, Sam gets a call from Sheriff Jody telling him that Eileen Leahy was found dead in South Carolina after an apparent animal attack in an area that has never been known for it to occur.
Sex and the City is my ultimate Mr. Big. Our relationship has changed over the years, but the show is present in every season.
After discovering feminism, which is never a fun TV watching companion, I began to ask myself about the pop culture of my youth and the underlying messages therein.
In this preview episode, I introduce the show and why I started doing it.
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