Tag Archives: Dillon

Dillon Brooks DID HIS JOB aggravating Donovan Mitchell! – Ohm Youngmisuk | That’s OD – ESPN

  1. Dillon Brooks DID HIS JOB aggravating Donovan Mitchell! – Ohm Youngmisuk | That’s OD ESPN
  2. Dillon Brooks suspended, Donovan Mitchell fined $20K after brawl in Cavaliers win over Grizzlies Yahoo Sports
  3. NBA suspends Grizzlies’ Dillon Brooks one game, fines Cavaliers’ Donovan Mitchell for brawl Fox News
  4. Donovan Mitchell says NBA ‘script’ has been crazy lately in light of fights and Kyrie Irving trade drama Cavaliers Nation
  5. NBA hands out punishment for Dillon Brooks-Donovan Mitchell brawl New York Post
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Melinda Dillon, Who Appeared in ‘A Christmas Story,‘ ‘Close Encounters of the Third Kind,’ Dies at 83 – Variety

  1. Melinda Dillon, Who Appeared in ‘A Christmas Story,‘ ‘Close Encounters of the Third Kind,’ Dies at 83 Variety
  2. Melinda Dillon, ‘Close Encounters,’ ‘A Christmas Story’ star, dead at 83 New York Post
  3. Melinda Dillon, Actress in ‘Close Encounters of the Third Kind’ and ‘A Christmas Story,’ Dies at 83 Hollywood Reporter
  4. Oscar nominee Melinda Dillon has passed away at 83 after a legendary career in Hollywood Daily Mail
  5. Who was Melinda Dillon’s ex-husband Richard Libertini?… The US Sun
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Donovan Mitchell rips ‘dirty’ Dillon Brooks after scuffle, calls for league punishment – cleveland.com

  1. Donovan Mitchell rips ‘dirty’ Dillon Brooks after scuffle, calls for league punishment cleveland.com
  2. Cavs’ Mitchell, Grizzlies’ Brooks ejected after scuffle ESPN
  3. Donovan Mitchell, Dillon Brooks ejected after brawl breaks out in Cavaliers win over Grizzlies Yahoo Sports
  4. Grizzlies vs. Cavaliers line, picks: Advanced computer NBA model releases selections for Thursday matchup – SportsLine.com SportsLine
  5. Social Media Buzz: NBA world reacts to Dillon Brooks’ dirty play vs. Donovan Mitchell Yahoo Sports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Los Angeles Lakers-Memphis Grizzlies courtside incident involved Shannon Sharpe, Tee Morant, Dillon Brooks

Shannon Sharpe and the Memphis Grizzlies’ Ja Morant and Dillon Brooks were involved in an apparent courtside incident at Friday evening’s game in Los Angeles.

Sharpe, the co-host of Fox Sports’ “Skip and Shannon: Undisputed,” was sitting courtside at the game but was briefly escorted away by security officials after he allegedly yelled at the players and an incident ensued.

According to Memphis Commercial Appeal, the altercation happened after the final possession of the first half. Morant was walking off the court toward the locker room before he paused and turned toward Sharpe.

Teammate Steven Adams intervened as the two neared Sharpe.

LEBRON JAMES FACES JEERS FOR BIZARRE PHOTO EDIT

Shannon Sharpe reacts after he is restrained by security from Ja Morant #12 of the Memphis Grizzlies after a verbal altercation after the first half against the Los Angeles Lakers at Crypto.com Arena on January 20, 2023, in Los Angeles, California. 
(Harry How/Getty Images)

Video of the incident appears to show others quickly got involved, including Morant’s father Tee Morant, and a crowd of people formed in the area.

Security officials separated the group and the players left for the locker room before returning for the third quarter.

LEBRON JAMES PUSHES BACK ON CLAIM HIS PATIENCE IS ‘WANING,’ NOT FRUSTRATED WITH THE LAKERS

ESPN’s Dave McMenamin reported the incident may have initially started with Brooks, a small forward who was covering the Lakers’ LeBron James.

LOS ANGELES, CA – JANUARY 20: LeBron James #6 of the Los Angeles Lakers looks on during the game against the Memphis Grizzlies on January 20, 2023 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California. 
(Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images)

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JANUARY 20: LeBron James #6 of the Los Angeles Lakers drives to the basket on Dillon Brooks #24 of the Memphis Grizzlies during the first half at Crypto.com Arena on January 20, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. 
(Harry How/Getty Images)

Memphis Grizzlies forward Dillon Brooks (24) fouls Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (6) during the first half of an NBA basketball game in Los Angeles, Friday, Jan. 20, 2023. 
(AP Photo/Ashley Landis)

Sharpe joked that Brooks was “too small” to guard him.

“It started with Dillon Brooks. I said he was too small to guard LeBron,” Sharpe said to ESPN

“He said, ‘F—’ me and I said ‘F— you’ back,” he added. “He started to come at me and I said, ‘You don’t want these problems.’ Then Ja came out of nowhere.”

Sharpe continued: “He definitely didn’t want these problems. Then the dad came and he obviously didn’t want no problems. But I wanted anything they had. Don’t let these fools fool you now.”

“They do all that talking and jockeying and I ain’t about all that jockeying,” Sharpe added.

Sharpe, an NFL Hall of Famer who is widely regarded as one of the greatest tight ends of all time, stands over 6’2″ and is bigger than most of the athletes on the court.

Other videos of the incident appear to confirm that Brooks yelled at Sharpe, who yelled back and pointed at the ground in front of him as if to gesture for him to come over. 

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Sharpe and Tee Morant were both allowed to return to their seat for the third quarter.

The Grizzlies were up at halftime at the Crypto.com Arena, 53-49, but ultimately lost to the Lakers 122-121.

A surge by the Lakers in the fourth quarter and a key steal by the Lakers’ Dennis Schroder sealed the victory.

Morant had a team-high 22 points, Adams had 16, and Brooks had 9. Adams also had a game-high 17 rebounds.

On the other side of the court, James had 23 points and the Lakers were led in scoring by Russell Westbrook, who had 29.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JANUARY 20: Shannon Sharpe is retrained by security from Ja Morant #12 of the Memphis Grizzlies after a verbal altercation following the end of the first half against the Los Angeles Lakers at Crypto.com Arena on January 20, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. 
(Harry How/Getty Images)

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JANUARY 20: Ja Morant #12 of the Memphis Grizzlies reacts as he walks to the bench during the first half against the Los Angeles Lakers at Crypto.com Arena on January 20, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. 
(Harry How/Getty Images)

Memphis has a 31-14 record while the struggling Lakers are now 21-25. 

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No. 2 transfer OT Dillon Wade follows Montgomery to Auburn

One of Phillip Montgomery’s best players at Tulsa is joining him on the Plains. And it couldn’t be at a better position of need for Auburn.

Dillon Wade, who ranks as the No. 23 overall player in the 247Sports transfer portal player rankings and the No. 2 offensive tackle, has committed to Auburn. He has two years of eligibility remaining.

“I’ve heard the culture around here is really amazing, I like that,” Wade said. “And also, Auburn-Alabama. Ever since I was a kid Auburn’s been a school of interest and as I’ve gotten older, the opportunity came in hand and I feel like I could make something happen here.”

While Auburn had the connection between Montgomery and Wade to help get things going, it wasn’t an easy portal win. Wade also had offers from Colorado, USC, Oklahoma, Ohio State, Louisville, Duke, Cal, TCU, Ole Miss and Mizzou. He was one of the most highly-coveted offensive tackles in the transfer portal.

Arriving in the Class of 2020 as a low 3-star, Wade redshirted in 2020. In 2021 he played in five games. It was the 2022 season where Wade found his footing as an offensive tackle and started to thrive. 

“Coach Montgomery is an outstanding person, he’s a great play-caller, I really appreciate him giving me this opportunity because he gave me the same opportunity out of high school,” Wade said. “I really haven’t took that for granted because he was one of the first people that made me feel like I can play at this level.”

A little smaller than a traditional tackle, Wade is listed at 6-foot-4, 290 pounds, but is expected to be a tackle for Auburn. 

The addition of Wade comes in a position room currently in the middle of a complete — but immediate — rebuild. Just Colby Smith returns from Auburn’s 2022 team, but Smith has not started a game and played minimally on special teams. Wade can instantly slot into a starting spot at left or right tackle.

On Signing Day, Auburn added JUCO offensive tackle Izavion Miller, but that was it. The addition of Wade is a big one for Auburn, especially after Alabama transfer Amari Kight committed to UCF on Friday.



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‘Realistic’ RBs Aaron Jones, AJ Dillon could get 50 catches apiece

The focus on the Green Bay Packers’ plan to replace Davante Adams and Marquez Valdes-Scantling has revolved around the revamped receiver corps. But part of the equation involves getting running backs Aaron Jones and AJ Dillon more involved.

Aaron Rodgers noted Tuesday that he expects both backs to be involved more in the passing game.

“We have runs to both of them, we have swing passes to them, we have screens, we have down-the-field stuff, we have action stuff, we have scat protection, we have six-man, seven-man protection stuff,” he said via the team’s official website. “There’s a lot in the offense for those two guys.

“We’ve got to get our best 11 on the field, and it seems like those two are both in the best 11.”

Unquestionably, Jones and Dillon are two of the Packers’ top offensive weapons. Getting them on the field together would provide different matchup issues for defenses. It’s a smart play, especially as the young receivers develop and newcomers like Sammy Watkins learn the offense.

Rodgers expects an uptick for both running backs in the passing attack.

“I think 50 (catches) for both of those guys is realistic,” Rodgers said.

It is realistic. Jones caught 52 passes on 65 targets in 15 games last season. In the previous two years, he had 47 and 49 catches. Last season, Dillon proved he could be a weapon in the passing game, catching 34 of 37 targets in 17 games — after only two catches as a rookie.

The Packers are searching to replace 149 catches Adams and MVS hauled in last season. Getting Jones and Dillon a chunk of those balls is a smart plan we should expect to see out of Green Bay.

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Warriors coach Steve Kerr: Dillon Brooks ‘broke the code’ with ‘dirty’ foul that injured Gary Payton II – USA TODAY

  1. Warriors coach Steve Kerr: Dillon Brooks ‘broke the code’ with ‘dirty’ foul that injured Gary Payton II USA TODAY
  2. Draymond Green bloodied by Xavier Tillman elbow, flips double bird to Grizzlies fans on way to locker room Yahoo Sports
  3. Memphis Grizzlies’ Dillon Brooks ejected for flagrant foul that leaves Golden State Warriors’ Gary Payton II with broken elbow ESPN
  4. Draymond is winning in the court of public opinion and basking in it Deadspin
  5. Grizzlies’ Dillon Brooks ejected for foul on Gary Payton II (VIDEO) NBC Sports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Dillon Brooks fires shot at Andre Iguodala after Warriors’ loss to Grizzlies

Dillon Brooks still doesn’t like Andre Iguodala and he made that crystal clear after the Memphis Grizzlies beat the Warriors 123-95 at FedExForum on Monday night.

The Grizzlies improved to 53-23 on the season and they are 18-2 without All-Star Ja Morant this season. Memphis now has a five-game lead over the Warriors for the No. 2 seed in the Western Conference and have the look of a team that can win the NBA title in June.

That possibility is something no one outside of Memphis — including Iguodala — saw coming in the summer of 2019 when the Warriors traded the 2015 NBA Finals MVP to the Grizzlies in a cost-cutting move.

Nearly three years later, Brooks and the upstart Grizzlies haven’t forgotten that Iguodala never played a game for Memphis.

“We all had the vision,” Brooks told reporters in Memphis after the game. “He didn’t, which is perfect. Send him back to the Warriors and let him do his thing over there.”

When Iguodala was traded to Memphis, there was an understanding that they would either buy out his contract or trade him to a contending team. But Brooks and Morant viewed it as Iguodala not wanting to play with them or be part of an up-and-coming team. Iguodala ended up sitting out the first few months of the 2019-20 season before being traded to the Miami Heat as part of a three-team deal that included the Minnesota Timberwolves. He would help the Heat reach the NBA Finals where they lost to the Los Angeles Lakers in the bubble in Orlando, Fla.

 

In Feb. 2020, Iguodala told The Athletic’s Sam Amick that he wasn’t the one who said the Grizzlies weren’t the right situation for him, saying that the idea was brought to him.

Three years after the trade, Brooks and the Grizzlies appear to be building something special in Memphis.

“From the beginning, we were growing a base, we had a base and we kept building and building and building and more guys got on the train and we were able to create something like this and keep building this dynasty and this program up to new heights,” Brooks said Monday night. “Just an amazing feeling to see guys grow every single year. I’ve been here the longest so I’m just happy to see each player grow in their role and to try to exceed their role, which is amazing to see. I’m just happy I’m a part of this and happy I figured out how to stay here in Memphis.”

Iguodala spent two years in Miami before re-signing with the Warriors this offseason on a minimum contract. Golden State got off to a hot start and his decision to come back to the Bay Area looked like the right one. But the Warriors have fallen on hard times while the Grizzlies have taken off.

RELATED: Furious Kerr ejected at halftime of Warriors’ loss to Grizzlies

The Grizzlies and their fans still have animosity towards Iguodala, so much so that the crowd booed him when he checked into the game Monday and when he touched the basketball. The 38-year-old quickly quieted the crowd by hitting a wide-open 3-pointer on his first shot.

Iguodala has the hardware and the accolades, but Brooks and the Grizzlies have the swagger right now, and they might get the last laugh if they are able to get the job done and win the title this year without Iguodala.

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Dillon Gabriel transfers to Oklahoma: Ex-UCF star QB reneges on UCLA commitment, will join Sooners instead

Oklahoma has landed a commitment from UCF transfer quarterback Dillon Gabriel, with the massive announcement coming just hours after incumbent starter Caleb Williams entered the transfer portal. Gabriel, a Hawaii native, originally committed to UCLA in mid-December before flipping to the Sooners on Monday. 

The move reconnects Gabriel with new OU offensive coordinator Jeff Lebby, who was Gabriel’s position coach and offensive coordinator during Gabriel’s breakout freshman season in 2019. Lebby spent the last two years at Ole Miss before joining Brent Venables’ staff. 

Gabriel threw for 8,041 yards, 70 touchdowns and 14 interceptions in 26 games for UCF. He suffered a broken collarbone in the final moments of the the Knights’ third game of 2021 — a 42-35 loss to Louisville —  but is expected back with no complications for the 2022 season. Gabriel should have two years of eligibility remaining along with an NCAA-granted extra year of eligibility if he chooses to use it. 

Flipping Gabriel is a coup for Oklahoma as Venables tries to salvage the 2022 offense. If Williams transfers as expected, Oklahoma could be losing nine starters from the Week 1 depth chart. However, Gabriel threw for 3,653 yards and 29 touchdowns to just seven interceptions in his lone season working with Lebby, all of which rank among his career best marks. Lebby coordinated the nation’s No. 7 offense with 493.2 yards per game at Ole Miss and helped turn QB Matt Corral into CBS Sports’ top quarterback draft prospect. 

Gabriel’s decision is some much-needed insurance for the Oklahoma staff if the highly touted Williams ultimately opts to leave the program. Williams kept the door open for a potential return, but a departure would leave Oklahoma without a returning pass attempt on the roster. Opening-day starter Spencer Rattler previously transferred to South Carolina to rejoin former OU assistant Shane Beamer. 

Conversely, losing Gabriel is a tough break for UCLA as starter Dorian Thompson-Robinson is expected to leave for the NFL Draft. If DTR leaves, Chase Griffin and Ethan Garbers would likely compete for the starting job in a pivotal Year 5 for Chip Kelly. 

Prior to Gabriel’s commitment, Oklahoma’s only projected quarterbacks for 2022 were Penn State transfer Micah Bowens, who has never thrown a pass, and 2022 recruit Nick Evers. Instead, Gabriel comes to Norman with more than 900 pass attempts, including 413 in a highly-productive sophomore season. 

Oklahoma finished 11-2 in 2021, a seventh straight season with only two losses. However, the Sooners failed to win the Big 12 for the first time since 2014 and later lost head coach Lincoln Riley to USC. Oklahoma went 55-10 under Riley’s watch with three appearances in the College Football Playoff. However, the newly hired Venables has been a part of 12 straight teams to reach 10 wins between stints at Oklahoma and Clemson as a defensive coordinator. 

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Season 1, Episode 4, “Recentering”

Photo: HBO

Can we escape becoming our parents? Halfway through The White Lotus, up to third episode “Mysterious Monkeys,” practically every character who discussed their parents did so with resentment. On the adults’ side were Tanya, complaining about her mother’s myopia and manipulation, and Mark, despondent over the reveal of his father’s gayness and secret life. On the twentysomethings and teens’ side, Olivia kicks back at her mother’s neoliberalism, status, and wealth all the time, while Quinn is increasingly wary of his father’s reckless honesty. Theoretically, those who complain about their parents probably don’t want to follow in their footsteps.

And yet in this fourth episode “Recentering,” it feels like nearly all of them are inching closer to becoming versions of the very same people about whom they complain. Tanya jumps headfirst into this dalliance with Greg, although on the boat with Shane and Rachel, she had bemoaned her mother’s reliance on men. Olivia might claim that she’s Paula’s ally, but if so, why did she make that desperate, “cool”-filled pass at Kai? Isn’t pushing aside the competition something that, say, Olivia’s mother Nicole would do in the boardroom at Poof? Mark starts off maintaining his open lines of communication with Quinn, but then shares that he—like his father—cheated on his wife. Across the board, there’s a lot of denial before what seems like a lot of acquiescence.

Even as “Recentering” finally acknowledges the Hawaiian perspective, sketches out the sympathetic Paula, and tumbles Armond further into self-destructive debauchery, Mike White’s insistence that our identities are generationally cyclical looms large. Think of Shane and his honeymoon-crashing mother Kitty (Molly Shannon, operating on a particularly noxious wavelength) gleefully chanting “Money, money, money!” as the horrified Rachel looks on. (Alexandra Daddario is really exceptional this episode, and her expressions of loneliness, exasperation, disgust, and bitterness are the most nuanced work of her career.) Is this the future Rachel has to look forward to? Wealthy, sure. But also attached, for the rest of her life, to an asshole. Is it worth it?

“Is it worth it?” applies to Paula and Kai, too. Is it worth it for Paula to be close friends with Olivia, who, she tells Kai, treats her like a token? “She’s my friend. As long as she has more of everything than I do. But if I have something of my own, she wants it,” she says, and that observation comes true when we see Olivia, who knows Paula and Kai are sleeping together, make a move on Kai herself. Is it worth it for Kai to work at the resort that evicted his family from their land, and to drive a wedge between himself and his brothers by doing so? “I gotta make a living, you know?” he says, and that living includes putting on traditional Hawaiian dress, blowing the “pu” or conch shell, and then engaging in fire dancing before barely interested resort guests—cultural ceremony as tourist entertainment. At a certain point, performing your otherness, and tolerating people like the Mossbachers, might be too much, and I wonder if Paula and Kai are nearly there.

Armond certainly is! Did we really believe his “Absolutely, 100 percent” to Belinda when she tells him to get rid of the drugs he found in Olivia and Paula’s bag? I did not. Armond is clearly working through some shit, and during this bender, he goes through it all. He resents Olivia and Paula’s pushiness, and keeps their pills, ketamine, and other hard drugs before giving back their backpack. He lies to Shane, giving him a fake phone number for the general manager Shane now demands to speak with. He hits on Mark again, with a delightfully lascivious wink. And by promising Dillon a better work schedule and some of the drugs, he gets the employee he’s been lusting after into bed—or, more technically, naked in his office. What is the fallout from Shane and Belinda seeing Armond and Dillon in flagrante delicto? For Belinda, it’s probably a loss of respect toward her coworker. But I doubt Shane will be satisfied with just that.

There are active and passive villains in The White Lotus, and the series has now positioned Armond firmly into active villain territory—alongside Shane, of course. But I will say that Armond’s frustrations with the guests, sparked by his realization that he’s become the kind of ignorant manager that puts their concerns over the staff’s, feel understandable, even if the ways he is acting on them are various levels of petty. Shane, though? The way Shane treats Rachel, the woman he allegedly loves, feels worse because it suggests that even in a relationship that is supposed to be intimate, honest, and supportive, Shane can’t manage it. If that’s how he acts with his life partner, of course he’d act so dismissively to a lesser-than like Armond. And everything about Shane makes sense when we meet Shannon’s exacting, judgmental, and casually cruel Kitty, the mother who crashes Shane and Rachel’s honeymoon.

In the span of something like five minutes, Kitty insults Rachel, describes her only in terms of her looks, asserts her dominance as the most important woman in Shane’s life, and takes Shane’s side in the ongoing Palm Suite vs. Pineapple Suite saga. The friction between the original Pattons and new addition Rachel comes to a head at dinner that night, during which Cristobal Tapia de Veer’s fantastic score and John M. Valerio’s spry editing combine for maximum impact. When the drums stopped after Rachel said, “I really want to get a job” and then bumped back up after we cut to Kitty’s appalled “No. … Why would you want to do that? That doesn’t make any sense”? That was art! And while Rachel realizes the selfishness and narrowness of the family she married into (Shane insulting her mother as poor with an “oh well” shrug!), the Mossbachers are across the restaurant in their own meltdown mode.

Paula going after Mark: “What do you stand for?” Nicole going after Olivia: “What’s your system of belief, Olivia? Not capitalism, not socialism. So, just cynicism.” And Quinn going after everyone: “We all do the same shit. We’re all still parasites on the Earth. There’s no virtuous person when we’re all eating the last fish and throwing all our plastic crap in the ocean.” Each night that Quinn has slept on the beach, he’s come one step closer to realizing that the Hawaii around the resort is at odds with its existence. The waves, the whale, those six very handsome, very buff men who Quinn could not stop looking at in that outrigger boat. Quinn is experiencing some kind of epiphany here, and it’s not coming from his family. They don’t have an answer when he asks, “Where does all the pain go?” Does anyone?


Stray observations

  • Those $75,000 bracelets are absolutely coming up again. There is nothing as dependable as the rich thinking “it’s not polite to talk about how much things cost”!
  • I’m curious what specifically informed White’s writing of the Hawaiian perspective in this episode, but in general, it’s depressingly easy to find news coverage of ongoing land disputes involving native Hawaiians and outside interlopers trying to buy up real estate. Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan own more than 1,300 acres of land in Hawaii, and Hawaiians have been fighting their purchases for years. And of course, the problem isn’t limited to the Facebook billionaires. The saga of private corporations stealing ancestral land, and the Hawaiian government dragging its heels on figuring out a way to return land to Hawaiian natives, has been infuriating for a long time. ProPublica published a thorough, dispiriting story about this last December.
  • Natasha Rothwell’s gasping “What?!” when Belinda learned Armond fell off the wagon was straight out of the I Think You Should Leave season one fully loaded nachos skit. Rothwell’s pained expression is so similar to how Tim Robinson reacts to being called out for complaining about his date eating the chips with all the good toppings.
  • Was Paula sleeping in a Rage Against the Machine shirt? This is on-the-nose costuming, but I’ll allow it.
  • “Most of these activists, they don’t really want to dismantle the systems of economic exploitation. Not the ones that benefit them, which are all global, by the way. They just want a better seat at the table of tyranny.” In another I Think You Should Leave moment, cue my “Oh my god, she admit it” face to Nicole acknowledging that the world is unjust, sure, but she’s benefitting from it, so oh well!
  • How sincere was Tanya’s “Let’s get into business”? My heart already aches for what I am sure will be Tanya letting Belinda down.
  • I need to see Daddario’s name on some Emmy ballots for many aspects of this performance, in particular her delicately ravaged line delivery of “There are people my age doing great work. I’m just not one of them.”
  • The dialogue on The White Lotus rarely makes me do a double take, but do we really think Shane has seen What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?. I doubt it.
  • “All these guests are crazy.” Not wrong, Kai!

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