Evalin Clark started her The Bachelor journey on a high note.
Literally, she had to climb down just to greet Joey Graziadei when she rolled in for the limo entrances on a tennis umpire’s chair.
It all went downhill from there.
Evalin cried during the first rose ceremony because she didn’t get picked fast enough.
She literally shed tears over the idea that she might not get a rose when 10 of the 32 women who showed up for Season 28 of The Bachelor were sent home.
Even Evalin seemed to realize how ridiculous that was as she commented on her tears in a confessional after finally getting picked.
Evalin proved she could jump during The Bachelor’s first group date
Evalin was along for the first group date with Joey where the ladies all dressed in wedding dresses and enacted what their wedding day might be — if The Bachelor star...
Literally, she had to climb down just to greet Joey Graziadei when she rolled in for the limo entrances on a tennis umpire’s chair.
It all went downhill from there.
Evalin cried during the first rose ceremony because she didn’t get picked fast enough.
She literally shed tears over the idea that she might not get a rose when 10 of the 32 women who showed up for Season 28 of The Bachelor were sent home.
Even Evalin seemed to realize how ridiculous that was as she commented on her tears in a confessional after finally getting picked.
Evalin proved she could jump during The Bachelor’s first group date
Evalin was along for the first group date with Joey where the ladies all dressed in wedding dresses and enacted what their wedding day might be — if The Bachelor star...
- 1/30/2024
- by Shaunee Flowers
- Monsters and Critics
Season 28 of The Bachelor is in full swing, with women competing to get Joey Graziadei’s attention.
Some are jumping over tables to be close to the tennis star, and others are using more conventional methods regarding their attention-seeking ways.
We know exactly how Maria plans to wow Joey after the latest episode, and it’s safe to say that no one but Joey was impressed.
It all started after the group date, where she and several others dressed up in wedding gowns, and the competitive claws came out as all the ladies went overboard to make an impression.
So when Maria finally gets a chance to get Joey alone, she’s not doing it in a full-coverage wedding dress.
Instead, she tells The Bachelor star that she’s going to slip into something more comfortable and, well, she clearly takes comfort in minimalism because her outfit left a lot to be desired.
Some are jumping over tables to be close to the tennis star, and others are using more conventional methods regarding their attention-seeking ways.
We know exactly how Maria plans to wow Joey after the latest episode, and it’s safe to say that no one but Joey was impressed.
It all started after the group date, where she and several others dressed up in wedding gowns, and the competitive claws came out as all the ladies went overboard to make an impression.
So when Maria finally gets a chance to get Joey alone, she’s not doing it in a full-coverage wedding dress.
Instead, she tells The Bachelor star that she’s going to slip into something more comfortable and, well, she clearly takes comfort in minimalism because her outfit left a lot to be desired.
- 1/30/2024
- by Shaunee Flowers
- Monsters and Critics
“Supervillain: The Making of Tekashi 6ix9ine” has its share of surprises. Karam Gill’s three-part series charts the perpetual rise and fall of one of the music world’s largest antagonists, the process by which Brooklyn-born and -raised Daniel Hernandez slowly transformed himself into rapper and social media archenemy Tekashi 6ix9ine.
Amidst the blend of interviews and archival footage, each episode takes a few well-timed journeys into a dreamlike abstract void. Dubbed in onscreen text as “Elements of a Supervillain,” each of these interstitials takes a part of the Tekashi lore and brings it to an artistic operating table of sorts. With a synthetic Tekashi figure in the center of the frame, disembodied white-gloved hands manipulate and style him as part of a hypnotic, sometimes nightmareish makeover.
“Karam said, ‘Think “Apple meets Kanye’s house.”‘ And I think that was deliberately to contrast with the gritty nature of doing found footage documentary.
Amidst the blend of interviews and archival footage, each episode takes a few well-timed journeys into a dreamlike abstract void. Dubbed in onscreen text as “Elements of a Supervillain,” each of these interstitials takes a part of the Tekashi lore and brings it to an artistic operating table of sorts. With a synthetic Tekashi figure in the center of the frame, disembodied white-gloved hands manipulate and style him as part of a hypnotic, sometimes nightmareish makeover.
“Karam said, ‘Think “Apple meets Kanye’s house.”‘ And I think that was deliberately to contrast with the gritty nature of doing found footage documentary.
- 3/7/2021
- by Steve Greene
- Indiewire
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