With regard to the third mom, played by Heidi Gardner: you kind of have to brace yourself for some sort of supernatural sensitivity when you name her Coraline.
Majors also got to show off his Yale-trained chops in a late-episode sketch about a Broadway benefit starring Blythe & Brick is not so sure the material is appropriate for a pre-teen, which feels like ageist profiling.
One revolved around the recent report that, as Melanie Hamlett put it in Harper’s Bazaar, “Men Have No Friends and Women Bear the Burden.” What can women do when the men they live with assault them with dull chatter the second they walk in the door because said men haven’t spoken to another person all day? Take them to the Man Park — it’s like a dog park, except for men in relationships to get used to socializing with each other.
Except Davidson actually has a twist in mind, and doesn’t understand why they would object to his describing them as “3 Sad Virgins”—and sprinkling in painfully accurate details about their romantic experiences and anatomy.
Speaking of Swift: okay, sure, she did only technically sing one song — this week’s internet-breaking “All Too Well.” But it was ten minutes long, and gave fans everything they wanted out of the experience, including highlights from the song’s short film projected on a screen behind her while she stood in a carpet of autumn leaves.
Vanity Fair may earn a portion of sales from products that are purchased through our site as part of our Affiliate Partnerships with retailers.