This blog is about my obsession with pretty little liars, a theories,and everything else pll !
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Text
Pll blogs are alive again!
I've noticed a lot of PLL blogs are alive again. Will you all watch the perfectionists?
26 notes
·
View notes
Text
I often wonder if technology is a step forward in the evolutionary process or if it is the very thing that stagnates evolution. Have we created a reason not to evolve? Or is technology an extension of our evolution as human beings ?
View On WordPress
5 notes
·
View notes
Text
Humanity
Humans created the word inhumane to separate themselves from the monsters they fear they could so easily become. Cast offs are as human as the ones who run them outside the borders of society. We are our own biggest threat. Human characteristics like power, greed and self righteousness can lend themselves to creating ‘good’ and ‘bad’ people.
View On WordPress
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
Taking a knee
The recent NFL vs. Trump chaos made its way into the lives of millions of people. It created many hostile views, a lot of hate speech, and polarizing views. There were expectations for players to bend the knee, demands they stand proud, taunts of lacking patriotism, and calls for firing players. The weekend was inundated with tweets, news stories, and articles on who was bending the knee, who…
View On WordPress
4 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Laughed to tears watching this 😂 No doubt why 11 times Hanna Marin was announced the best actress of PLL 💚
4K notes
·
View notes
Photo
Mona never called the cops.
Mona never stopped playing.
Mona has new dolls.
Mona is the queen.
6K notes
·
View notes
Text
Jenna recognized A.D’s perfume

When AD took her and gave her the endgame rules, she smelled her, she smell a perfume. A perfume that saved Spencer.
She thought she was talking to Spencer but smelled the same perfume A.D wears and that’s how Jenna figured out who A.D was and saved everyone.
4K notes
·
View notes
Quote
You get the feeling in all these Pretty Little Liars exit interviews and memoirs from the cast that the network and the studio had their hands all over every scene in every script of this TV show. It was about the tweets and the Tumblr gif sets and the Teen Choice surfboards and the NOISE NOISE NOISE NOISE. It’s why Ezra’s not dead or in jail, why he’ll end up riding off into the sunset with Aria. And it’s also why the other Liars got cardboard cut out replacement love interests during the time jump, so they could inevitably dump them and be reunited with their most significant love interests on-screen. And why for Emily, it was the opposite. The criticism of Paige McCullers, even from professional TV critics, to this day, drips with barely masked disdain for the ways she’s not feminine enough, not gentle enough, not apologetic enough. The way she doesn’t fit the mold of culturally acceptable womanhood. Her hair, her button-downs, her muscle t’s. The way she walks and the way she talks. And the only reason those same people have loosened up on Ali is because she was punished, and thoroughly. She didn’t apologize for who she was, for what she knew, and so suffered to atone. […] What a story it could have been if Paige had been given the same care and attention as the male love interests on this show, if she’d grown organically on-screen, and if Alison had been written with consistency and courage. What a story to see Emily choose between her first love and her most significant relationship here in these final episodes, to know that either one would be a radical decision. The queer Dead Blonde Girl, resurrected. Or the self-harming kid in the closet who came out on TV during an epidemic of gay teen suicides in real life, and who lived and lived and lived and loved and got the girl. My heart should have been broken by the beauty of this mess, the glorious breathtaking jumble of impossibility; one of the longest running lesbian characters on television choosing between two complicated, polarizing, unapologetic women. Women who devastated and undid her and helped her and healed her, each in their way, hating themselves and each other and, in loving her, finding themselves made whole. What if Paige and Ali had been given the same mandate as Ezra? What if any ferocious woman anywhere was ever given the same mandate as her dime-a-dozen white male counterpart? It haunts me. (It haunts all of us now, whether we acknowledge it or not.)
Heather Hogan, Autostraddle (x)
125 notes
·
View notes
Conversation
me before the finale: so PLL is either going with the evil british person cliche (wren) or the secret twin cliche.
Marlene: just you wait
*Does the evil secret British twin cliche*
209 notes
·
View notes
Text
Canadian Tumblr reblog this so we can find each other.
3K notes
·
View notes
Text
I hear you. I still dream of Ali being A.
I love “Shadow Play” so much, guys. I really thought it was full of this great foreshadowing, and i had this whole wonderful theory based off that episode when it aired, and… I’m just so bummed that this episode is basically rendered irrelevant.
But even if this episode is now obsolete… I stand by this… if Ali isn’t playing these girls now… she most certainly was back then. Maybe she has changed, but she still hasn’t owned up to everything she did.






184 notes
·
View notes
Quote
When the script came, it was extremely thick. My coworkers on Chicago Med saw it sitting on my chair, and they were like, “What is that? Is that a bible?’
Torrey on receiving the finale script (via fuckyeslittleliars)
291 notes
·
View notes