The Split returns for 2-part special with Nicola Walker, Stephen Mangan and more
The special will release ahead of already announced spin-off The Split Up.
Surprise! Two years after it seemingly came to an end, Abi Morgan's hit legal drama The Split is returning for a brand new two-part special.
The new episodes are set two years after we left Nicola Walker's Hannah and Stephen Mangan's Nathan, as they attempted to navigate their way through a "good divorce".
Further details provided by Radio Times here
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What, WHAT?! 😲
(No mention of Barry Atsma/Christie returning 😒 - and "In this chapter, Abi explores the often terrifying prospect of facing new romance after divorce" seems to be referring to Hannah - but I will remain optimistic...)
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OMG, all the feels…can’t wait to have these lovely ladies back in “The Split Special”. Until then enjoy a look back at some beautiful, some happy & some bittersweet moments. Nicola💜
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Son garantía… “Industry · Temporada 3”
Cuando Pierpoint mira hacia el futuro y apuesta fuerte por la inversión ética, Yasmin, Robert y Eric se encuentran en primera línea de la impactante salida a bolsa de Lumi, una empresa de tecnología energética verde dirigida por Henry Muck, en una historia que llega hasta lo más alto de las finanzas, los medios de comunicación y el gobierno.
Desde que dejó Pierpoint, Harper está ansiosa por volver a la adictiva emoción de las finanzas y encuentra una improbable socia en la gestora de carteras de FutureDawn, Petra Koenig.
Estreno: 11 de agosto de 2024 por HBO y en Max.
La tercera temporada cuenta con las actuaciones de Myha'la Herrold, Marisa Abela, Harry Lawtey, Ken Leung, Conor MacNeill, Sagar Radia, Indy Lewis, Adam Levy, Sarah Parish, Trevor White, Elena Saurel, Irfan Shamji, Fiona Button, Fady Elsayed, Roger Barclay, Miriam Petche, Andrew Havill, Sarah Goldberg, Kit Harington, entre otros.
A pesar de que la serie presenta a nuevos personajes, nunca ningunea la trama de sus protagonistas, dando como resultado otra temporada espectacular, mordaz, implacable y despiadada.
Puntuación: ★★★★☆
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Shreck and Fiona are the perfect exemple of love beyond what appearances
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A Master Post of XxScarletxRosexX's Spy x Family Merch Collection
Please reblog this post to help me get SxF merch rehomed faster ^^
I'll do my best to update this post regularly whenever I make a new post of my collectibles and/or merch. Statuses of available merch for sale are shown in the box below:
For Sale: Spy x Family Merch
Sold Out: Spy x Family Merch
Not for Sale: Spy x Family Merch
In case this post doesn't get updated fast enough (or gets lost from different reblogs when changes are made), you can just follow this tag: #scarlykofishop. But the fastest update will be on my Ko-Fi shop and the Twitter/X thread.
Questions/Interests/Inquiries:
DM me on Tumblr / Reply to the post/chat
DM me on Twitter/X / Reply to the post
How this happened:
I made a Ko-Fi shop as an intervention for my Spy x Family Merch collection...
Acrylic Stands
SpyxFamily x Ultrizon: Banquet Series -- Acrylic Stands (Part 1)
Acrylic Keychains
Apparel
Bags
Buttons
Clear File Folders
Enamel Pins
Rubber Keychains
Small Figures (typically from gashapon)
Stationery
Wares (kitchen + homegoods)
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You know Andrea Davenport's intense hatred of her name being mispronounced? It's a particular, notable quirk of her character. This small error brings out the absolute worst in her; in her introductory episode she's much crueller and more of an active bully, enforcing the total social exclusion of Molly, instead of simply self-absorbed and insensitive but ultimately good at heart as she has been since, all because Molly accidentally says her name wrong more than once in their first meeting.
Why? The correct pronunciation of Andrea in her case is the less common one (and therefore seems posher), and less intuitive based on the spelling. It's quite reasonable that someone would say the other pronunciation more than once out of instinct. She can surely intellectually understand that. So why is this such a big issue for her?
Well, a lot of her bad behaviour can be explained by her parents' behaviour. Her father can be selfish and greedy in regards to his business, and while Andrea is spoiled materially and financially, both her parents routinely ignore and emotionally neglect her to pay more attention to their work, social media and image. When she focuses excessively on herself and her reputation, she's directly imitating her two first and most influential role models. Maybe if she makes the family and their brand look good enough, she'll be good enough for them to give her their time. Maybe if she's exactly like them, they'll be more interested in her. They're always interested in themselves, after all.
What if her parents are so neglectful that they can, at least on occasion, accidentally get their own daughter's name wrong?
Imagine an episode about Andrea where Molly is either observing her without her knowledge like in "The Don't-Gooder", or hanging out with her in a normal way, since she is her "best friend" now in Andrea's own words. Andrea is talking to her parents, who are looking at their phones and only half-listening.
Then her mother or father distractedly mispronounces her name, or even calls her a different name like Annie or something. Molly gasps, bracing for how badly Andrea will react. Her parent doing it is far more insulting than a stranger doing it!
But Andrea barely reacts at all. She's stung, dejected, but not angry. Resigned. She doesn't even bring it up. Like this is frequent enough that she doesn't think that her literal parents remembering how to say the name they chose for her or even the name itself would be a guarantee.
She doesn't have much power over her parents. Not the kind that will sway them to meet her basic emotional needs. But as she learned early on in life, thanks to her wealth, beauty and charisma she can exert power over her peers, and later the general public and her fanbase. So she is going to make damn well sure that everyone else refers to her correctly. And if they don't, she'll subject them to the most painful, degrading treatment she can conceive of: being ignored.
Her name thing set the whole plot of the second episode into motion. Can you imagine, after how firmly it was established, the impact on Molly and the audience of Maxwell Davenport saying, "That's nice, Angela" and Andrea's only response being reserved, familiar hurt?
@fallen-gravity
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