The End of a Lacklustre Season
What’s so frustrating about this season and some of these housewives, is that we never get the full story.
Is Drew Sidora full of lies?
This season has been so lacklustre it’s embarrassing.
It’s so frustrating when they’ve clearly got a lot of stories, they’re not executed right.
Kenya Moore has at least been trying to give us something important this season.
She has addressed wanting another baby and pursuing surrogacy. She has been working on her hair salon this season, but it has been cut from the show.
Sanya Richards-Ross’ story this season was expanding her family, and she was so happy when she finally got pregnant.
My heart broke when she told us she sadly had a traumatic miscarriage. It was so bad she thought she was going to die. That is truly horrific.
I’m so glad that she’s pregnant with her rainbow baby now and that she and her family appear to be happier than ever.
Kandi Burruss was busier than ever and felt hardly present this season, but Todd Tucker was working on his movie which Drew stared in.
Kandi was so supportive of Drew in this episode, but she has been hellbent on putting out the story that Drew made out with LaToya Ali.
And their friendship will only go from bad to worse, judging from the trailer of the reunion.
Now, Drew had her singing career, acting career, a marriage falling apart and rumours about an affair between her and Ty Young.
One should think that she would be “the star” this season. But sadly, no. Drew is deflecting, projecting, and lying.
She has a good story, but she refuses to share it.
When the producers were pushing her about the divorce from Ralph Pittman she started crying and saying it was too soon.
When the producers were pushing her about Ty, she said she didn’t know what she was allowed to say.
Courtney Rhodes said plenty, though!
The other women gave us nothing this season. Nothing but fake storylines.
RHOA and its producers are in crisis mode after this season, that’s for sure.
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KAMROOZ ARAM
on the ancient arts of Iran
Achaemenid (Iran, Susa). Bricks with a palmette motif, ca. 6th–4th century B.C. Ceramic, glaze. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Rogers Fund, 1948 (48.98.20a–c)
The Artist Project
Vito Acconci on Gerrit Rietveld's Zig Zag Stoel
Ann Agee on the Villeroy Harlequin Family
Diana Al-Hadid on the cubiculum from the villa of P. Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale
Ghada Amer on an Iranian tile panel, Garden Gathering
Kamrooz Aram on the ancient arts of Iran
Cory Arcangel on the harpsichord
John Baldessari on Philip Guston's Stationary Figure
Barry X Ball on an Egyptian fragment of a queen’s face
Ali Banisadr on Hieronymus Bosch's The Adoration of the Magi
Dia Batal on a Syrian tile panel with calligraphic inscription
Zoe Beloff on Édouard Manet's Civil War (Guerre Civile)
Dawoud Bey on Roy DeCarava
Nayland Blake on boli
Barbara Bloom on Vilhelm Hammershøi's Moonlight, Strandgade 30
Andrea Bowers on Howardena Pindell
Mark Bradford on Clyfford Still
Cecily Brown on medieval sculptures of the Madonna and Child
Luis Camnitzer on Giovanni Battista Piranesi's etchings
Nick Cave on Kuba cloths
Alejandro Cesarco on Gallery 907
Enrique Chagoya on Goya's Los Caprichos
Roz Chast on Italian Renaissance painting
Willie Cole on Ci Wara sculpture
George Condo on Claude Monet's The Path through the Irises
Petah Coyne on a Japanese outer robe with Mount Hōrai
Njideka Akunyili CROSBY on Georges Seurat's Embroidery; The Artist's Mother
John Currin on Ludovico Carracci's The Lamentation
Moyra Davey on a rosary terminal bead with lovers and Death's head
Edmund de Waal on an ewer in the shape of a Tibetan monk's cap
Thomas Demand on the Gubbio studiolo
Jacob El Hanani on the Mishneh Torah, by Master of the Barbo Missal
Teresita Fernández on Precolumbian gold
Spencer Finch on William Michael Harnett's The Artist's Letter Rack
Eric Fischl on Max Beckmann's Beginning
Roland Flexner on Jacques de Gheyn II's Vanitas Still Life
Walton Ford on Jan van Eyck and workshop's The Last Judgment
Natalie Frank on Käthe Kollwitz
LaToya Ruby FRAZIER on Gordon Parks's Red Jackson
Suzan Frecon on Duccio di Buoninsegna's Madonna and Child
Adam Fuss on a marble grave stele of a little girl
Maureen Gallace on Paul Cézanne's still life paintings with apples
Jeffrey Gibson on Vanuatu slit gongs
Nan Goldin on Julia Margaret Cameron
Wenda Gu on Robert Motherwell's Lyric Suite
Ann Hamilton on a Bamana marionette
Jane Hammond on snapshots and vernacular photography
Zarina Hashmi on Arabic calligraphy
Sheila Hicks on The Organ of Mary, a prayer book by Ethiopian scribe Baselyos
Rashid Johnson on Robert Frank
Y.Z. Kami on Egyptian mummy portraits
Deborah Kass on Athenian vases
Nina Katchadourian on Early Netherlandish portraiture
Alex Katz on Franz Kline's Black, White, and Gray
Jeff Koons on Roman sculpture
An-My Lê on Eugène Atget's Cuisine
Il Lee on Rembrandt van Rijn's portraits
Lee Mingwei on Chinese ceremonial robes
Lee Ufan on the Moon Jar
Glenn Ligon on The Great Bieri
Lin Tianmiao on Alex Katz's Black and Brown Blouse
Kalup Linzy on Édouard Manet
Robert Longo on Jackson Pollock's Autumn Rhythm (Number 30)
Nicola López on works on paper
Nalini Malani on Hanuman Bearing the Mountaintop with Medicinal Herbs
Kerry James MARSHALL on Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres's Odalisque in Grisaille
Josiah McElheny on Horace Pippin
Laura McPhee on Pieter Bruegel the Elder's The Harvesters
Josephine Meckseper on George Tooker's Government Bureau
Julie Mehretu on Velázquez's Juan de Pareja
Alexander Melamid on Ernest Meissonier's 1807, Friedland
Mariko Mori on Botticelli's The Annunciation
Vik Muniz on The Henry R. Luce Center for the Study of American Art
Wangechi Mutu on Egon Schiele
James Nares on Chinese calligraphy
Catherine Opie on the Louis XIV bedroom
Cornelia Parker on Robert Capa's The Falling Soldier
Izhar Patkin on Shiva as Lord of Dance
Sheila Pepe on European armor
Raymond Pettibon on Joseph Mallord William Turner
Sopheap Pich on Vincent van Gogh's drawings
Robert Polidori on Jules Bastien-Lepage's Joan of Arc
Rona Pondick on Egyptian sculpture fragments
Liliana Porter on Jacometto's Portrait of a Young Man
Wilfredo Prieto on Auguste Rodin's sculptures
Rashid Rana on Umberto Boccioni's Unique Forms of Continuity in Space
Krishna Reddy on Henry Moore
Matthew Ritchie on The Triumph of Fame over Death
Dorothea Rockburne on an ancient Near Eastern head of a ruler
Alexis Rockman on Martin Johnson Heade's Hummingbird and Passionflowers
Annabeth Rosen on ceramic deer figurines
Martha Rosler on The Met Cloisters
Tom Sachs on the Shaker Retiring Room
David Salle on Marsden Hartley
Carolee Schneemann on Cycladic female figures
Dana Schutz on Balthus's The Mountain
Arlene Shechet on a bronze statuette of a veiled and masked dancer
James Siena on the Buddha of Medicine Bhaishajyaguru
Katrín Sigurdardóttir on the Hôtel de Cabris, Grasse
Shahzia Sikander on Persian miniature painting
Joan Snyder on Florine Stettheimer's Cathedrals paintings
Pat Steir on the Kongo Power Figure
Thomas Struth on Chinese Buddhist sculpture
Hiroshi Sugimoto on Bamboo in the Four Seasons, attributed to Tosa Mitsunobu
Eve Sussman on William Eggleston
Swoon on Honoré Daumier's The Third-Class Carriage
Sarah Sze on the Tomb of Perneb
Paul Tazewell on Anthony van Dyck's portraits
Wayne Thiebaud on Rosa Bonheur's The Horse Fair
Hank Willis THOMAS on a daguerreotype button
Mickalene Thomas on Seydou Keïta
Fred Tomaselli on Guru Dragpo
Jacques Villeglé on Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso
Mary Weatherford on Goya's Manuel Osorio Manrique de Zuñiga
William Wegman on Walker Evans's postcard collection
Kehinde Wiley on John Singer Sargent
Betty Woodman on a Minoan terracotta larnax
Xu Bing on Jean-François Millet's Haystacks: Autumn
Dustin Yellin on ancient Near Eastern cylinder seals
Lisa Yuskavage on Édouard Vuillard's The Green Interior
Zhang Xiaogang on El Greco's The Vision of Saint John
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Secrets Revealed at the Sip and See
Things are starting to move in an interesting direction, and I was shocked to learn that the next episode will be the season finale of season 15.
All the juiciness from the trailer and the midseason trailer has been misleading of what we actually got this season, and I feel duped.
I even said that all the talk about Drew Sidora kissing another woman, could easily be empty talk.
Come to learn that it was LaToya Ali they were talking about the whole time was beyond frustrating.
I guess we’ll see what shows up in the season finale, but I doubt we’ll get to see anything interesting between her and Ty Young.
It was interesting following the production of Todd Tucker’s movie though.
Ralph Pittman showed up in Drew’s trailer and creeped her out with pestering her about the sex scenes with her female castmate.
She said that in her confessional clearly after they had filed for a divorce, but he was obviously objectifying her.
Their scenes together have always stressed me out because there’s an underlying passive aggressiveness between them.
At Shereé Whitfield’s sip and see for her granddaughter, things got interesting, chaotic, and comical.
Drew refused to enter the doors as she saw Anthony the Shady and Untrustworthy Assistant among the guests.
He had apparently thrown a shoe at Drew at the club after an argument – and he inserted himself in the conversation when Kandi Burruss told Shereé why Drew wouldn’t come inside.
The fact that Shereé invited Anthony is proof that she’s full of bullshit.
Andy Cohen had told her and Drew to drop the man as he was clearly bad news.
Speaking of being full of bullshit, there was no intimacy or chemistry between Shereé and Martell Holt at this party.
Who greets their date with an awkward hug instead of a kiss?!
Bob Whitfield also thought it was the right time to bring along his grown daughter that Shereé didn’t know anything about.
This created one of the funniest and most chaotic conversations of the season, and it’s the first time I’ve been properly entertained.
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