I'll Tell You An American Horror Story

WARNING! This review contains some spoilers! I will try to keep them to a minimum but just know that you've been warned!


In my earlier post, I said that Ryan Murphy has a creative yet scary mind and that's because of this show. The things in this show are..unconventional to say the least. I wouldn't say that this is a horror show but it's more like a super creep show. It's almost really scary what Ryan Murphy conjures up for this show and I'm super excited that they got a confirmed order for a third season. I have no idea how they're going to top this season, but then again, this is Ryan Murphy we're talking about.

What I really liked was how Ryan approached this concept. Instead of having it as a regular show where each season is a continuation of last season, Ryan made it where each season is part of an anthology and each season is different. Different plot, different characters, all that jazz. I find it interesting that Ryan has this sort of drive to fill people's niches that people didn't know they were missing. And he seems to have some divine foresight to know to create a singing show and make money on the songs they sing, to have a horror anthology show, or to have a gay couple show. It's like he's a game changer and people are looking to him for the next thing for people to bandwagon in a good way.



This year, American Horror Story is set in an Asylum, Briarcliff, where of course, people aren't what they seem. It's run by a nun and a monsignor, but the main doctor thinks he's running the show. The patients at Briarcliff are sometimes put there mistakenly but of course, back in the sixties, no one really questioned what happened at mental institutions. They were secluded far from any kind of other civilization, they used all kinds of cruel and unusual punishments that didn't even help their supposed problems, and it was just really inhumane.

Anywho, there are a lot of plot points in this season and they touch on a lot of things. Historical stuff like how white men and black women together were frowned upon or how lesbians were considered icky. It also touches on a lot of personal themes like living with demons, romance, fighting for things you believe in, doubt, all kinds of things. Ryan Murphy really packs it in this season. I haven't seen the first season, I think I'll catch it when it finally comes on Netflix if I can work myself up to it. I usually don't like horror genre things. You'll never catch me at a screening of Halloween yet I'll watch Freddy Kruger and though he shouldn't even be considered in the horror genre, I'll watch the Chucky movies.



There are also some less than historical themes like aliens, devil possessions, crazy nuns, Nazi's, and weird science experiments in the woods. Yeah, there are definitely some eyebrow raising moments but if you like this sort of thing, just put your trust in Ryan Murphy's creative little hands, and go along for the ride. You won't be disappointed. Believe me.

They have a very huge cast for this but a definite fave of Ryan Murphy is Jessica Lange. Not to be mean, but she's just not an attractive lady, but I'll be damned if she wasn't a good actress. I can see why she's been kept around for two seasons and is now being picked up for season 3. They also have Joseph Fiennes, Sarah Paulson, Zachary Quinto, and James Cromwell. These are some really heavy hitters and then you have semi fresh faces like Evan Peters or Lily Rabe and it's easy to see why they would want to hop aboard this wagon.

Honestly, there's too many characters to try and get through so I'm just going to limit it to the major players and my favorite, Evan Peters of course.



Evan plays Kit Walker, the aforementioned white guy with a black wife. He's in the 1960s part of the show. Sometimes this show does time jump and at first you're like which time am I in but you figure it out close enough. At first, I didn't know what to think of him. I knew that he was cute and looked completely familiar. But I was very interested to see where they were going to take his character.

Spoilers aside, he gets framed for the murder of his wife and some other women and sent to Briarcliff pending psychiatric evaluation to figure out if he did it for kicks or if he did it as a sort of mental breakdown. Because audiences know what happened, you're sitting there like "HE DIDN'T DO IT!" LOL. I can't speak for anyone else, but I know that for me, he became an instant tragic character because he's stuck in this place where he doesn't belong while his wife is still alive but unreachable. I don't know if there's something chromosomally wrong with me but I just adore tragic/misunderstood characters and Kit definitely fits that profile.

Here he is, minding his own business, adoring his wife, and in the next instant, he's public enemy number one and he has so many cameras shoved in his face, so many people asking him questions while hating him for what he's supposedly done. No one will believe him and everyone just thinks he's a crazy psychopath who won't admit to what he's done. The only person that will believe him is Grace. She won't get her own profile, but here, I will say that she is kind of cute for Kit. She's one of those people who you know belongs there, yet she doesn't. She killed her parents and that's why she's at Briarcliff, but she's also so much smarter than the people there and so....uncrazy. It's easy to see why her and Kit would gravitate towards each other. She was one of the few people who understood him instantly and knew that he didn't kill his wife or all those other women.

I will say that Evan Peters brings a raw authenticity to his character, I can wholeheartedly believe that he is practically a kid in 1960s whose being wrongfully imprisoned at a horrible institution. So kudos to Evan because it's not easy to get into that kind of mindset and actually sell it and not lose yourself to it.


The next person that I think deserves some shout time would be Jessica Lange. Like I said, I didn't see her performance in the previous season of American Horror Story, but since it is an anthology, I don't have to in order to praise her brilliance on this show. She plays Sister Jude, a controlling strict nun who takes no mess from nobody. I grew up with mordern nuns so all of these horror stories I hear about nuns doesn't faze me. I never had a nun hit me with a ruler, never had one yell at me or anything like that, so I'm incredibly freaked out about how they're portrayed on this show. There's Sister Jude and then there's Sister Mary Eunice and the way they're portrayed makes me a little angry because of my faith. I respect that for the purposes of TV, you can play around with practically anything but it also makes me upset that so many writers play around with people's faith.

I just don't understand how people can't control themselves. In my own writing, I leave God or anything of the Catholic faith out of it, though I am a Catholic and yes, it's a personal choice, but I also feel like people kind of have no right to do that. But this isn't about all that.

Sister Jude didn't lead a chaste life and then got the calling at a younger age. She was a prostitute at first, or at least a boozy cougar who really loved sex, and she had a horrible drinking problem. From what I've seen or read about the 60s, everyone had a drinking problem. She ran over a little girl in the middle of the night. Okay, what was a little four eyed white girl with pigtails on her hair doing in the middle of the night on a deserted road, riding her bike like it's the thing to do? I know back then murderers and rapists were sort of few and far inbetween, but no respectable parent should have had their child out like that. I'm just saying, all of that looked a little funny to me.

Anywho, she ran over the little girl and ever since then, she's kept the secret to herself and devoted her life to God, trying to repent for the many mistakes of her past. Yet, she wears a red teddie underneath her habit and fantasizes about the monsignor. Honestly, when it's Joseph Finnes, who wouldn't? But because he's playing a priest, it's like why would you? But knowing her past, it is understandable. She spends most of the episodes trying to keep a leash on her rowdy patients and keeping Sister Mary Eunice in line. If someone gets out of hand, they get caned. Sister Jude isn't exactly scary, but she is a force you do not want to reckon with. I can see why Ryan Murphy would want to keep Jessica Lange. Her versatality is almost unmatched.


The next person, would have to be James Cromwell. This fool pops up in some very random but frequent places. It's astounding how long I've seen him crop up in movies and not know his name yet love his acting. He's always played an old, professsor type of guy so it's not surprising he's playing a doctor but it is surprising that he's playing a Nazi doctor, named Dr. Arden, who keeps experimenting on people he thinks the world has forgotten.

Of any of the characters on this show, he would definitely be the creepiest, spookiest, and craziest. First of all, he's a Nazi doctor. I mean, come on, it doesn't get creepier than that. But what also makes him creepy is that he's in love with a nun because of her pureness but when said nun tries to come onto him, he recoils like it's disgusting. He put makeup on a statue and called it a whore and then broke it. I mean, this guy has some serious psychological issues and I can't think of anyone else to play this type of character.

A major defining quirk of this guy is that he's think he's untouchable. He's all controlling and he likes things the way they are, which is his way. He has no regard for Sister Jude and think she's just there as a front. When she comes close to figuring out that he's a real Nazi doctor, he figures that she has to go.

He's also been doing some really freaky science experiments. It's never been clear to my simple mind, but the gist is that he's trying to create a super human, one that can withstand nuclear radiation like cockroaches. It makes their face bubble up and really pus filled. I mean, this guy is just sick. He's so concerned about human advancement, it's like he just can't wait for evolution to take its course. He also chopped off a woman's legs because she tried to come on to him. The things this guy does is just mind boggling, because to outside viewers like Sister Jude, he's just a doctor with a power trip. But to everyone else, he's a closet psychopath who just likes cutting people open. This is another great performance by this man and I'm so glad that he decided to get into acting because if he didn't, the craft just wouldn't be the same.



Next would be Zachary Quinto who plays Dr. Thredson. My goodness man, just my goodness. I first fell in love with Mr. Quinto when he was on Heroes and playing the bad guy. I guess something is just wrong for me because I like villains of the show, not necessarily the heroes, no pun intended. He did an amazing job on Heroes. He played this tragic character who had this incurable need for power. On AHS, it's the same tragic character, he does have his issues, (like mama's boy from hell), but he's not after power. He's after affection. And this is what I like about how Ryan Murphy creates his characters. Because we all have that universal need for affection, for someone to love us and for us to give our love as well.

So while Dr. Thredson is someone we should be wary of, we can't because he's after the same thing we're after. Yet, at the same time, we have to understand that he is a bad character, he is a bad guy.

*Scroll over for a MASSIVE SPOILER!*

*Dr. Thredson is in fact, Bloody Face from the very first episode. That first image of him shooting the imposters was a total mind freak to me. Because you had one, then you had two and you're like, what the heck is going on? And then out of nowhere, a third pops up and you're like WTF! If you've been keeping up, then you know that he called the police on himself to showcase the imposters and to let the world know that there is only one Bloody Face. What is most creepy about this is that you see him in the past and you see him now. He's gotta be at least 60 or 70 years old and this fool is still going around killing people. Granted, he's doing it with a gun instead of flaying people's skin off but still. It's creepy because you know that in the past, he's not going to get caught. If he's still walking around shooting people, then he doesn't get caught at all.

As you also know, Dr. Thredson tricked Kit into confessing about the murders so that he could go on killing people. What's sad, is that he's killing women that look like his mom. He kidnaps Sarah Paulson's character, Lana, and thinks he's found the one. The one to replace his mother and give him the affection he's craving. That is what makes him such a tragic character but you can't feel anything for him because he's a serial killer with severe mommy issues. What I didn't like about this was how dumb Lana has to be. She keeps trying to get away. I know there's an inherent need to get away from anything that hurts us, but if you're facing down a serial killer, DO WHAT HE SAYS WOMAN!  I'd like to think that if I was in that situation, I'd be the best damn mom he could have ever dreamed of. Just saying.

What I also liked was how in tact Dr. Thredson seemed to be. It was like he really wanted to help and was always there to lend a hand. And when he said that he would help Lana break out, I was like wow, how awesome. Then he totally flipped the script by being creepy and knocked her out and being completely unhinged. And he took it up a knotch by kidnapping her lover, plucking her teeth out, and sewing it onto his mask. And yet you can't forget how put together he looked in the beginning of the season. If it weren't for the scenes of being in his apartment and being totally creepy, I wouldn't have guessed it was Dr. Thredson. That was a completely 180 for me.

And how dare he frame Kit. Kit is so cute and it breaks my heart that he's rotting in jail while Dr. Thredson is getting his rocks off with Lana. But, this only speaks to how talented Zachary is. He is truly a character to watch out for. How many guys do you know that can go from serious and normal to freaky and a psychopath?*

Zachary Quinto is truly an amazing actor and I very much can't wait to see what he does next. It's terrible that actors are such fickle people. They don't want to be stuck playing one type of role. But my whole thing is that if you're really good at one thing, why not suck the thing dry?! It's just so delicious watching this amazing actor play his craft and I wish that he would continuing playing it. Like Jason Statham with all his action movies. Like why wouldn't you want to continue doing it?



Sister Mary Eunice is played fantastically by Lily Rabe. In the beginning, I was like, why is she crying all the time? I thought she was going to get real old real fast. But then things changed and I'm ashamed to say that I like this person a lot better. I've noticed a trend in people just wholly not liking female characters. I don't know if it's the writers or if it's the actresses. But I do know it's my inner feminist that just can't see a woman crying for no reason. It's like buck up, lady! Put your big boy pants on and sit at the adult's table!

I can't write about her without another MASSIVE SPOILER, so scroll over for her profile!

*Sister Mary Eunice becomes possessed by the devil which is the reason for her complete turn around of character. As a Catholic, I'm disgusted by this proposition that a nun would be possessed by the devil. I can understand why Ryan Murphy would do this. I can appreciate the irony of it all, but still, it's like leave religion out of things!

As a writer, I think it's very clever. What I can't figure out is how no one knows she's the devil! She was such a sniveling, scared woman and then she completely turns around and is suddenly okay? She's okay with caning people, she's okay with helping Dr. Arden avoid being found out as a Nazi, she's okay with killing someone, and neither Sister Jude nor Dr. Arden have noticed the turnaround and it's like, how blind are you? At least the promos for the show makes sense now. The all white nun going into the woods emptying buckets of blood and guts. Watching it, I was like what the heck? But now I totally get it.

Im curious to see where this character goes. At first, she's just going around creating mild mischief. She took it a step further when she killed the PI Sister Jude had working for her. And it looks like she's no longer playing like she's second fiddle to Dr. Arden so it's going to be interesting watching the power play between the two of them during the 60s when feminism was on the rise.*
I think that Lily Rabe is a great actress and I'm interested to see where she goes from here. I think she's very gifted and she is definitely someone you need to look out for.



Everyone else, I've pretty much covered. Though Joseph Fiennes and Sarah Paulson do amazing jobs in their respective roles, somehow I just feel like their storyline hasn't really gone anywhere juicy enough to warrant a full profile. Joseph's character did do something scandalous, but even that is one small thing so like I said, I don't see any reason for a full profile.

If you like horror shows or just plain creep shows, this is something you should definitely watch. On the surface it's blockbuster fluff and has all the makings of a horror genre soup. But if you really take the time to watch it and dissect it, you'll see that these could be real characters. They're not just 2D they're definitely 3D and you're just so interested in seeing where these characters end up. Ryan Murphy is a master storyteller and you can't help but tune in every Wednesday and see what happens.

Honestly, watch it, and you won't be sorry.




My New Fav TV Couple

WARNING!!! This review does contain some spoilers. I'll try to keep them to a minimum but just so you know, I will bring up some things! You've been warned!


That's right, it's that time of the day again when I review my latest obsession. I know I keep apologizing and not reviewing, but that's going to change in the upcoming weeks. Anywho, I'm sure you've all heard of the new show from the brilliant and really scary mind of Ryan Murphy. (I might do American Horror Story: Asylum next. I don't know, stay tuned!)

I first heard of Ryan Murphy when he created Glee but because Glee was the reason one of my shows got cancelled, I don't watch it on principle but that did not stop me from watching this show. And I'm really, really, really, really, REALLY, glad that I did. If you're not watching this show, something is severely wrong with you!

This show has everything. It has humor, it has romance, it has a crazy bigot grandmother, and a super precocious little girl. It really doesn't get any better than that. Basically, the premise of this show is that a gay couple, Bryan and David, decide to have a baby. They get help from a surrogate, Goldie, who has a daughter Shania (pronounced Sha-Ny-A) and they have a semi-racist, homophobic Republican grandmother who just represents everything old school, and she goes by the name of Jane.



What I thought was really creative was that they didn't make the whole show just about the pregnancy. If anything, it's a family show. It explores the same dynamics any other family show would explore but it's just a new twist on it. I don't know if it's just my closet cynicism, but I see all these new crop of shows and I can't help but not like them because they're the same thing over and over again. What I'm noticing what seperates good shows from bad shows is the level of surprises they have. A lot of people in the industry will tell you that there are no new stories. See, I partly agree with that. There may be seven stories, but there will always be new ways to tell those stories, making it new in some way or another. And I think with the New Normal, it's the same exact thing. Ryan Murphy is just so good at bringing you something new and exciting. And I seriously suggest you give this show a chance, no matter what your prejudices are.

I'm going to start with the other characters first and then get to the main characters. I'm only doing it this way because the main characters are probably the only reason why I like this freakin' show so much. This is in no way because of the other actors' capabilities, I just really like David and Bryan!


The role of the surrogate is Goldie, played by Georgia King. She's a smart, capable woman who just wants to do right by her daughter and I really like her character. I've noticed a trend about female characters getting a really bad rep, but I like her character. I think under the circumstances she's held up pretty well and she has a good head on her shoulders despite being abandoned by her mother and raised by her grandmother. Goldie's is a tragic life. She had a deadbeat idiot husband who was Shania's dad and he just didn't get it.

Goldie walked in on him literally cheating on her and she gave him up simple as pie. What I liked was that she didn't blow up, she didn't scream, she just said she had enough and kept it pushing. I know this is very anti-feminist of me. But I feel like there are all kinds of women in this world. I genuinely don't believe that all of them would blow up in their husband's faces over such a betrayal. Especially when her husband had been treating her bad for years.

I've never been more proud of a female character than when she just said, "You know what? You can have him!" Because there's just some things not worth blowing up over. I'd like to think that if I ever caught my man cheating, I would react the same way. The way I see it, he obviously didn't care too much for me to not cheat, so in my eyes, he can pack his bags and go. I don't believe in cheating, I don't condone it, and never will I. People keep telling me how when I'm all lovey dovey in love with someone, that I would do anything for them and I really beg to differ. Why waste your time on someone who obviously doesn't care about you? So what I liked was how Goldie handled that situation.

Goldie hopped in the car soon after and drove all the way to California and watched the sunset, but then Goldie met Bryan and David and the rest is history from there. I also liked Goldie's open mindedness about the couple. It's so easy to judge people based on their sexual orientation without getting to know the actual people. In my theatre class, I'm seeing more and more evidence of how "gayness" wasn't a big deal back then. It wasn't uncommon for guys to kiss each other, or girls. Let's face it, it took a supremely long time for English theatre to get used to the idea of having actresses. Which means all of you who loves Romeo and Juliet by Shakespeare. Yeah, guess what. In original productions, Juliet was played by a man and those epic love scenes mean two guys were kissing. Back then, it just wasn't a big deal. Once people put a name on things, it becomes taboo. Which is why when people talk about gay people in a negative way, I can't help but think they're dumb because it wasn't that long ago when their ancestors were kissing all over other guys or other women.

But Goldie was really chill with them and I liked how willing she was to help them. It's so rare to come by, it's almost sad and it really makes me wonder about the future of America or anywhere for that matter. I seriously fear about this world because people just aren't happy unless their mad about something and going to war over the smallest things. So as far as my list of good, strong female characters go, Goldie is definitely one of them and I think Georgia does a terrific job of bringing those characteristics back to life.


Shania is the precocious little girl and she's played by Bebe Wood. It's sort of like Ryan Murphy looked at old tapes of Kids Say the Darndest Things and put it all into the character of Shania. She's just so worldly and accepting and it's not at all what a child of her age should act like, yet she's completely believable. It's not uncommon for children to be the total opposite of their upbringing. Like if they had a very outspoken parent, it's not uncommon for the kid to be shy. In the case of Shania, she has a very outspoken grandmother and a sort of timid mother. So it makes sense that Shania would be a mix of reserved yet outspoken.

It's amazing the things that Shania does. She's so weird and cool and funny and it makes me think that if I were still younger and Shania really did exist, I'd want to be friends with someone like her. I mean, she watches animal documentaries and yells for the animal to eat the people, she imitates characters from movies, and she dresses like a pilgrim when Goldie takes away her iPad to symbolize how far people have come frome the "dark place" where there was no technology to keep everyone connected.

What I also liked was that Shania is very observant and knowledgable. She teaches Bryan and David, Goldie, and even Jane things that they still needed to learn but didn't know that they needed to learn. Considering things that have happened, it would have been very easy for Shania to be a jaded little girl who hates the world. As it looks, her dad abandoned her, Goldie sort of kidnapped her across state lines, and her mom is having a baby for a gay couple. Yeah, that would be enough to make anyone mad but instead, Shania is just this very open cool girl and I really look forward to future Bebe Wood's projects because I honestly think she's going to go far in her career and I hope it's a really long one.


Ahh, what to say about dear grandmother Jane, played by Ellen Barkin? I don't think there are adequate words to describe everything that is her, but here's to trying. All in all, it's very easy to understand Jane. She comes from a different era where gay people were weird, black people were others, and teenagers just didn't have sex like that and have children at such young ages. It's easy to see how she's a product of her society because I'm sure her parents were filling her head with all kinds of untrue crap, and again, it's just a product of that kind of world back then. The world's changing and she just doesn't like what she sees and she's frightened.

There was a time when all kinds of guys would walk up to her in a bar and try to pick her up. There was a time when Goldie would listen to her. There was a time when gay people kept their business to themselves and times were just simpler then. I think more than anything, Jane is just scared of what the future is going to bring. She puts up a good front but she has just as much insecurities as anyone else would regarding the future.

She embodies anything old school and that means rules of sex. She thinks people her age shouldn't do any of that and with a gentle push, she gets it on with a guy who makes her feel wanted but also makes her feel old. The rules of dating and sex have changed and she felt dumb about it because she hopped on the bandwagon too late. Yet, in this past episode, she discovered twitter and the many wild things that could happen with it. I think she's just a woman who is trying to catch up to a world that's left her beliefs behind.

Having said that, she has some of the most funniest lines I've ever heard ever on a TV show. Ellen Barkin just really sells her character and I can see why she's such a recognized person. Ellen is a fantastic actress. Just astounding.


Next up is Bryan's assistant, Rocky, played famously by Nene Leakes. What I also thought was clever was how Bryan is in charge of a television show called Sing which is a wink to Ryan's show Glee. I thought that was cute.

Rocky is there to play the stereotypical ghetto black person who tells it like it is. Though funny, I would like to see something different from black women like what Kerry Washington is doing on Scandal. (Another guilty pleasure. You MUST watch it!)

Anywho, having said all of that, I really like Rocky's character. She does tell it like it is and she keeps Bryan from being too much of a prima donna. In fact, she pretty much keeps everyone grounded and keeps egos from flying every which way. I think she's a really good addition to the show and I'm interested to see if her character will go beyond her stereotype and become something more than what she is now. I hope she gets a little more meat with her storyline instead of popping up as the situation demands.



Finally, the best for last! YAY!! Okay, David first. He's played amazingly by Justin Bartha. I first fell in love with Justin when he played the faithful sidekick Riley in the National Treaure movies. He was just so cute at being self deprecating and just as smart as Ben without all the credit. So when I saw that he was going to be on this show, the only thing I could say was, "I am so watching this!" He may not be a huge star, but I think he really should be. He's just so good at what he does, it's almost cruel to not give him his props when they're so definitely deserved.

David is a gynecologist and he plays the obvious centered and serious one of the relationship. I recently read an article in EW magazine where one of the writers was upset at the portrayal of gay men in TV. On one hand I agree with him, but on the other, I think he's an idiot. This is in no way reflective of him personally, but I just didn't agree with his views. He was upset that in every couple whether romantic or friendly, there's always a flamboyant one who's so wild, fashion forward, and flashy. And the other is always the serious one who has to keep talking them off the ledge. I understand where's he's coming from. He is a gay man and it's exactly how I feel about how black people are portrayed in TV. Only as lowly thugs and gangbangers or basketball players and things like that.

I understand, I really do, but he should know better. In TV, that's what works. It would be completely boring to have two flashy gay guys, or two serious gay guys, or the same for one gay guy and one staight guy. The couple just wouldn't be believable. The only example I can think of right now, is the gay couple in Suburgatory where Tessa's guidance counselor is flashy gay and Chef Allen for Dallas and Dahlia is the same kind of flashy gay. To me, that couple doesn't really pop off the screen. They're actually kind of annoying. But in the case for The New Normal or Partners, the serious/flashy duo just works. It's the same with straight couples. Ricky and Lucy anyone? Lucy was flashy and always getting into trouble and Ricky was always bailing her out and it brought such great laughs and that was totally okay, but in the case of gay people, it's not okay?



And no offense, but gay people kind of have it coming. Besides TV, I've seen and known gay people who are flashy and flamboyant and fashion forward and act exactly like Bryan on this show. Just as I've seen serious gay men, but flashy is usually the norm. They wear wild clothes that seriously don't match, wear heels, swish their hands, snap their fingers, make fun of people, or even go full drag. Like I said, they kind of have it coming.

So in the case of Bryan and David, it just completely works. David likes to keep Bryan grounded and I love the little flashback scenes where David is really getting into the gay scene and he had glasses, he looked a little nerdish and nervous, he was awkward and it was just so cute to see that side of them when they first met and started talking to each other. I honestly couldn't stop smiling. The chemistry between Justin Bartha and Andrew Rannells is just so electric, you have to wear special glasses for it. Seriously.



What I also liked was how good David is to Bryan. Bryan can go on some pretty wild tangents and still bring him back down while making him feel good about it instead of hurting his feelings like straight men would do to women. There was a scene where they had a party to prove they had black friends (don't judge) and David kissed Bryan's shoulder and then his cheek. Like double kisses like that is so rare to get from a straight man and to see a gay one do it is just ten times sweeter. David is just so open about his love for Bryan and it nearly brings tears to my eyes. That's how much I love this freakin' couple!! I hope they stay around for a really long time because those two weeks in between episodes were literally killing me. This show is so much more than its premise and these characters really give me a renewed hope for future America.


My very best, most favorite character would have to be Andrew Rannells. He's just such a great actor that if it were anyone else in this role, it so would not work. I really hope to meet him one day and work with him because he is just so talented and adorable, it's like how can you not like this show because of him? That whole thing with Utah was just disgusting and it's no wonder why no one even gives that state a second thought.

Andrew plays Bryan with such deep seated sincerity, you can't help but fall in love with his character. He may be a crazy prima donna who cares about if his furniture matches, or baby accessories, or anything like that, but he also deeply cares about David and his mother who's always gone out of her ways to make Bryan feel unwelcome. Bryan has a heart and it's so adorable how David and Bryan play off of each other.

It's not necessarily one is the dominant male and the other is the submissive male. I think they both have a dominant side and a submissive side. There's moments where David is kind of in charge but if you see them in flashbacks, Bryan was the dominant one and really made David step up and embrace his gayness.



This show isn't all fun and games. There are serious moments that make this show even better like the presidential episode where they discuss the effectiveness of either candidate. But there's also an episode where David and Bryan are going shopping for baby things and Bryan put on a baby hat which made him look like a little kid which was cute. And David was saying how cute he looked. It was really lovey dovey stuff that all couples do and some idiot guy came up to them and told them that they shouldn't do that in public, that they shouldn't do that in front of his daughter and that they're setting a bad example for her. I literally wanted to reach through the screen and punch everything that that guy stood for. It was disgusting. I mean, if people want to express their love, let them. It wasn't that long ago when a lot of people couldn't get married, or had arranged marriages, and it's sick how people can think that way.

I feel very much a part of David and Bryan's life because they're so open with each other and so honest and cute. If I ever have a relationship, I totally want it to be like theirs. They're just so cute and teach people what the real meaning of love is. Love is blind, love is true, and love is hard but well worth it.



What I also thought was cute was how David is short and Bryan is tall, yet David is seen as the manly serious one mostly and Bryan is the sensitive one. I don't know if anyone else has caught on to that but I find it really adorable and I think that this show will definitely last if people just give it a chance and stop letting their hatred or their parents' hatred decide things for them. This show is well worth watching because in such a dysmal world that's obsessed with violence, it's great to see a show like this get made. And I cannot wait until David and Bryan's baby is born because they are going to be such fantastic parents. The baby is going to be the most spoiled and responsible person ever. That may be an oxymoron and never done before, but in this case, it's most definitely possible.



Is it obvious how much I love this show? LOL. So honestly, just give this show one episode. If you don't like it, that's your business but at least you gave it a shot before not liking it just because of the subject matter. Seriously, watch this show, you won't forget it. Thanks for reading! Have a fantastic evening!




    Binge Watch List

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    Obsessed With

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