470 views
440 BuenaVista says: May 14, 2014 at 2:35 pm Scoff: #432: pop culture view of husbands and men. I like Americana (roots country music) and last year there was a TV show created by Khalli Couri (married to Americana genius T-Bone Burnett) about the process and lifestyle of both roots country and NashVegas country. It’s called Nashville. The show barely hung on to get a second season, and transformed itself in search of more eyeballs. T-Bone quit, claiming it had gone from a study of music and its denizens, to a soap opera. Still, I sat down this weekend with great anticipation to binge-watch a few episodes. T-Bone was right. After a few episodes, there were a few consistent changes in narrative structure. a. All NashVegas all the time. The series protagonists are a group of women and men who rotate in and out of each others lives. Only now the drama is not the music (which is now countrypolitan 90% of the time), but the extraordinary bravery and sensitivity of all the female characters, who tend to fuck now and ask questions later, prior to breaking down like delicate flowers owing to the perfidy of men and the noble pain that is artistry. The women are artists, headliners, poets, sensitive, entrepreneurs, forgiving saints, troubled geniuses, patient adults. They’re always crying, yelling, or being abused by somebody. <p><a href="https://american-girls.blieb.nl/">Getting Approached By Girls</a></p> <p><a href="https://american-girls.startblaster.nl/">Is The Age Of Calling Girls On The Phone Coming To An End?</a></p> <p><a href="https://american-girls.linkaanmelden.nl/">What Is Life Experience?</a></p> <p><a href="https://american-girls.rmdplay.nl/">Mythical Casanova</a></p> <p><a href="https://american-girls.knaps.be/">When Girls Say They Got Tested For STDs</a></p> <p><a href="https://american-girls.dutchartist.nl/">The Perfect Woman</a></p> <p><a href="https://american-girls.paginavinder.nl/">Kissing Makes Me Drowsy</a></p> <p><a href="https://american-girls.j22.nl/">Putting Women On A Pedestal</a></p>