Blake lively gay
Blake Lively Defends Transgender Troops Against an Instagram Troll
Blake Lively has taken to Instagram to show her aid for transgender rights.
On Wednesday, President Donald Trump released a statement through a series of tweets that he plans to reinstate the ban preventing trans individuals from serving in the United States Military.
In the proposed order, which was made with the help of "generals and military experts," Trump said, "Our military must be focused on decisive and overwhelming victory and cannot be burdened with the tremendous medical costs and disruption that transgender in the military would entail."
The Gossip Girl alum responded to the news with an Instagram post of the United States Army carrying an array of LGBT flags.
She told her followers, "THIS is America. WE the people. ALL THE PEOPLE. Today I stand with our fellow citizens. No human organism is a burden. I believe in equality. In freedom. In opportunity. In kindness, acceptance, and fairness. I believe in this country, so I, and many others, sign the petition linked in the bio. Please join."
While thousands of fans showed their suppor
feature image via instagram
Anna Kendrick has it all: she’s cute, she’s funny, she’s talented, she’s good at twitter, she has friendly teeth, she has shiny hair and she can sing songs with folio cups! Furthermore, she gave PrideSource a very very homosexual interview in advance of her upcoming film, A Uncomplicated Favor, which looks so gay it has probably already made out with one of my ex-girlfriends.
After asking Anna about the queerness of a drawn-out list of previously played characters, eventually noting “So much of what you do is just a bit gay,” PrideSource went straight for the homosexy jugular:
You’ve been open about your girl crushes over the years. Have you ever had a teen crush that was or could have been romantic?
Let me think about that. I definitely – there’s somebody I’m still friends with, and when we met we kissed. This was after high academy, and it was the first time I had kissed a girl where it wasn’t just prefer, we’re at a party and boys are watching! That horrible performance silliness. But I think I haven’t had that passionate love for a lady, which isn’t saying it could never happen to me, but I consider I’m more of an Emily t
Satisfying sequels are few and far between this period of endless reboots. My overarching question when thinking about sequels is: Why? Not why are you doing this to me, but why in conversation with the original material. Did it end in a way that speaks to a continuation of the story? Are there characters I miss seeing on screen who I’d want to see again in a new adventure?
Paul Feig’s A Simple Favor was released in 2018, and gained something of a cult following, especially among queer women who recognized the do I want to be her or do I desire to be with her energy that these characters possess in spades. The costumes were fun, the writing was funny and surprisingly dark at times, and there were of course, wild twists abound. Here is where I should say that I co-hosted a multi episode podcast (A Simple Pod) where my co-hosts and I broke down the movie in almost excruciating detail. We talked to a lot of the cast and crew, including screenwriter Jessica Sharzer, director Paul Feig, and yes, even Emily (Blake Lively) herself. Suffice it to say: I am not new to the Simple Favor life, I’m factual to it.
Another Simple Favor, now streaming on Prime, cleared my admitted
It’s 2025—Let ‘Another Simple Favor’ Be Gay
[There are spoilers for Another Simple Favor below.]
If there was one thing I knew for certain I would get when I sat down for Blake Lively and Anna Kendrick’s Another Simple Favor, it was ridiculousness. As a swift refresher, the first film in this franchise has both patricide, sororicide, and an infidelity plotline in which a character sleeps with her half-brother. It’s batshit crazy. But after watching the sequel, the most egregious thing about Another Simple Favor isn’t what happens in the plot (although there’s a lot of that) but what doesn’t. Because for some unfathomable reason, this franchise will still not let its two head characters, Stephanie and Emily, just be gay already.
In the sequel to A Simple Favor (which is now streaming on Amazon Prime), we’re dropped back into this earth about five years after the first movie ends. Emily (serving time for two separate murders) has somehow managed to acquire out of jail preliminary. She’s getting married, and she wants Stephanie to be her maid of honor. For some reason, Stephanie agrees, jetting off to Capri with a woman who killed two people and even tried to ki
.