Tag Archives: big love

Alcatraz’s Greatest Mystery: What’s Under Sarah Jones’ Bra? [PIC]

Not to be confused with the New York performance artist or the embattled Cincinnati Bengals cheerleader , Sarah Jones is the baby-faced blonde who stars in Lost creator J.J. Abrams ‘ new series Alcatraz on FOX. And while Sarah is hot enough to melt steel bars, unfortunately her awesome twosome has never been liberated from her shirt. Not even when she had the Huge Boobage Opportunity of co-starring on the HBO series Big Love , though she was kind enough to strip to her skivvies and give us a clue about the fleshy secrets contained within (left). So forget the polar bear or the time-traveling convicts or whatever misleading mystery Abrams has cooked up this time. We have one question, and one question alone: What’s under Sarah Jones ‘ bra? Go deeper with all of Sarah Jones ‘ sexiest moments right here at MrSkin.com!

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Alcatraz’s Greatest Mystery: What’s Under Sarah Jones’ Bra? [PIC]

Ginnifer’s New ‘Do Is A Goodwin

Big Love star Ginnifer Goodwin attended the Metropolitan Opera’s Premiere of Armida , sponsored by Yves Sant Laurent in New York City last night. We are loving her pixie-bob do, she looks amazing!

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Ginnifer’s New ‘Do Is A Goodwin

Big Love: A Game the Whole Family Can Play [Recaps]

Well, how do you like that. After a wild and shaky season, our favorite (and, sadly, only) polygamist drama ended its fourth lap in thrilling and moving fashion. Yes, I said thrilling and moving! If you didn’t feel some sort of swell of the heart or catch in the throat or pound in the chest or something as the wives all publicly clasped hands and the wind blew their hair (where were they?) then you are a soulless robot zombie from the planet Zorbot. (Is that where Jesus and Moroni live? I don’t remember my theology.) It was great! It was exactly where this ridiculous carnival season needed to end up. I’m beginning to think that the craziness of the storylines this season was the whole point . The juggling and lying and all that needed to reach a fever pitch, so decisions could be made and partnerships ended. Ended?? Barb sorta broke up with Bill last night, didn’t she? I know in the end she grabbed hands with the family and all, but I think that was just for show. When she said “I needed you for twenty years and I don’t think I need you anymore,” that sounded pretty final, didn’t it? I suppose we’ll have to wait until next year to find out. But of all the shifting narratives of each of the three wives seeming to contemplate leaving the family, that it ultimately turned out to be Barb who made the big decision was supremely satisfying. It had shades of season two, I believe, when we last saw Barb struggling to accept her place in this strangely unequal marriage. Jeanne Tripplehorn did fabulous work as always — I hope somebody somewhere gives her an award. But, they probably won’t. Speaking of good lady actresses, Sissy Spacek! What a strange, quietly sad character her Marilyn turned out to be, eh? I’m not sure I quite got why she had such an emotional attachment to Bill and his various infidelities, but that doesn’t really matter. Mostly it was just a joy to watch Spacek do what she does so well and to see a ballsy woman throw Bill’s arrogance back in his face. Though, it was kinda strange that the writers chose to have the one woman who ever really stood toe to toe with Bill become a crying mess in the end. That said, it was completely terrific when she said that his polygamy was just another “excuse to fuck around.” Because, yes, that’s exactly what it is. Joseph Smith was a known philanderer who invented the polygamy revelation because he couldn’t keep it in his pants. Yay men! It doesn’t seem like Spacek will be back in any capacity next season, which is a shame. Now that Bill has won the election and come out of the triple-wide closet we’ll have to deal with more political plotlines, but I’m assuming it will all be of the local variety. Ohh and will they move to that big creepy house on the hill? That sounds like trouble to me, going from three safely separate homes to one large shared one. I feel like intimate nights or whatever would be wayyy more awkward. But that’ll be fun to watch, hopefully! The creepy house on haunted hill filled with unhappy public polygamists. The second most exciting thing to happen all episode was that Mary Kay Place done gone wild. She basically burned JJ and his weirdo bewigged wife alive. Wasn’t that horrifying? I mean, the whole storyline was horrifying. Turns out that JJ was trying to make a pure race by taking Wanda’s eggs and putting them in other ladies, like Adaleen, and then fertilizing them himself. So incest, basically. There were reports coming out of the creepy Kansas compound (I think based on the real-life creepy Texas compound ) about inbreeding and developmentally disabled children and it seems that JJ was the source of a lot of it. So, yeah, he’s gross. And now he’s probably dead, as Mary Kay and Chloe staged a daring scissor-stabbing escape, and then Mary Kay tied JJ and his wife together, doused everything with gasoline, and set the whole doctor’s office of horrors ablaze. I’m so glad they didn’t kill her off. She may be my favorite character on this show. Let’s get a spin-off. Adaleen! Goodness, what else. Bill got Adam Beach and his dad fired from the casino because they were allowing meth to be sold on the floor. This made Barb sad and mad and ultimately caused her to say she wants out. I mean, that wasn’t the main reason, but it didn’t hurt. Don’s kid is angry at the Henricksons because everything’s been messed up for his family since Don was made to take the polygamist fall a couple of episodes ago. Ana and Serbian Matt LeBlanc are still tangled up in all of this, even more so now that Margene made her creepy confession that she has a crush on Balkan Eddie Cibrian and Ana was all “Whatever” and the three of them did a weird hug thing. A new plural family is born! OK, that’s basically it. I think the finale episode helped to make up for the odd messiness of the past few episodes, and brought this season where it needed to go. Don’t you feel like the wagons have circled a little and next time everything won’t be as spread out and stretched thin as it was this season? Well, that’s my feeling at least. Who knows what will actually happen. I’m happy that, despite a wobbly run, I still can’t wait to find out. Oh and Nicki straightened her hair. It looks good.

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Big Love: A Game the Whole Family Can Play [Recaps]

Big Love: Sweating It Out

The fourth season of HBO’s sweeping melodrama was brought down to Earth a bit this week, even though the beginning of the episode seemed like an overstuffed Robert Altman movie. I know this whole Bill-runs-for-office storyline is annoying some fans — because it seems to forget Barb’s outing in the first season, because in these days of dirt-digging and mud-slinging no one could possibly expect a secret that big to stay hidden — and for the most part those fans are right. The whole thing is a little too much . It’s just not terribly believable that a years-practiced caution would be so impulsively thrown to the wind. But last night I was glad for the whole thing, because it gave the show a big and rousing platform to discuss the tragedy of the Lost Boys, crime-prone young men who are cast out of FLDS compounds and left to survive on their own. Mostly I’m glad that the show finally dug into Bill’s past. We’d known since the beginning of the show that he was cast out of Juniper Creek, but didn’t know any particular details of that part of his history. That he was a troubled kid with a rap sheet wasn’t surprising. That Bill Paxton was such a dish in his younger years? Big surprise! That was really the most valuable thing we learned last night. Though, maybe it was just that dark greaser mugshot that made him look good. Because here , for example? Not so much. But whatever. Yes, Bill was cast out by his father and now he’s, inadvertently to some degree, done the same thing to Ben. That weird, noodley kid did some strong acting last night, looking more poised and mature, though sad and shaken, than he ever has before. Props also to sis Amanda Seyfried, who does beatific concern so well. I’m not sure when we’ll see Ben next, though I’d bet that it’s going to be a big part of the end of this season or the beginning of the next one. I don’t exactly see happy things happening. Meanwhile, with the wives. Everyone’s mad and a little bit grossed out by Margene, who was being weirdly indignant about being in trouble. She kept trying to shake it off, trying to get people to let it go, because really it’s not such a big deal, right? Except, well, yes of course it is a big deal. Jeanne Tripplehorn did fabulous work as Barb went from sad to mad and back to sad again, once again feeling the crushing weight of this bizarre and booby-trapped family life she’s chosen for herself. Also, let’s take a moment to say: Toldja so, vis a vis Barb and the Injun. She and Tommy had a strange bonding session in a sweat lodge during which we learned that Tommy lost his wife and two children to a drunk driving accident and that Barb really likes to sweat. The whole sweat lodge thing seemed a little over the top, I mean they did it on 90210 for god’s sake, but I do so love to see Tripplehorn chin-deep in the business of acting, so I didn’t really mind. I don’t know where the Tommy thing might go, but I suspect that Barb is on the hunt for something wildly different from the norm. Might this finally be the start of her long-overdue escape from polygamy? Nicki was all tangled up in the campaign stuff, serving as a mole in the competition’s office and beginning to have some moral doubts about the sneakier work that Bill asks her to do. She likes being his special little “secret weapon,” but also isn’t quite sure what to make of the fact that she’s the only one ever asked to do the devious, underhanded stuff. You bad, Nicki. Just deal with it. So amid all the Ben hullabaloo we saw Bill’s campaign suffer and rally, both helped and hurt by the tricky presence of Sissy Spacek’s Marilyn the Lobbyist. She wanted in at the Indian casino, but Bill doesn’t trust her. So he set up a fake meeting with Tommy just so she could hear Tommy say no, but then she found out that she was set up, and boy is she pissed. So Bill really has made a nasty enemy, definitely worse than his local campaign rival, who tried to call Bill out on his sinister past, but ended up galvanizing him instead. Oops! Sorry, strict dad from Everwood . Good luck in four years. Bill’s crazy parents showed up again, this time a bit meaner and sadder than we usually see them. Lois’s heart was broken when her beloved little Benny told her about Bill’s exiling, while nasty old dad was just pissed that Bill had a big fancy casino and had never invited him to come play, for free. Naturally they showed up while Marilyn was there and all the wives were fighting with Ben. So many things to juggle! A lot of the episode felt a little Noises Off backstagey, doors slamming constantly with entrances and exits, fast-paced problems piling up on top of each other with alarming speed. The hour was definitely was chock full of nuts, on occasion a bit too full, but again I found it all worth it for Bill’s impassioned Lost Boys-defending speech at the run-off debate. Apparently the fictional nominating committee did too, because he won the darn thing. Which means he’ll now be running a real election for the seat, presumably against a Democrat. Which means… he’ll probably win, right? Though Bill would be wise to not to get too swept up by the whole thing while Margene goes slightly nuts, Nicki tries desperately to get pregnant, and Barb sits in the bathroom weeping and trying to create her own sweat lodge. Obviously Bill will be ignorant of this stuff until just before it’s too late, because that’s how this show works. And how Bill works. It was refreshing to see him actually shoulder the blame and apologize for something last night, but I don’t think his honestly self-reflective period will last terribly long. Creepy thing that happened: weirdo Ben kinda hit on Nicki’s timid, moon-faced daughter. Again with this show and the murky incest stuff! I guess it goes to show that no matter how mainstream you try to make that life — with nice new houses and a swimming pool and big cars and all that — the whole multiple marriage thing can ultimately become warped and ugly, full of strange complications and forces that pull and tear at you from all directions. I bet you the show will go one more season after this and then, in the end, we’ll have some of the family in tatters. How else, with all of these fractures spidering and spreading out, could it really go down. I don’t think the sprawling Henrikson clan can possibly stay one cohesive unit with all this shit up in the air, though I’m not sure who’d like be the first person to leave. My money’s always been on Barb, but now maybe it could feasibly be Nicki the Manic or Margene the Flirt. Margene who had a little Betty Draper/Henry Francis-style meet cute with that silver-smooth congressman. I just feel as though someone, other than Ben and Sarah, is going to walk away soon. I both can and can’t wait to find out who. So what’d you think? Any questions? Any favorite moments that I missed (I’m sure there are many)? Mostly I’m just glad that Professor Lasky was back. I like him.

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Big Love: Sweating It Out

Amanda Seyfried in Big Love of the Day

Amanda Seyfried is damaged goods to me. Not because she’s getting fucked in this clip, if anything that’s her only redeeming factor, you see cuz the second a bitch does those shitty fucking hollywood Hallmark card type movies I want to shoot myself in the face after seeing the trailer for, I have a hard time thinking of them in the way I like to look at woman and that’s as the whores they are even if she sacrificed her career, herself and our love by whoring herself for money by doing these movies, because that’s not the fun kind of whoring….

http://www.drunkenstepfather.com/flv/Amanda_Seyfried_Big_Love.flv

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Amanda Seyfried in Big Love of the Day

Big Love: Define ‘Incest’…

The fourth season of HBO’s social drama just keeps getting bigger.

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Big Love: Define ‘Incest’…

In Praise of Television’s Bad Mothers

While we weren’t loving last night’s uneven season finale of Weeds , we were loving Nancy Botwin’s parenting skills—or lack thereof. Who wants to be raised by a boring stroller-pusher when you can have someone to bring the crazy? Bad mothers are like unhappy families, no two are alike, but they are all a whole lot of fun to watch

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In Praise of Television’s Bad Mothers