Tag Archives: molly-ringwald

Madelaine Petsch in a Bra Top of the Day

I accidentally watched 13 episodes of Riverdale and I fucking hated every single one of them, but for some reason, I watched every single episode while hating it, and a girl I get nudes from watched every single one of the episodes and asked me which one of the bitches I liked the best, and I hated all of them…especially Molly Ringwald and her mangled face…BUT…this one…this Madelaine Petsch….was on point.. Which brings up a serious issue that I am only realizing I have…a Redhead fetish…what the fuck, not ever in my life have I fucked a redhead, been into a redhead, wanted a redhead…but every single young starlet I’m into from Lohan to Bella Thorne to now this stripper porn looking chick is a redhead…I guess they are good marketing tools, brainwashing me with their redhead power… TO SEE THE REST OF THE PICS CLICK HERE The post Madelaine Petsch in a Bra Top of the Day appeared first on DrunkenStepfather .

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Madelaine Petsch in a Bra Top of the Day

See Spellbinding Nudes From The Last Witch Hunter’s Rose Leslie

Rose Leslie co-stars in the Vin Diesel action flick The Last Witch Hunter, but shows off her rosebuds on Game of Thrones . Jem and the Holograms’ Molly Ringwald is mam-licious in 1995’s Malicious , and a double feature of Tales from the Crypt films brings us tales of the stripped!

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See Spellbinding Nudes From The Last Witch Hunter’s Rose Leslie

Top 10 Naked Babes of John Hughes Movies

There is perhaps no single filmmaker who better captured what it was like to be a teen in the 80s than John Hughes. Though Hughes has a ton of writing credits to his name, he only directed eight movies . Thankfully they were a breeding ground for actresses who would go on to do some great nudity. From the Hughes regulars like Molly Ringwald and Ally Sheedy to the one-timers like Kelly Lynch and Mia Sara , here are the Top 10 babes from John Hughes directed films that have done nude scenes…

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Top 10 Naked Babes of John Hughes Movies

Molly is My Homegirl: Relatives Embarrass Teen, Have No Clue What They’re Wearing

Christmas is a special, joyous time of year … but when you get close and distant family together for extended periods of time, it can also be embarrassing. Especially if your name is Molly and your relatives buy and wear these t-shirts. A Reddit user captioned the pic, “My cousin Molly’s grandma went into Spencer’s to look for presents for her family. She thinks she found the best presents ever!” Molly is my homegirl . What a coincidence that Spencer’s chose that name! The name Molly reached peak popularity in the early ’90s, (thank you, Molly Ringwald), then took on a new meaning this year (thank you, Miley Cyrus ). The name, of course, has become a euphemism for the drug MDMA, which all the (not) cool kids are talking about … and these folks likely aren’t aware of. Let’s just hope they aren’t Tweeting about their hot cousins , as well.

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Molly is My Homegirl: Relatives Embarrass Teen, Have No Clue What They’re Wearing

Hunter Hayes Is Telling ‘The Rest Of The Story’ On Encore

MTV Artist to Watch talks to MTV News about ‘closing the chapter’ on his debut album with eight new songs. By Christina Garibaldi

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Hunter Hayes Is Telling ‘The Rest Of The Story’ On Encore

James Gandolfini Remembered As ‘A Fine Man’ By Steve Carell, Ewan McGregor

Russell Crowe, Molly Ringwald, Governor Chris Christie and more take to Twitter to remember the late, great ‘Sopranos’ actor. By Todd Gilchrist

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James Gandolfini Remembered As ‘A Fine Man’ By Steve Carell, Ewan McGregor

Molly Ringwald Jazzes Up Breakfast Club Theme Song

Some theme songs never die. And with that in mind, Molly Ringwald – who has released a novel, starred on The Secret Life of the American Teenager and come out with her first album, all in the past 12 months – has unveiled her version of “Don’t You (Forget About Me).” It’s slow, it’s jazzy… and it’s pretty darn great if you ask us! Listen for yourself: Molly Ringwald – “Don’t You (Forget About Me)”

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Molly Ringwald Jazzes Up Breakfast Club Theme Song

Pretty In Pinkgate: Is Duckie Gay? Jon Cryer Responds

Earlier this week, John Hughes muse (and recent Reddit queen ) Molly Ringwald set the record straight with Out.com on the sexuality of her Pretty in Pink character Andie’s lovesick BFF, Duckie: ““Duckie doesn’t know he’s gay. I think he loves Andie in the way that [my gay best friend] always loved me.” To which the world breathed a knowing sigh. ” Of course Duckie is gay!” Thought everyone. Well, everyone except for, you know, Jon Cryer . A day after Ringwald dropped the Duckie bomb, the Two and a Half Men star chimed in with an objection to Zap2It , admitting that the Duckman was easily prone to such speculation. That said, if anyone would know, it’d be Cryer… right? “I respectfully disagree. I want to stand up for all the slightly effeminate dorks that are actually heterosexual. Just cause the gaydar is going off, doesn’t mean your instruments aren’t faulty. I’ve had to live with that, and that’s okay.” Still, I’m with Ringwald when it comes to Duckie’s romantic prospects with Andie and the alternate ending in which she chooses her squirrelly bestie over pretty boy Andrew McCarthy. She remembered the Duckie ending feeling not quite right: That ending fell so flat — it bombed at all the screenings. I didn’t realize it then — I just knew that my character shouldn’t end up with him, because we didn’t have that sort of chemistry. If John was here now, and I could talk to him, I think that he would completely acknowledge that. That said, how could you not love a boy who sings you Otis Redding? [via Zap2It ]

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Pretty In Pinkgate: Is Duckie Gay? Jon Cryer Responds

Mr. Skin Says: "Ask Me Anything"

Have a burning question for Mr. Skin? Well, you’re in luck- today our fearless leader joins a motley crew that includes Louis CK , Molly Ringwald , and adult star Stoya by participating in a Reddit “AMA”, or “Ask Me Anything”, Q&A. “Ask Me Anything” is a popular feature of the social aggregate site where users can submit questions about, as the name implies, anything directly to the interviewee. Other users can then upvote the questions they really want to see answered, which will go to the top of the AMA page. The Mr. Skin Ask Me Anything page is live NOW, so submit your questions- Mr. Skin goes on LIVE at 1pm CST to give you the answers you need. Even about that burning sensation. Ask Mr. Skin Anything

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Mr. Skin Says: "Ask Me Anything"

REVIEW: Richard Linklater’s Bernie Paints an Opaque Portrait of a Happy-Go-Lucky Killer

Can a person really be charming enough to get away with murder? Especially if the victim is a super-beeyotch to begin with? That’s the question asked, and almost answered, by Richard Linklater’s Bernie , in which Jack Black plays a Carthage, Texas, assistant funeral-home director who’s so beloved in his community that his fellow citizens are almost willing to look the other way when he breaks the sixth commandment. Bernie , written by Linklater and Skip Hollandsworth, was drawn from a Texas Monthly article about the real-life Bernie Tiede, now serving a prison sentence for the 1996 murder of 81-year-old widow Marjorie Nugent. Tiede shot Nugent in the back four times with a rifle and then proceeded to stuff her body into a freezer in her own home. Nugent was missing for the better part of the year before her body was discovered; Tiede defended himself by claiming that she’d abused him emotionally, driving him to the breaking point. It was a stroke of genius, at least a miniature one, to cast Black in this role – he’s made to play the affable teddy bear who could snap at any moment. Linklater structures the movie so that almost before we even see Bernie, we know just what kind of a guy the townspeople think he is. In the opening sequence we see him giving a glossy-ghoulish presentation on how to prepare corpses for viewing: “Don’t overcosmetize!” he warns, and Linklater follows up with a series of on-camera testimonials from the locals, giving witness to the fact that before he snapped, Bernie took just as much care with the living as he did with the dead. (One of these townspeople is played, with sharp, wicked glee, by Matthew McConaughey’s mother, Kay .) Bernie keeps track of which people’s kids had gone off to which colleges; he sings boisterously with the church choir; and in the line of duty he pays special attention to the bereaved, particularly fragile widows, though he doesn’t seem to be particularly interested in their money. At least, not until he buries the husband of the cantankerous Marjorie Nugent (Shirley MacLaine), who habitually terrorizes the town with her rudeness and self-involvement. She also happens to be loaded, and somehow she takes a shine to Bernie, even though she appears to hate everyone else. Before long, the two are traveling first-class to New York and Paris, seemingly thrilled with each other’s company – until Marjorie begins wrapping Bernie around her little finger, demanding countless numbers of errands and household chores. Her harping takes the spring out of Bernie’s step, plus it interrupt his important community activities, like directing and starring in a production of The Music Man . Local sheriff Danny Buck Davidson, played by a breezily laid-back Matthew McConnaughey, makes it clear he never bought any of Bernie’s shtick, and as far as he’s concerned, it doesn’t matter how much everyone hated Marjorie Nugent – murder is murder, no two ways about it. But Linklater and Black keep us squarely on the other side, with the townspeople, who seem to believe Bernie has committed a selfless community service. MacLaine nudges us in that direction, too: Her performance isn’t big – it’s small and pinched and calculating, though it’s also rather unformed. Marjorie Nugent is a caricature, which is probably all she needs to be, particularly when all eyes are supposed to be trained on Bernie. As Black plays him, he’s a roly-poly PSA for the joys of small-town life, as happy to raise his eyes to heaven during a church service as he is to march, skip and bunny-hop his way through a community-theater production. (Bernie’s possible homosexuality is strongly hinted at, though the movie addresses the issue with a noncommittal shrug.) Linklater allows Bernie’s story to unfold in a way that’s a little arch but mostly toothless. At times he comes close to talking down to his small-town subjects, but somehow he always pulls back just in time: Linklater, a Texan himself, is earnest enough not to want to score jokes off people, and he seems to genuinely understand the allure of small-town life. The movie is mild fun, though its persistent self-consciousness keeps tugging us away from some of the pleasures it might offer; Linklater is perhaps a little too taken with the quaint, quirky elements of this story, and its folksiness becomes too much of a cartoon. As Bernie, Black is both likable and unreadable, as we can imagine the real Bernie might be. This isn’t a deep performance – everything slides off Bernie’s surface, so we never really know what he’s thinking. That makes sense for a guy who kills a woman and then goes about his business for months while the body of the deceased lies in the deep freeze. It’s a supreme example of comic cold-bloodedness, and yet somehow the whole enterprise should be funnier, darker and more pointed. Bernie, like its lead character, has a degree of diffuse, aw-shucks charm, but it’s also maddeningly opaque. Why does Bernie behave the way he does? We never really know, but even worse, we don’t have much reason to care. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Richard Linklater’s Bernie Paints an Opaque Portrait of a Happy-Go-Lucky Killer