Tag Archives: sensibility

Mercedes Javid: Pregnant With First Child!!

In April, Mercedes “MJ” Javid and longtime boyfriend Tommy Feight were married after years of ups and downs. Now, this Shahs of Sunset couple has even bigger news. They’re expecting their first child! Us Weekly reports that Shahs of Sunset star Mercedes Javid is pregnant ! She and her husband, Tommy Feight, are expecting their first child together. According to the tabloid’s source, the couple first told Mercedes’ mother. They then told the rest of the cast of Shahs of Sunset on Thursday, October 4 while filming the reunion special. This is amazing news! Mercedes has previously spoken about in-vitro fertilization and the sensibility of freezing one’s eggs. “I really want all women who are single and 35 years old to run to their fertility doctors and get it done,” she suggests. This is, of course, only directed at those who want to have children. “I just think it’s really awful to wait and put it off until you’re over 40,” she confesses. Mercedes says that she feels this way “because you’re just increasing your odds and you’re just making it harder for yourself.” “And don’t worry about the costs,” she says, possibly forgetting that not everyone is rich. Earlier this summer, she had “almost completed the [IVF] progress,” sources said. “it is a lot of hormones that can make us feel crazy,” she admits, referring to the hormone injections one receives prior to getting eggs harvested. “The truth is that I have a lot of ups and downs,” she confesses. “Moment to moment, especially on the hormones from IVF stuff.” “You retain a lot of water,” she cautions those who would heed her advice and walk in her footsteps. “You feel really great one moment and then terrible another moment,” she adds. Yep. Hormones can make a person go a little nuts for a while. “That’s the reason why I share because,” Mercedes begins. She says: “In my Instagram Stories for instance, I’ll say, ‘I don’t feel good today, but I want everyone else to know not to beat themselves up, to be kind to yourself and know that those days happen to everyone.’” “That’s how we connect to people,” Mercedes explains. It always feels good to help others by using your own experiences. “If you’re going through something and you and I share that,” she reasons. “[That’s] how much we just closed the gap between the two of us.” Mercedes Javid and Tommy Feight have had, as we mentioned, some ups and downs during the course of their tumultuous relationship. So some may be nervous about these two stars in particular being responsible for a new, tiny, helpless human being. But it is the hope of fans that the fact that they decided to finally tie the knot is a sign that they had worked out previous issues and are a happier, healthier couple. This is amazing news. We’re just sorry that her late father isn’t around to meet this granchild. We can’t wait to watch Shahs of Sunset online and, hopefully, see MJ’s co-stars react to her huge news.

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Mercedes Javid: Pregnant With First Child!!

REVIEW: Video-Game Sensibility Of Resident Evil: Retribution Makes For Unsettling But Unsatisfying Experience

It’s a big week for the filmmaking Paul Andersons. Paul Thomas Anderson’s    The Master  opened in a handful of cinemas in New York and Los Angeles, and Paul W.S. Anderson’s  Resident Evil: Retribution  in theaters everywhere (in 3D and otherwise). While  The Master  offers up a immersive, abstract look at an unstable man being courted by the head of a cult-like movement,  Resident Evil: Retribution  in its own way also departs from the usual narrative confines of moviemaking. It’s the closest thing you’ll find yet to a recreation of a video game sensibility on the big screen — which is in line with the franchise’s source material — and makes for a memorably unsettling if not particularly satisfying viewing experience. Resident Evil: Retribution finds action star (and Anderson spouse)  Milla Jovovich  returning to play Alice, a former employee turned sworn enemy of the evil Umbrella Corporation. Considering how crazily far and, frankly, nonsensical the story has gotten from its start as the story of a weaponized virus infecting a secret genetic research facility, the film pays surprising attention to the basic premise before skimming over the developments of the more recent installments in an intro sequence. The series’ ability to shuck off its own history is put on display in the initial action scene, which picks up where the last film left off: a slow-motion sequence of explosions and gunfire that runs backwards before lurching forward at full speed to neatly do away with the Arcadia and any other surviving characters on board. Then again, who cares about those guys? The  Resident Evil  films have clearly become a continuing discombobulated nightmare belonging to Alice and Alice alone. Again and again, she seems to find safety, only to wake up in some new, terrible scenario in which she has to fight for her life.  Resident Evil: Retribution takes this idea to its end point by being set in an underwater Umbrella-run base in which different test stages have been built for the company to demonstrate its bioweapons. All-white hallways string together life-size recreations of Times Square, downtown Tokyo, central Moscow and a suburban street. Each houses a scenario in which, at the bidding of the central A.I., swarms of infected humans, ax-wielding mutants or zombie soldiers will be released to attack. Resident Evil: Retribution , in other words, has taken great pains to find a way to have real-life game stages. This sensibility extends to the way the film explains its mission — rendezvous with a rescue team and find a way out — and the way it provides weapons for its characters: armories rise out of the ground, or, in a sequence that demonstrates definite game logic, Alice looks in an abandoned cop car, heads to a nearby bike to take its chain, smashes in the window and adds both her new tool and a gun from the vehicle to her inventory. This is even the case in the way actors from earlier installments in the franchise — Michelle Rodriguez and Oded Fehr — are folded into the film, thanks to Umbrella’s fondness for cloning. A glimpse of multiple versions of Alice in storage also reinforces the idea that if she were to die, she could just respawn and start over. Video games and movies have an uneasy partnership. The first  Resident Evil is one of the best of a shaky history of adaptations from console to big screen, but the franchise has skewed toward the sensibility of the former medium rather than the latter in a way that’s unique but tiresome. At its best,  Resident Evil: Retribution feels like a series of elaborate cut scenes strung together, but much of the time it’s a reminder of how incredibly unfun it can be to sit around watching someone else play without getting a chance yourself. The film’s extravagant action scenes have not a whiff of consequence to them, and other than Alice, the foremost quality of all of the characters is their disposability. A sequence like the one in which clones of familiar characters are put through an impossible test scenario is genuinely disconcerting in how it shakes up our perceptions of the reality of what’s on screen. But even that becomes a reminder that bringing one of the traditional qualities of a video game protagonist — his or her qualified immortality — to a movie further strips any sense of human investment in the character. Any consistency on screen is entirely stylistic: there are no rules in this universe other than that Alice will battle on, defying gravity and physics and looking fabulous despite the world eternally ending all around her. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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REVIEW: Video-Game Sensibility Of Resident Evil: Retribution Makes For Unsettling But Unsatisfying Experience

Extreme Cat Hoarding

This is what happens when your cat obsession gets a little out of control. BuzzFeed, don't let this happen to you

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Extreme Cat Hoarding

Alanis Morissette’s Comeback

CELEBRITY BUZZ : You know her as the woman singing about blowjobs in a whiny voice with long hair over her boobs. Contribute: Add an image, link, video or comment

Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters

After the success of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, Quirk Books is back with the next Austen-classic-meets-classic-monster novel in the series: Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters. (via Flavorwire ) Contribute: Add an image, link, video or comment