Tags: Bomb GirlsReelzAli LiebertIMDbBomb Girls recapsPretty Little Liars
I'd like to start by thanking everyone who commented this week. I'm so excited to gush over this show together. Let's never fight.
So far, other than talking to you guys, the coolest thing about recapping this show is being forced to re-watch and rethink episodes. It's made me change my opinion on a couple of things. Firstly, I'll admit that I was not initially very fond of Ms. Gladys Witham, because I thought she was the Canadian Lady Mary, and the spot for "poor little rich girl" in my heart has already been claimed by a girl with the eyebrows of an angel and an immortal golden retriever. But then it came to me in a dream: Gladys isn't the Canadian Mary Crowley, she's the 1940s Spencer Hastings. Because Gladys, like Spencer, uses her beauty, wits, and sense of entitlement for...
I'd like to start by thanking everyone who commented this week. I'm so excited to gush over this show together. Let's never fight.
So far, other than talking to you guys, the coolest thing about recapping this show is being forced to re-watch and rethink episodes. It's made me change my opinion on a couple of things. Firstly, I'll admit that I was not initially very fond of Ms. Gladys Witham, because I thought she was the Canadian Lady Mary, and the spot for "poor little rich girl" in my heart has already been claimed by a girl with the eyebrows of an angel and an immortal golden retriever. But then it came to me in a dream: Gladys isn't the Canadian Mary Crowley, she's the 1940s Spencer Hastings. Because Gladys, like Spencer, uses her beauty, wits, and sense of entitlement for...
- 9/19/2012
- by Elaine Atwell
- AfterEllen.com
It's been nearly 13 years since researchers first discovered the Pacific Trash Vortex, a country-sized mass of plastic debris in the North Pacific Gyre. Since that time, countless boats have come back with anecdotal reports of masses of plastic floating in the sea.
Earlier this week, we had the chance to sit down with two people who voyaged into the gyre this past summer: Mary Crowley, Project Kaisei co-founder and executive director of the Ocean Voyages Institute and Nick Mallos, a marine scientist with The Ocean Conservancy. The pair took part in a 20 person, three-week expedition in August on the research vessel Kaisei that took them from San Francisco to San Diego. This is what they found.
One of the most striking things about traveling into the so-called plastic island is that it isn't much of an island at all, Mallos explains. "It's more like an archipelago. It would be so...
Earlier this week, we had the chance to sit down with two people who voyaged into the gyre this past summer: Mary Crowley, Project Kaisei co-founder and executive director of the Ocean Voyages Institute and Nick Mallos, a marine scientist with The Ocean Conservancy. The pair took part in a 20 person, three-week expedition in August on the research vessel Kaisei that took them from San Francisco to San Diego. This is what they found.
One of the most striking things about traveling into the so-called plastic island is that it isn't much of an island at all, Mallos explains. "It's more like an archipelago. It would be so...
- 11/19/2010
- by Ariel Schwartz
- Fast Company
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