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Post by Deleted on Aug 6, 2019 22:45:37 GMT -5
OKAY MAYBE IT’S A LITTLE TOO EARLY TO MAKE THIS THREAD AND WE DON’T EVEN HAVE A LOVER SUB CATEGORY YET BUT I’M EXCITED LEAVE ME ALONE
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Post by Deleted on Aug 6, 2019 22:46:53 GMT -5
The little “oh” after the second “you could stay” in The Archer.
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Post by taryn on Aug 24, 2019 21:15:27 GMT -5
All of the little laughs in 'I Forgot That You Existed' and the way she says "indifference" differently every time she says it.
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Post by taryn on Aug 24, 2019 21:17:32 GMT -5
The way she ends 'I Forgot That You Existed' with "Sooooo, yeah..." is so iconic.
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Post by taryn on Aug 24, 2019 21:34:45 GMT -5
I love the "(Oh yeah, you're right, I want it)" in the background of 'Cruel Summer.'
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Post by TaylorSwiftFan on Aug 24, 2019 23:36:40 GMT -5
How Taylor sort of laughs or giggles in 'I Forgot That You Existed' is cute.
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Roman
Next Level Swiftie
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Post by Roman on Aug 25, 2019 4:09:09 GMT -5
Did you guys notice the volume in Lover slightly drops?! (about 1:30 into the song)
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Post by FearlesslySpeakNow on Aug 25, 2019 5:33:53 GMT -5
I love love love how I Forgot That You Existed ends with like a 'it's just indifferenceeeee... oh yeah', it's so cute. XD
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Post by SomeFearlessChick on Aug 26, 2019 4:18:47 GMT -5
I posted this on Tumblr but thought I would share here too:
Just a little personal perspective to 'The Man'. During high school I was a drama club geek, and I always wanted roles that were meant for males. My teacher even queried this, asking why I never wanted any of the female roles. At the time, I really had no idea why, all I knew was that I preferred playing stronger, bolder characters, and all the female parts were always damsels in distress, very far from what I was interested in. Anyway, it wasn’t until years later, during the next wave of feminism that I was like ohhhhhh, I see now why they were so different. And I just think 'The Man' perfectly epitomises this.
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Post by FearlesslySpeakNow on Aug 26, 2019 7:17:37 GMT -5
I posted this on Tumblr but thought I would share here too: Just a little personal perspective to 'The Man'. During high school I was a drama club geek, and I always wanted roles that were meant for males. My teacher even queried this, asking why I never wanted any of the female roles. At the time, I really had no idea why, all I knew was that I preferred playing stronger, bolder characters, and all the female parts were always damsels in distress, very far from what I was interested in. Anyway, it wasn’t until years later, during the next wave of feminism that I was like ohhhhhh, I see now why they were so different. And I just think 'The Man' perfectly epitomises this. Ahh, that's so cool and inspiring!!
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Post by taytaytay on Aug 27, 2019 1:59:11 GMT -5
I posted this on Tumblr but thought I would share here too: Just a little personal perspective to 'The Man'. During high school I was a drama club geek, and I always wanted roles that were meant for males. My teacher even queried this, asking why I never wanted any of the female roles. At the time, I really had no idea why, all I knew was that I preferred playing stronger, bolder characters, and all the female parts were always damsels in distress, very far from what I was interested in. Anyway, it wasn’t until years later, during the next wave of feminism that I was like ohhhhhh, I see now why they were so different. And I just think 'The Man' perfectly epitomises this. I'd genuinely never considered gender roles in plays so this has been like a lightbulb moment for me. I did drama in my first few years of secondary school and I always played the male parts because there wasn't enough boys, so it had never clicked to me that women are often portrayed as damsels in destress. I'm off to reread all the plays we did now
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Roman
Next Level Swiftie
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Posts: 5,849
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Post by Roman on Aug 27, 2019 6:32:32 GMT -5
I posted this on Tumblr but thought I would share here too: Just a little personal perspective to 'The Man'. During high school I was a drama club geek, and I always wanted roles that were meant for males. My teacher even queried this, asking why I never wanted any of the female roles. At the time, I really had no idea why, all I knew was that I preferred playing stronger, bolder characters, and all the female parts were always damsels in distress, very far from what I was interested in. Anyway, it wasn’t until years later, during the next wave of feminism that I was like ohhhhhh, I see now why they were so different. And I just think 'The Man' perfectly epitomises this. I'd genuinely never considered gender roles in plays so this has been like a lightbulb moment for me. I did drama in my first few years of secondary school and I always played the male parts because there wasn't enough boys, so it had never clicked to me that women are often portrayed as damsels in destress. I'm off to reread all the plays we did now Depends on the play and the storyline. It's logical to cast boys and girls for the specific roles matching the right gender (unless you don't get enough people of course). In my highschool we had plays varying from classic to modern. Leading roles were distributed equally (varying from year to year). There was plenty of room for girls to be in the foreground and play strong roles. It would've been wrong to positively discriminate girls and let them audition for male roles too.
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Post by taytaytay on Aug 27, 2019 7:01:50 GMT -5
I'd genuinely never considered gender roles in plays so this has been like a lightbulb moment for me. I did drama in my first few years of secondary school and I always played the male parts because there wasn't enough boys, so it had never clicked to me that women are often portrayed as damsels in destress. I'm off to reread all the plays we did now Depends on the play and the storyline. It's logical to cast boys and girls for the specific roles matching the right gender (unless you don't get enough people of course). In my highschool we had plays varying from classic to modern. Leading roles were distributed equally (varying from year to year). There was plenty of room for girls to be in the foreground and play strong roles. It would've been wrong to positively discriminate girls and let them audition for male roles too. I mean for most roles the gender of the character doesn't have huge implications for the story so I don't see why there's a need to limit it. Obviously you can't really cast a woman as Lola in Kinky Boots when the whole point is that the character is a drag queen, but I don't see why in like The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time Christopher has to be played by a man or a woman.
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Roman
Next Level Swiftie
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Post by Roman on Aug 27, 2019 13:25:51 GMT -5
I suspect that Taylor’s speech at the end of Daylight is intentionally recorded with a phone sound. It represents her true voice saying important things in contrast to the rigged message in the K*nye phonecall.
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Post by SomeFearlessChick on Aug 27, 2019 21:22:41 GMT -5
I suspect that Taylor’s speech at the end of Daylight is intentionally recorded with a phone sound. It represents her true voice saying important things in contrast to the rigged message in the K*nye phonecall. I agree with this but I don't think it's to do with Kanye.
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