This is super inappropriate and also super true.

This is super inappropriate and also super true.

Where I’d like to be right now.

Where I’d like to be right now.

My *future hubby #1 (and the man to whom Slamminginhd is dedicated) getting his summer pose on.
*A.P.

My *future hubby #1 (and the man to whom Slamminginhd is dedicated) getting his summer pose on.

*A.P.

Seriously, she is going to murder all of us very soon.

Seriously, she is going to murder all of us very soon.

Writing is like getting hit in the head repeatedly with a mallet. For me, anyway. I love having written. You feel good when you have that fifty-page script. I don’t know from personal experience, but it’s like childbirth: You forget the pain, and then you’re ready to do it again. — Vince Gilligan (from The Men Behind The Curtain: A GQ TV Roundtable)
My favorite part of the Anything Goes cast’s lip sync to One Direction—besides S. J. Block’s laugh—is this dude’s dressing room decor.
Looks just like my inspiration board.
Call me maybe?

My favorite part of the Anything Goes cast’s lip sync to One Direction—besides S. J. Block’s laugh—is this dude’s dressing room decor.

Looks just like my inspiration board.

Call me maybe?

You can assume that any time you see me I want to be doing this.

You can assume that any time you see me I want to be doing this.

(via fuckyeahandrewrannells)

Pasquale can get it in anywhere.

(via popculturebrain)

When Your Facebook Friend Posts Model Shots

thedcgayz:

Who are you fooling?

Really, this testing ritual seems pretty outdated in the Internet age. Why stick with such a small sample size when we have the technology to quickly get the opinions of a much bigger audience? A network could put all of its pilots up on its website and let the entire populace of interested viewers vote for their favorites and leave comments on how they would like to see the show improved before it went to series. Anything less than that is like deciding who wins an election based a recent poll. Additionally, networks could probably sell ads on those online pilots, thereby recovering some of the huge costs they incur each year for productions that don’t get picked for the schedule. Those shows that do subsequently get picked to go to series would then already have a constituency of viewers who felt a vested interest in the particular show they helped to get on the air. — Gavin Polone (from The Folly Of Having Focus Groups Judge TV Pilots)