"Finn would have kicked over one of my chairs."
"It’s a tree. They grow, you know."
"You’re not going to go to your deathbed thinking, ‘Good. they never knew I was kind.’”
"Cut the crap. I don’t care about people, I cared about him."
"I’m home."
@innypocket / innypocket.tumblr.com
"Finn would have kicked over one of my chairs."
"It’s a tree. They grow, you know."
"You’re not going to go to your deathbed thinking, ‘Good. they never knew I was kind.’”
"Cut the crap. I don’t care about people, I cared about him."
"I’m home."
(x)
This is such an interesting story to be telling. I’m really glad Glee is doing it, even if the reasons are just awful.
(via lettersfromtitan)
I want to talk about something Ryan Murphy said about 5x03 even though I also said I didn’t want to spec that episode. It’s not spec though. Under a cut anyway.
It made me think, also, of the fact that we still don’t know how Kurt’s mother died, after all these years.
Per Ryan Murphy’s latest interview, I think Glee is doing a very smart thing in making 5.03 about grief as opposed to death.
It’s been a difficult circumstance because we basically went straight from the memorial into [reworking] the two Beatles episodes, which I think are fun and optimistic, that we had always had planned. The hard part for all of us is that the past week we’ve been holed up writing the memorial episode. There were a lot of things that we had to decide — how are we going to deal with his death? At one point, we were going to have his character die after an accidental drug overdose—that was something we had considered. But we have decided that we’re not going to have him pass from that. Basically, what we’re doing in the episode is we are not telling you yet, or maybe not at all, how that character died.
Ryan Murphy (via sarahexplosions)
Ryan Murphy (via nadiacreek)
Growing up is not easy. Isn’t that what Glee is sometimes about?
This is well written & thought out. Kudos to Vulture & New York Magazine for getting it right.
This is lovely.