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Peacock's ANGELYNE series with Emmy Rossum

Peacock's ANGELYNE series with Emmy Rossum

MisterJosh85 Profile Photo
MisterJosh85
#1Peacock's ANGELYNE series with Emmy Rossum
Posted: 5/22/22 at 7:09pm

I've only watched the first episode so far, but Rossum is quite good.

Emmy talks Angelyne on Kelly Clarkson

Bettyboy72 Profile Photo
Bettyboy72
#2Peacock's ANGELYNE series with Emmy Rossum
Posted: 5/31/22 at 10:34pm

Rossum is fantastic and fully committed. However it’s way too long and there’s not enough content to hold a viewers attention. The real Angelyne is intensely private and is now bad mouthing the series. Rossum was so worried about not offending  Angelyne that the series has no teeth. As someone who has enjoyed Angelyne over the years, she’s not all bubblegum and light. She can be incredibly cruel, controlling (in a non comic way), paranoid, bizarre (in a non-kitschy way). 
 

Tonally it’s all over the place. I was hoping this would be more like La Veneno on HBO, which artfully melded reality, trauma and fantasy in moving and thrilling ways. 
 

This just felt clunky and uneven. I agree with Angelyne. It’s not very good. 


"The sexual energy between the mother and son really concerns me!"-random woman behind me at Next to Normal "I want to meet him after and bang him!"-random woman who exposed her breasts at Rock of Ages, referring to James Carpinello

South Florida Profile Photo
South Florida
#3Peacock's ANGELYNE series with Emmy Rossum
Posted: 6/1/22 at 7:15pm

Who cares it's Emmy Rossum.


Stephanatic

Valery Lavrentiev
#4Peacock's ANGELYNE series with Emmy Rossum
Posted: 6/2/22 at 8:09pm

South Florida said: "Who cares it's Emmy Rossum."

Really :)

 

lovepuppy
#5Peacock's ANGELYNE series with Emmy Rossum
Posted: 6/14/22 at 6:05am

Bettyboy, you're so right. I lived with a housemate who worked for Angelyne in the last couple of years, and she seems pretty horrific. She'd call them to come to her house or studio at any hour of the night, even on Christmas. I wouldn't say she's "intensely private," as she's been an exhibitionist for 40 years and still drives around L.A. in a very noticeably un-private hot pink sports car and sells merch out of her trunk. She sold her story to Universal, then as I've learned what is usual for her, changed her mind, s**t-talked it, and decided to do her own documentary about herself. But she still got paid $1- or $2-mil from Peacock for the story, so what does she care? She likes to make noise for the sake of it.
I haven't seen the Peacock version yet, but do like Emmy Rossum. The hair and makeup team were up there with the folks who did "Pam & Tommy." Talented folks who created spectacles in both cases. But yes, that woman, like the show, would have a limited shelf-life if she'd literally be more private. No one wants to see a 70-year-old buxom Barbie replica. (Well, I guess some do, as she's a pre-Kardashian/pre-internet Hollywood legend, but it's better that some people just take their money and bow out gracefully.)


"There is no use trying," said Alice; "one can't believe impossible things." "I dare say you haven't had the practice," said the Queen. "When I was your age, I always did it for half an hour a day. Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast." --Alice in Wonderland


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