But there's only so
much mad woman's poopy I can throw around looking for them.
Not exact matches
As far as examples of strong
women in media, I can only cite the ones that I've appreciated — Buffy and Willow from Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Zoe, Inara, and Kaylee from Firefly, and Joan and Peggy from
Mad Men (I love Peggy so
much), Katniss Everdeen from The Hunger Games (the books, as I haven't seen the movie).
And as it says in Jeremiah 50 vs. 36 - 38, the mingled people will become as
women, and will be
mad upon their idols, as described in the days of Babylon, and now it is juxtaposed to this time of the United States, the world of today is how this book works, it tells the present, past, and future people, this is why
much of it is «prophesied» duh..
Then we went to Dublin and ingested too
much hard liquor and stayed up until 3AM eating allllll the chocolate and woke up the next morning — still a little woozy — and ran around like a
mad woman trying to finalize everything for the wedding.
I pretty
much look like a
mad woman.
It was
much clearer who was supposed to be doing what; if you look at «
Mad Men,» the
woman stays home and looks pretty and takes care of the house and the man brings home the money and on either side if you're failing in your role, it's a real failure in your role as a spouse.
Oh, not that
women are facing a shrinking pool of marriageable men, but that she — and society — is still defining men by how
much they make and how smarter they are than their wives, a very 1950s, «
Mad Men,» retro and misguided way to think.
I pumped like a
mad woman for four months and fed my son what I could, but no matter how many «boost your milk supply» teas and pills I swallowed, or how
much oatmeal I ate, none of it helped.
In this show, a single
woman would be given a Watch full episodes of
Mad Men and get the latest breaking news, exclusive videos and pictures, episode recaps and
much more at
The title stands for Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling, a short - lived 1980s TV show of which I have no memory whatsoever, and it stars Alison Brie (Community,
Mad Men) and Betty Gilpin (Nurse Jackie) as L.A. - based actresses - turned - wrestlers whose major conflict is outside the ring, and comedian Marc Maron as the down - on - his - luck movie director who hires them to be part of an all -
woman wrestling show that's as
much soap opera as it is fighting.
Alison Brie (Community,
Mad Men) and Betty Gilpin (Nurse Jackie) star as L.A. actresses - turned - wrestlers whose major conflict is outside the ring, and comedian Marc Maron as the down - on - his - luck movie director who hires them to be part of an all -
woman wrestling show that's as
much soap opera as it is fighting.
It also doesn't help that if you've ever picked up a smattering of basic French, you'll quickly realise that she's pretty
much just repeating herself like a
mad woman.