Not exact matches
The tired stereotypes of the
sorority girls offer little in the
way of humour.
between Jim, Maggie, and Don (and Lisa); the goosebump - raising
way that the show used on - screen text to reveal the BP spill and the Giffords shooting; the structural flourishes of the 2010 election episode and the season finale; that great scene where Don gives a master class in covering trashy news; the
way you can see Olivia Munn finding her bearings as an actress, and how that parallels her character becoming a confident on - air personality; the brashness of Jane Fonda, the patience of David Krumholtz, the deliciousness with which Emily Mortimer says the word «douchebag,» the
way Jeff Daniels tosses off his throwaway lines, and the
way he answered that «
sorority girl»'s question the second time.
In other
ways she's your average
sorority girl (the pathetically one dimensional
way sororities are portrayed in movies, at least).
She knew that the PG - 13 summer - movie
sorority stereotype of the wild, hot
girls, barely contained in clothes for all the suds and water that came their
way, and the male - model - hot fraternity stud, beer in one hand, cell phone in the other, hooking up with the
girls like a harem — she knew all that was a cartoon image of
sorority life, but it was precisely the movie stereotype she was curious about; she now wanted to immerse herself in this too shallow pool.