At one point this season, it seemed quite possible there would be no Reign Season 4. After this season finale, Reign Season 3 Episode 18, I am gutted, heartbroken, and then gutted again.
And I'm also totally ready for Reign Season 4 and finding out exactly where this series is going now that Mary is all alone.
If you've read just about any of my other reviews, particularly of CW shows, you know that I have beef with the fact that literally no one ever gets to be happy. Someone is always breaking up with someone else, running away, being, I don't know, kidnapped, or dying.
Tonight we got not one, but Two gut-wrenching deaths, and I don't even know what life is right now.
Lola is dead. Lola is dead, and I cannot even.
I clasped my hands over my mouth and right now I sort of feel tears welling up in my...
And I'm also totally ready for Reign Season 4 and finding out exactly where this series is going now that Mary is all alone.
If you've read just about any of my other reviews, particularly of CW shows, you know that I have beef with the fact that literally no one ever gets to be happy. Someone is always breaking up with someone else, running away, being, I don't know, kidnapped, or dying.
Tonight we got not one, but Two gut-wrenching deaths, and I don't even know what life is right now.
Lola is dead. Lola is dead, and I cannot even.
I clasped my hands over my mouth and right now I sort of feel tears welling up in my...
- 6/21/2016
- by Miranda Wicker
- TVfanatic
Six months after the Deepwater oil spill, is Bp bowing out of the Gulf of Mexico? Hell no.
Following last week's lifting on the moratorium on deep-water drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, a group of oil and gas company representatives has been lobbying the Interior Department in an attempt to speed up the permit process. This comes barely six months after the disastrous Deepwater oil spill, for which Bp was found liable. And, early this morning, Bp announced it was selling four deep-water oil and gas fields in the Gulf, begging the question that, as the turtles return, is the much-vilified energy company getting out of the area?
The answer to that is definitely not--and that comes straight from the horse's mouth. In a speech Monday morning to the Cbi in London, Bp's CEO Robert Dudley reiterated that his firm's ties to the Us were as strong as they ever had been.
Following last week's lifting on the moratorium on deep-water drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, a group of oil and gas company representatives has been lobbying the Interior Department in an attempt to speed up the permit process. This comes barely six months after the disastrous Deepwater oil spill, for which Bp was found liable. And, early this morning, Bp announced it was selling four deep-water oil and gas fields in the Gulf, begging the question that, as the turtles return, is the much-vilified energy company getting out of the area?
The answer to that is definitely not--and that comes straight from the horse's mouth. In a speech Monday morning to the Cbi in London, Bp's CEO Robert Dudley reiterated that his firm's ties to the Us were as strong as they ever had been.
- 10/25/2010
- by Addy Dugdale
- Fast Company
Bp Oil managing director Robert Dudley was making the Sunday rounds this morning attempting to explain what it is exactly that Bp is doing to contain the oil spill now that the 'top kill' has ostensibly failed. Truth be told, watching Dudley during his various appearances one got the sense his role was less spokesperson than official punching bag: he took a lot of hits and offered very little in terms of response.
- 5/30/2010
- by Glynnis MacNicol
- Mediaite - TV
Earlier this morning Robert Dudley, the managing director of Bp Oil, told Meet the Press host David Gregory that he thought Bp CEO (and Shep Smith's current least favorite person on the planet) Tony Hayward was doing "a fantastic job" and that he should stay in that job. Uh huh. Even David Gregory was non-plussed with the response and opted to "leave it there."...
- 5/30/2010
- by Glynnis MacNicol
- Mediaite - TV
Miniature portraits of Queen Elizabeth I and the first Earl of Leicester sold at auction for £72,000 yesterday (25.11.09). The tiny portraits - which are both the size of a fingernail and were painted around 1575 -show Elizabeth I and Robert Dudley, who was a childhood friend and then a suspected lover in later years. The portraits by Nicholas Hilliard were made when Elizabeth had been on the throne for 17 years. Camilla Lombardi, head of the portrait department at Bonham's, the auction house which conducted the sale, said they were "immensely" important because they document the most serious personal relationship with a man that the "Virgin Queen" ever had. She told the Times newspaper: "They might well have been...
- 11/26/2009
- Monsters and Critics
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