Note: The point that you try to resist yourself on having a girl that you want to be ship but rather focus on what Fans considers another different character to ship with it even though they just met, Kinda sucks really hard... With that a Random Sketch of Walton (Teen years) push Isabel close to James knowing that people others considered a perfect couple instead of somebody else.
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let's talk about hookups! who do you reeeeeally think should hookup in this trip? going by vibes only, ofc.
part of me wants to say let's not because i really could care less but i'm feeling a little ... chaotic tonight so here are some pairings based purely on vibes and nothing else:
josie/laurie , teagan/jia , rory/julien , percy/lorenzo , benny/miyeon , charlotte/rina , harlowe/ace , trix/lulu , sasha/james , paige/giorgia , lari/juliette , roman/elias , rosalind/jaeha .
no i will not be elaborating ( @delicatlueur , @stclaires , @teagvns , @roaries , @concertaes , @wcrstbehaviior , @rainforum , @lovesues , @hcerin , @harlcwes , @bcatrixs , @racingfm , @jamesluvsria , @dearpaige , @gicrgiia , @lcrissas , @fairjuliette , @rosbella , @lcvesickboy )
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About EJO, from “The Making of Miami Vice”
- “Like Castillo, Eddie Olmos is a man whose life is centered around a sense of duty and dedication. ‘Success hasn’t changed Eddie at all,’ says his childhood friend Bob Wolf. ‘He’s very loyal to his friends. No matter where he’s been, he’s always kept in touch.” … Wolf explains that Olmos helped him through some rough times when he was diagnosed as having multiple sclerosis twenty years ago. “He’s very much a humanitarian. Last year, for example, Eddie sent me one thousand dollars to give to my doctor at UCLE for research into MS.”
- “There’s a box of fan mail next to the computer—all of which Olmos will answer. ‘That’s one of the reasons we got the computer,’ his wife explains. ‘You wouldn’t believe some of the letter be receives.’ Like from the eighty-five-year-old woman who said she’d never written a fan letter before. ‘And the kids. So many kinds write.’”…
- “Olmos’s life goal, simply put, is to bring people more closely together through the arts. ‘Religion, culture, race, age, education, politics, and money are things that divide us. Division isn’t bad; it can be good. But the arts are what unite us. I can take a painting by a young, Russian Communist woman and show it to a conservative, elderly, while male Republican from Georgia, and he’ll understand it. He’ll look at the painting and say, ‘I enjoy that.’ For that single moment, he can unite himself through the art with a person who’s different from him.’ Religions, he feels, are more about division than unity of mankind. ‘Organized religion has its place, but it’s got a long way to go. The day that I see the Catholic ask the Mormon to call the Jehovah’s Witnesses so that they won’t be late for the Bar Mitzvah, is the day I’ll know that organized religion is understanding what’s going on.’”
- “Olmos, who was chairman of the actors section of Hands Across America, frequently extends his humanitarian concern beyond people he knows. The man behind the brooding face of Lt. Castillo, in fact, I’d a social activist who makes frequent appearances without charge. In the farming community of Homestead, south of Miami, he works with Mexican migrants, helping their organizers raise funds. He frequently speaks at prisons, juvenile detention centers, and inner city school. Even when the Coca Cola Company asked him to speak to their Hispanic and black bottlers in Atlanta, he refused to accept a fee. ‘His only condition for accepting the engagement was that the Coca-Cola people also line up several inner city schools where he could talk the same day,’ says Father Edward Olszewski, of St. Joseph parish in Miami Beach, who accompanied him…
- “When he accompanied Eddie to the set of VICE, he’s seen that same genuineness. ‘He talks to everyone—from the guy who sweeps the floor to the producer. No one’s too big or too small.’”…
- “…He turned down George C. Scott’s part in Fire Starter because he believed a real American Indian should’ve been used. For the same reason, he turned down a part in a miniseries called Mystic Warrior, and the lead role in Band of the Hand, a feature produced by Michael Mann. In Wolfen, however, he played a Mohawk Indian, a high steel worker, named Eddie. But first he asked permission from the American Indian Movement. Because of his concern that American Indians play themselves, a page of the directory of American Indian actors, which directors use for casting, is dedicated to him.”
- “Pepe Serna points out that Olmos was offered any role he wanted in Scarface, except for the two leads. He turned them down, however, because he didn’t agree with how Cubans were depicted in the film.”
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