Donald Glover for Los Angeles Time (March 2020)
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“We did have a goodbye dinner, but not like a "Goodbye, we're never going to see each other again," because I think we're all in contact, we'll see each other again. But it was definitely like, we're never going to see each other like this again, where we're on set wearing pajamas and blanket forts for 16 hours. That's a once in a lifetime opportunity, or twice [laughs]. So there was a little bit of mourning that this is it. It was actually really nice for all of us to get together and truly celebrate the show and bury it a little bit in our hearts. It helped us cope with it. And as much as we don't ever expect coming back, I don't think we were expecting to truly be canceled.”
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25/? favourite photos of Gillian Jacobs
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Alison Brie photographed by Lindsye Byrnes for Nylon (December 2017)
Sometimes, we have trouble giving ourselves permission to be happy or to believe in ourselves, and that’s something that GLOW has reminded me to do, and say, “You know, it’s okay to feel good about yourself, to believe in yourself.” I think, as women, sometimes we’re meant to feel like that type of cocky behavior is inappropriate and that we need to sort of belittle ourselves to make other women feel good about themselves or to make men feel less threatened. And, I think, I just have let all of that go.
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I think there’s been a shift in how sexual women are portrayed in film. There’s been a separation from the virtuous leading lady that maybe just has a peck on the lips to the seductress. It’s just this whole different type of woman. It’s very contemporary and I feel like this is more true to how people live in life today. It’s a more accessible type of sexuality that’s realistic and non-malicious. It’s not meant to be scary, it’s just a reality.
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