With the help of the friendly car salesman Kareem (played by Jaleel White), Louis wants to buy an exact replica of Sheila, while Jessica continues to tell him to get over it - until she steals the van off the lot, which leads to a residential chase of bad driving - mostly on Jessica’s behalf. They come to the realization that this was a trip that wasn’t really a trip for the time capsule, but one last trip for the Huang brothers to bond before Eddie goes off to school. They are irritated with their older bro, but when they find the time capsule, it is filled with Emery’s rubber ducky, Eddie’s bag of farts, and a picture of their mom, which Evan put in there. This is damage control, and it isn’t going well.When the boys reach DC, Eddie gets sick from eating too many hot dogs, and Emery and Evan are forced to dig and find the time capsule without his help. Wu has violated the most sacred dictum of the entertainment industry. Essentially to be likeable to the point that we go see them. Performers get paid to “promote” movies and tv shows. Look, no one gets paid to star in movies or TV shows. Getting new work might be getting difficult. Everything she’s had in the last few years were projects she signed on for in the wake of CRA, or at least BEFORE she popped off about her show being renewed. She has nothing scheduled going forward after Lyle. If Lyle isn’t a big hit, getting future work will be hard. HWood isn’t keen on hiring people who do that. Based on her interviews, I think Wu might be one of those types that demands worship and agreement, and anything short of that is basically a assault and battery in her mind. Kate W stopped talking about her non-existent bullying after that. Kate Winslet once said that she was bullied in HS, only for basically every teacher at that HS to say she was a drama queen and that she went ape-poop whenever anyone didn’t slavishly praise her. Too often I’ve seen performer call bullying what in reality is someone else not agreeing with/worshiping the ground said performer walks on. Rarely does that land on working actresses who are leads in TV projects with burgeoning movie careers. No one else says this from the project.įurther, I’ll fully acknowledge that there is plenty of horrible treatment of actresses and actors in the entertainment industry. Given that she’s promoting Lyle, I’d say they were crocodile tears. She’s a quality actress, so I don’t buy her tears. She’s throwing anything against the wall to see what sticks. Because if somebody does something out of character for them, it usually means something’s going on in their life.” (In July of this year, the actress divulged that the intense backlash she’d received for her tweets led her to attempt suicide.) “I decided to include in the book because I think it’s important that we engage in curiosity and empathy before we go straight to judgment. “Thank you for not making fun of, because it led me to a really dark time,” an emotional Wu continued to Meyers. People didn’t understand the context of those tweets. “The thing I learned is that bad feelings and abuse don’t just go away because you will it to. “I feel like I was never able to really be myself on set, because I’d see my abuser being buddy-buddy with everybody else, knowing what he had done to me,” she shared. Not wanting to “stain the reputation of or of this producer,” Wu stayed silent publicly about the experience, but she said her tweets about the show’s pickup were ultimately an outlet for her frustration. In her new memoir Making a Scene (released today), Wu alleges that the producer repeatedly demonstrated controlling and harassing behavior, including telling her to send him selfies and gatekeeping her business decisions on Late Night, Wu also referenced the producer’s “inappropriate touching, the telling me to wear short skirts, the intimidation.”Īs Wu told Meyers, the producer’s abuse was mostly kept to Fresh Off the Boat‘s first two years on the air, after which she “felt a little bit of job security” and “started saying no,” which allegedly “infuriated” the man in question. On Monday’s episode of Late Night, though, Wu explained that her disappointment with the show’s renewal was largely due to sexual harassment and emotional abuse she says she’d experienced at the hands of a Fresh Off the Boat producer, whom she has declined to name. Jon Cryer Comedy From Mike O’Malley Ordered at NBC Donald Faison and Abigail Spencer Co-Star - First Look
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