Penny Mordaunt Minister endorsed STEAM on Thursday
On Thursday late Morning the Business of the House questions took place and Penny Mordaunt who is the Leader of the House of Commons responded to the various questions and discussions. One of the people who took part was Barbara Keeley who is the Labour MP for Worsley and Eccles South and she is also the Shadow Minister for Culture, Media and Sport. The response from Penny included the comment…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Keeley and Barbara's desks being pushed together like Ted and Beards are 🥹🥹🥹
1K notes
·
View notes
every friend group should include:
a himbo
a mean bisexual
an even meaner lesbian
she/theys
he/theys
a token straight that’s on thin ice
an astrology bitch who has everyone’s birth chart memorized
and a short king
356 notes
·
View notes
Arts Council Funding promoted by Peter Bottomley MP
On Wednesday there was a debate that took place in the Westminster Hall in the Palace of Westminster area of Parliament. The debate was entitled “Arts Council England: Funding” and the person who started it was Bob Neil who is the Chair of the Justice Committee and he is also the Conservative MP for Bromley and Chislehurst. He began with the “I beg to move, That this House has considered the…
View On WordPress
0 notes
btw. Keeley Jones is VERY good at her PR job, btw. This isn't even in discussion. A venture capital firm offered out of the blue to finance her opening a business when she hadn't even presented a business proposal, just on the basis of the freelance work she'd been doing on the side in the past year
Yeah, she's used to working on her own and bad at being someone's boss, and needed a learning curve for that. But she IS good at PR.
312 notes
·
View notes
One thing I’ve really grown to like about Keeley’s KJPR storyline is the gradual change in her relationship with Barbara. Like, Barbara in the beginning was obviously very condescending towards Keeley and treated her like she was an idiot. Her behavior with Shandy was so demeaning and almost as nasty as Shandy’s own attitude. Then as things went on and Barbara started to see what a good boss Keeley actually is, and began to understand her a bit more, Jack and Keeley still spoke about her like she was the butt of a joke, “I tried to pick the most sensitive, empathetic person I know,” “should we invite Barbara over, mess it all up?,” even their little smirky glances at each other when Barbara was making comments at the football match were designed to make fun of her. It was like Keeley and Jack were in the cool girls club while Barbara was continually the loser on the outside.
Yet, even when they weren’t being kind to one another it still felt real? Like one thing I haven’t loved in general this season is that when characters mess up, they’ve quickly devolved into caricatures (e.g., Shandy) and their mistakes feel ridiculous instead of genuine. This however felt true to the way people, even good people, can dismiss one another so quickly for not being like them. The way we talk about each other in little, unkind ways that add up.
But then in the last episode, when Keeley extends her olive branch, she calls Barbara fun. And it’s just so genuine and wonderful? Like, she notably wasn’t just thanking Barbara for being competent or hard working or organized or anything about her as an employee, all the praise Barbara surely has always received. She was saying, “I like you as a person and I like being around you and I would like to be your friend” and Barbara quitting her job to come work for Keeley was her saying “I trust you as my boss and I know you are competent at your job.” The parts of each other they weren’t able to see in the beginning are what brings them back together in the end. I think that’s so lovely.
279 notes
·
View notes
Barbara: Hooray, he's kicked the ball. The ball's over there now.
Keeley: That guy has it now. That's an interesting development. Maybe he'll kick the ball?
Barbara: He has indeed. And apparently and apparently that deserves a round of applause
Keeley: How long do football matches last?
Barbara: A billion hours, apparently.
75 notes
·
View notes