#pairing ╱ olivia & eamonn.
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gvngsigns · 4 years ago
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"will you be my valentine?" - eamonn to olivia <3 <3 <3
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valentine’s day was commercialized bullshit. though, deep down, she had secretly fantasized about what it would be like to spend a romantic evening with a certain special someone. every time she envisioned said romantic evening, eamonn fulfilled that part, which was irrational and completely ridiculous because he didn’t think of her that way. she was sure of it, and had herself convinced it wouldn’t happen, the small flicker of hope completely burned out. she was sure of it, until one day after class, she noticed him waiting for her and the question brought an instant smile to her face.  “ are you serious ? y-yeah, i’d like that. yes. i’ll be your valentine. ”  she had almost forgotten what butterflies felt like, but they were roaming in her stomach right now.  “ my dad and melissa are going out for dinner so i’m babysitting chase but he usually goes to be around eight, so you could come over if you want ? we could finally have that it marathon. i’m pretty sure both the movies are on netflix, so. ”  she quickly suggested before he could change his mind about asking her, which he probably wouldn’t do, but that was just the way her mind worked.
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newstfionline · 8 years ago
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Forget Netflix and Chill. Try Pure Flix and Pray.
By Katherine Rosman, NY Times, April 22, 2017
CHICAGO--Before breakfast at Sixteen, a restaurant in the Trump International Hotel and Tower here the morning after the premiere for the film “The Case for Christ,” David A. R. White and Andrea Logan White requested a pause.
“Hold on, I want to say grace,” Mr. White said to this reporter, whose mouth was already stuffed full of bacon. “Bless us, Lord, thanks so much for this day,” he went on, concluding: “I love you. Thanks so much for the movie.”
The disconnect between the mainstream news media and evangelical Christians is also a major theme of “The Case for Christ.” Based on the best-selling book written by Lee Strobel, a former journalist at The Chicago Tribune, the movie depicts his process of going from a hard-nosed newsman and atheist to a devout Christian and minister.
It was produced by Pure Flix, a faith-based entertainment production and distribution company in Scottsdale, Ariz., that Mr. White helped found in 2005. In June 2015, the company introduced an on-demand streaming service. While Netflix denizens devour series like “13 Reasons Why” and “Breaking Bad,” PureFlix.com offers bingeable programming like “The American Bible Challenge,” a game show hosted by Jeff Foxworthy; “Family Affair,” a sitcom starring Brian Keith that ran from 1966 to 1971; “The Encounter,” a Pure Flix original scripted series about people who are visited by Jesus; and stand-up comedy from Sinbad and Louie Anderson. Next up is “Hilton Head Island,” a soap opera starring Antonio Sabato Jr. It also streams sermons and documentaries for parents who home-school.
Last month, PureFlix.com had nearly 715,000 unique visitors, according to Alexa, a website traffic analytics company. Greg Gudorf, chief executive of PureFlix.com, said the service’s nearly 250,000 paying subscribers could choose from a catalog of more than 7,500 titles. “We’ve been blessed with really strong growth,” he said.
Mr. White, who was raised a Mennonite in rural Kansas, saw just one secular film in a theater before he turned 18. (“The Mennonites make the Mormons look like a pack of Hell’s Angels,” he said.) A friend’s parents took him to see “Grease” and “when Olivia Newton-John came out in black tights, I thought for sure I was going to hell,” he said. This was enough to persuade him to drop out of Bible college after one year. His goal was to serve God through acting, but then he became interested in production, too. Pure Flix has made hundreds of films (“Do You Believe?” starring Cybill Shepherd), sitcoms, serialized dramas and web series including “On the White Track,” which stars Mr. White and his wife.
On-demand services allow Christians of different disciplines to find content that speaks to their individual interests and beliefs. A theatrical feature film can be a tougher sell to a religious population with many different denominations.
“In the Christian faith, there are divisions with all the sects,” Mr. White said. “The Baptists won’t talk to the Assemblies of God. You have your charismatic Christians. You have your ultraconservatives, like Southern Baptists. You have Catholicism. They’re all a little different.” But, he added, invoking the Rev. Billy Graham, “The foot of the cross is level ground.”
The 2014 Pure Flix theatrical release “God’s Not Dead” found the level ground. It earned more than $60 million at the box office. (Mr. White was a star of the film, and it features Korie and Willie Robertson of “Duck Dynasty.”)
“The Case for Christ” also focuses on a theme that binds all Christians, the resurrection of Jesus. Set in 1980 and decked out with the cars, pastel clothes, handlebar mustaches and smoky newsrooms that conjure the dawn of Reagan’s America, the movie was filmed over six weeks in Atlanta and cost more than $4 million to make. It stars Mike Vogel (recently of the Syfy network’s mini-series “Childhood’s End”), the Tony-winning actress L. Scott Caldwell and Erika Christensen (known for her six-season work on the NBC show “Parenthood”). There are cameos from Robert Forster and Faye Dunaway.
On the film’s marketing poster, Mr. Vogel’s character gazes at a red Time magazine cover from 1966 that asks, “Is God Dead?” (As it happens, Time repurposed the cover for a March 2017 edition, but the modern-day headline read, “Is Truth Dead?”)
The film earned mostly favorable reviews from the small mainstream publications. It received an A-plus CinemaScore, measuring audience appeal, and has a 77 percent favorability mark from Rotten Tomatoes.
By the end of its first two weekends in more than 1,000 theaters around the country, the movie had brought in about $9 million, perhaps less than Mr. White and his partners had hoped for but still delivering a tidy profit.
Thanks to President Trump’s popularity among evangelicals and discussions of “fake news” abounding on the internet, the film has considerable resonance.
“If you watch CNN or Fox, you feel like it’s two different worlds,” said Michael Scott, a founder of Pure Flix and a producer of the film. “Here, you have something similar, you have an atheistic journalist investigating the claims for Christ. There are some similarities even though it was taking place more than 30 years ago.”
Speaking near the red carpet before the screening, Mr. Scott, also the chief executive of Pure Flix, was upbeat and gregarious, if a little nervous. Soon he would need to introduce the film with a list of thank yous “as long as the Bible,” he said. He was standing with Shawn Boskie, who was a pitcher with the Chicago Cubs and is Pure Flix’s vice president for investor relations. (A Q. and A. session after the screening was conducted by Kirk Cousins, a quarterback for the Washington Redskins.)
Mr. Scott was wearing a red-stripe tie that Mr. Boskie bought for him at Trump Tower in New York. Earlier in the evening, Mr. Scott had been yearning for a pair of scissors to help nip a tag hanging from the back of the tie. He didn’t want to just yank it off. “The tie was made in China,” he said.
Us Weekly was not represented on the news media line, but The National Catholic Register and Movieguide were. “This is like ‘All The President’s Men’ journalism before so much of it was doubted and before there were so many different journalists writing for so many different media,” said Jon Gunn, the movie’s director, of his protagonist’s search for answers. “Back when people had notebooks and pens and spoke face to face.”
But the film’s character connects to modern opinions of the news media, too, he said. Mr. Strobel’s character “is a skeptic who says he’s being evenhanded and unbiased but he’s looking to debunk Christianity so he’s not as unbiased as he should be.”
Mr. and Ms. White sidled up to Mr. Gunn and his wife, Lisa, to say hello. Mr. Gunn and Mr. White have known each other for years. Mr. White starred along with Eric Roberts in 2000’s “Mercy Streets,” Mr. Gunn’s first feature film, in which Ms. Gunn, an actress, also had a role.
“I got to make out with his wife for ‘Mercy Streets,’” Mr. White said with a big laugh.
Mr. Gunn said, “Andrea and I are still waiting for our turn.”
“Oh, it’s getting chilly in here,” Mr. White said. Ms. White, who met her husband at a church in Malibu, Calif., when she had blond dreadlocks and was working as a personal trainer, rolled her eyes. “I’ve never been a rainbow-and-unicorn Christian,” she said later.
The world of faith-based entertainment feels small and interconnected in this way. Eamonn McCrystal is an Irish tenor whose music career is managed by Elizabeth Travis, the country singer Randy Travis’s ex-wife and ex-manager who is also a Pure Flix partner. Mr. McCrystal, who played an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer in Pure Flix’s “God’s Not Dead 2,” strolled amid the friends and family of the film’s cast and crew as Ms. Travis walked the red carpet. He carried a cellphone in a leather case that made it look like a little Bible. “Oh, you’re the one that Donald Trump hates,” he said after meeting a reporter for The New York Times.
Brian Bird, the film’s writer, was an executive producer of “Touched by an Angel” and worked on programs including “Step by Step” and “Evening Shade,” the Burt Reynolds sitcom that was broadcast on CBS from 1990 to 1994. When he was in his early 20s, Mr. White had a recurring role on “Evening Shade” until he stuffed a pillow under his shirt and did an impersonation of Mr. Reynolds in front of the studio audience before filming an episode. Mr. Reynolds turned his rings around and smacked Mr. White on the ear with his open palm. Mr. White was subsequently fired.
Now Mr. Reynolds plays Mr. White’s father on a new sitcom Pure Flix is trying to shop to the networks, a 10-episode season of which has already been shot. In “Hitting the Breaks,” Mr. White plays a former racecar driver who moves with his family from Atlanta to a small town in Colorado, where he has inherited a bed-and-breakfast, the Serenity Inn. His real-life wife plays his wife on the show. Morgan Fairchild, Rob Schneider and Tim Tebow have guest-starred.
Mr. and Ms. White would also like to star in a reality show. After the success of “God’s Not Dead” in 2014, they took meetings with network executives but the discussions went nowhere.
In part “it was a faith thing,” Mr. White said.
“The major networks like the audience of faith,” he continued, “but when you have to go to the audience and say faith things on television, well, we might be too open.”
Ms. White responded, “They’re worried we’ll make the audience uncomfortable, like Jesus freaks.”
“I think the climate is different now,” Mr. White said of producing a reality show based on an evangelical Christian family. “I think it eventually will happen.”
Pure Flix executives are also building a strategy to attract a secular audience so that its content is not mere “preaching to the converted,” said Alysoun Wolfe, another of the company’s partners. This fall, Pure Flix will release in theaters “Same Kind of Different as Me,” starring Greg Kinnear and Renée Zellweger and featuring Jon Voight. It also has been filming “Samson,” starring Rutger Hauer, Jackson Rathbone, Lindsay Wagner and Billy Zane, in South Africa. And Ms. Wolfe, with Mr. Scott, is focusing on the start of Epiphany, a production partner to Pure Flix whose subtler brand name is intended to avoid alienating non-Christians.
“We need to reach a broader audience,” Ms. Wolfe said, “because we want to get the moral lessons out.”
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gvngsigns · 4 years ago
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🤪 😔 😠 😨 🥴 we have.... so many ships djsjwkeie you can choose bby <3
🤪 : a goofy voicemail for rafael & betty
“ listen, why isn't there a voicemail feature in facetime ? we should be able to leave video messages if someone's not picking up the call. leaving you a voicemail makes me feel like a grandpa. ”  rafael was on the other side of the world, timezones their biggest enemy again.  “ anyway, someone sent me this really funny joke and─”  his own giggles interrupted him.  “ i really wanted to share it with you. okay, so, why did the golfer bring two pairs of pants ? ”  another pause.  “ in case he got a hole in one. ”  he burst out laughing again, not saying anything until it died down.  “ if you didn’t laugh, you’re not my friend anymore. bye, nugget. text me. unless you didn’t laugh. then don’t ever contact me again. i’m joking. text me anyway. ”
😔 : a sad voicemail for rome & scott
“ hey, um, fuck─ this is really fucked up and i can’t believe i’m doing it this way but i know i’ll change my mind if i don’t tell you this now. ”  rome let out a deep sigh, giving himself more time to prepare for what he forced himself to say next.  “ i just don’t think what we’re doing is fair for you. you deserve better than all this secrecy and i think─ maybe we should take a break ? ”  he couldn’t believe he was actually doing this. he thought about deleting the entire voicemail and leaving it at that, but continued anyway.  “ i feel too guilty to be happy, and i just don’t think it’s fair to you. you deserve more than what i can offer, scott. i’m really sorry. ”
😠 : an angry voicemail for joshua & poppy
“ i didn't wanna call back because, well, i don't feel like talking to you but then i started worrying because twenty calls in five minutes is a lot and─ ”  rambling like his life depended on it, joshua caught himself in the act and sighed to give himself a break. she didn't deserve an explanation, not anymore.  “ just─ please stop calling me if this is about that thing with scott. if something's wrong, just text me and i'll come get you but please leave me alone if this is about you and scott. i don't feel like talking about it and, uh, i just need some space. i hope you understand. okay. bye. ”
😨 : a scared voicemail for olivia & eamonn
her hands were still trembling when she held her phone against her ear, sitting up straight in her bed, sweaty clothes clinging to her body.  “ eamonn ? “  the name came out resembling a squeal, followed by a shaky breath.  “ i’m sorry i’m calling in the middle of the night, you’re probably asleep and─ i mean, i hope you’re asleep. i just─ i had this really bad dream and i just wanted to make sure you’re okay ? ”  she laughed bitterly through her tears, wiping at them with her sleeve.  “ i know this is probably really weird but it─ i don’t know, it just looked so real and now i’m too scared to go back to sleep. ”  olivia waited, as if his voice would magically appear at the other end of the line.  “ please call me as soon as you’re up ? ”
🥴 : a drunk voicemail for valerie & niall
“ seriously ? too busy to pick up your phone ? ”  valerie had locked herself in one of the bathrooms to make herself somewhat audible, the loud music thumping through the walls.  “ anyway, not gonna lie, i was kinda expecting you would be here tonight. made myself extra pretty for you, but your friends told me you’re studying ? it’s a fucking friday night, niall. live a little. ”  looking at herself through the mirror, she fixed her hair.  “ you should stop by. the rooms upstairs are nice. ”
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