dreams kept beside your pillow

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cooperbenjamin:

White Collar Exclusive: Get Your First Look at Season 4!

“You’re an FBI agent. I’m a con man. There are only a few ways this could have ended.”

That’s what Neal Caffrey (Matt Bomer) tells his now-ex-FBI handler Peter (Tim DeKay), but it looks like things are actually just getting started on the new season of White Collar, which premieres on July 10 at 9/8c on USA.

White Collar Exclusive: Lost’s Rebecca Mader sets her sights on Neal… and Diana?!

In this exclusive first look, Season 4 picks up just after Neal’s escape at the end of last season. Peter is now — spoiler! — on leave from the FBI, just as the Bureau’s search for Neal heats up, thanks to a very determined agent (guest star Mekhi Phifer).

“If anything ever happened to him, I don’t think I could live with it,” Peter says. But just how far is he willing to go to protect Neal? Watch the exclusive preview below:

(via waxjism)

Filed under white collar oh how i've missed you

2,420 notes

I don’t think it’s terribly controversial to note that women, from a young age, are required to consider the reality of the opposite gender’s consciousness in a way that men aren’t. This isn’t to say that women don’t often misunderstand, mistreat, and stereotype men, both in literature and in life. But on a basic level, functioning in society requires that women register that men are fully conscious; it is not really possible for a woman to throw up her hands and write men off as eternally unknowable space aliens — and even if she says she has, she cannot really behave as though she has. Every element of her life — from reading books about boys and men to writing papers about the motivations of male characters to being attentive to her own safety to navigating most any institutional or professional or economic sphere — demands an ironclad familiarity with, and belief in, the idea that men really are fully human entities. And no matter how many men come to the same conclusions about women, the structure of society simply does not demand so strenuously that they do so. If you didn’t really deep down believe that women were, in general, exactly as conscious as you, you could probably still get by in life. You could probably still get a book deal. You could probably still get elected to office.
Jennifer duBois, Writing Across Gender (via florida-uterati)

(via unlockaflockofwords)

Filed under gender women equality

10,987 notes

True story: His Name is Robert Downey Jr.

rdjnews:

by Dana Reinhardt

I’m willing to go out on a limb here and guess that most stories of kindness do not begin with drug addicted celebrity bad boys.

Mine does.

His name is Robert Downey Jr.

You’ve probably heard of him. You may or may not be a fan, but I am, and I was in the early 90’s when this story takes place.

It was at a garden party for the ACLU of Southern California. My stepmother was the executive director, which is why I was in attendance without having to pay the $150 fee. It’s not that I don’t support the ACLU, it’s that I was barely twenty and had no money to speak of.

Read More

(Source: fitofpique)

Filed under rdj