Controversial take on this whole Blake Lively situation and it ends with us. This is not a defense of her as a person and how she’s like answering questions and just like the vibe that she’s giving off. Has nothing to do with that. Has to do with the actual marketing of the movie. A lot of people are talking about how ridiculous it is that she’s going out and marketing this movie that’s about domestic violence and kind of like rolling it out as like a rom-com or something like that. And she’s a producer of the movie, right? Okay, same page. My controversial take doesn’t actually have to do with her. It has to do with the fact that this is constantly how they roll out these types of movies. How many movies have you watched or went to go see that were marketed as these like kind of fun, sentimental, silly things? Look at like Imaginary Friend, IF. Those movies are devastating to the core. They’re sad, sad, devastating movies that are, you know, pulling on your heartstrings or being marketed in a specific way to get you into the movie theater. I am a reader of Colleen Hoover and I read It Ends with Us. All of my girlfriends said it was amazing and no one told me what it was about. All I asked was, is this going to be ridiculous and sappy or am I going to be absolutely devastated at the end because I’m like not in a mental place to deal with that? No, no, no, you’re going to love it. I read the book, absolutely loved it. I loved that much like the character, you constantly didn’t really know what she was going to do and much like someone who’s in that situation, you see the passion mixed with the violence and like not really knowing the best way to move forward and her making excuses for him and all that stuff, right? That’s why I think it’s such a beautiful book is because you kind of don’t really know where it’s going. And to be honest, if I was not a reader of this book and didn’t have all of my girlfriends telling me to read it and I saw all of the press for this movie and was told constantly during the press tour that this is a movie about domestic violence and I don’t know if mentally I would want to go see that. But I know how beautiful the story is, how moving it is, how nuanced it is, how personal it is to Colleen Hoover. So like because of that, I’m very interested in seeing the movie. So once again, this is not anything to do with Blake Lively. I just think we’re forgetting the fact that they do this all the time to us in movies. They constantly sell us one thing and then you show up and you’re like, that was rough or that’s not exactly what I was interested in. It’s okay for them to bring up the fact that there are domestic violence themes and things like that. But I think they’re trying not to give away the whole plot of the movie. Am I crazy in this? Seriously, I’m interested in hearing people’s feedback. I don’t think it’s minimizing people’s experience. I think it’s just how they market these sorts of movies, no?