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Review of Pitchers season 2: This subtle and brilliant lecture in how not to run a startup

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Review of Pitchers season 2: This subtle and brilliant lecture in how not to run a startup

If you’re looking for a show that will make you laugh, cry and want to pull your hair out, then Pitchers is the show for you. The second season of this show about startup culture is even better than the first, with more drama, more laughs and more insights into the tech world.

If you’re not familiar with the show, it follows the story of four friends who quit their jobs to start their own tech company. The show is equal parts hilarious and heartbreaking, as we watch the characters make mistakes, learn from them and try to navigate the ever-changing world of startups.

One of the things I love about this show is that it doesn’t shy away from the darker side of startup culture. The characters are constantly making mistakes, whether it’s overspending on office space or hiring the wrong people. And while it’s easy to laugh at their mistakes, the show also does a great job of illustrating the very real consequences that come with them.

In the second season, we see the characters struggle with funding, office politics and their own personal demons. It’s a subtle and brilliant lecture in how not to run a startup, and I can’t recommend it highly enough.

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Cate Blanchett’s response to her character in Tár being dubbed a “lesbian icon” Yes, that’s cool. I’ll take it.

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Cate Blanchett’s response to her character in Tár being dubbed a “lesbian icon” Yes, that’s cool. I’ll take it.

The Golden Globe-winning actress Cate Blanchett responded to the praise she received for her performance in Todd Field’s Tár, for which she won Best Actress in a Motion Picture for the fourth time (Drama). Cate plays a gay conductor named Lydia Tár in the movie, whose career takes a sharp turn for the worse after a number of accusations are made public. When some gay fans referred to her as a “lesbian icon,” Cate Blanchett responded.

In the drama Tár, the Academy Award-winning actor, who is anticipated to receive her seventh Oscar nomination, portrays an EGOT-winning conductor who is wed to a female violinist (played by Nina Hoss). Cate has been quite busy promoting Tár since she missed the 2023 Golden Globes event to go to the movie’s London premiere. She emphasised that director Todd Field did not place any special attention on Lydia’s same-sex relationship and that Lydia’s status as a female conductor has no bearing on the film’s significance. According to the actor, the movie’s focus is on her power rather than her gender and sexual orientation.

Group Media Publications
Entertainment News Platforms – anyflix.in      
Construction Infrastructure and Mining News Platform – https://cimreviews.com/
General News Platform – https://ihtlive.com/
Legal and Laws News Platforms – https://legalmatters.in/
Podcast Platforms – https://anyfm.in

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