Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Game of Thrones Season 5 Episode 7

Spoilers through Season 5 of ‘Game of Thrones’ follow.

We come to tonight’s episode of Game of Thrones—”The Gift”—on the heels of last week’s horrifying rape scene, only to find that some time has passed, and Sansa is in perhaps even more dire straits than we realized.

She is locked in her room when Reek brings her food. Bruises cover her arms. She begs the man who was once Theon to help her, makes him promise to light a candle in the tower so that someone will come to save her.

But instead he goes to his master, Ramsay.

If you happen to be one of the many Game of Thrones viewers who has sworn off the show after last week’s episode—like The Mary Sue and various other confused dissidents—you will have missed all of this.
It’s scary stuff, the way the show presents marital abuse and rape as truly awful. It’s scary, too, that so many viewers would decide to not watch or discuss the show over this topic, since it’s a very real, human issue that people face in the modern world as well as Westeros.
These viewers will also have missed one of the best episodes of the season, an episode that ups the ante quite a lot, ratcheting up the tension, and setting in motion events that will carry us into what I suspect will be a harrowing final three episodes of Season 5.
GoT S5E7 8
Oh well. That’s their loss. For those less fair-weather fans, there’s plenty to love about “The Gift.”

Game of Thrones

No doubt that Game of Thrones has been captured the world in flare. It's been one of the most popular tv series in such short time. The popularity is unquestionable, as this become the most pirated downloaded TV series world wide. Pirated downloaded came to maximum point as Series reaches its 5 th Season. The first 4 episodes were available online way before 5th Season launch in April. It's no doublt has reduced the viewers on telecast as almost all have watched the series prior to telecast on cable TV.

6th Episode was telecasted getting red and angry comments from reviewers as Sansa Stark was raped by Bolton in home, Winterfell. The scene I would say is really horrible and difficult to watch. In looking at cinematic point of view, it has been shot in a absolute beauty continuing the way of Game of Thrones all the way.




Monday, March 30, 2015

Kaleidoscope Kate

She’s gracing the cover of America’s leading society magazine as the world’s best-dressed woman. Here, we chart the colours that made her a global icon 

Her unique style has inspired the ‘Kate Effect’, with millions of women throughout the world trying to copy her look. 
And last week the US magazine Vanity Fair declared that the Duchess of Cambridge had topped their best-dressed list for a third time, making the Royal fashion icon their September cover girl. 
Now, a Mail on Sunday survey of outfits worn by the Duchess in the past two years has revealed the secrets of her wardrobe. And occasional criticism of her ‘drab’ taste in colours is proved ill-founded as the Duchess emerges as Kaleidoscope Kate. 
Kate refuses to hire a personal stylist and has been dubbed the Duchess of Thrift because of her habit of recycling her outfits and buying high street frocks

Kate refuses to hire a personal stylist and has been dubbed the Duchess of Thrift because of her habit of recycling her outfits and buying high street frocks 
Kate likes a neutral look, wearing white and cream 16 per cent of the time and grey another 16 per cent of the time

Kate likes a neutral look, wearing white and cream 16 per cent of the time and grey another 16 per cent of the time 
Like the Queen, Kate’s favourite hue is Royal blue, making up 21 per cent of her colour choices. Yes, she also likes a neutral look, wearing white and cream 16 per cent of the time and grey another 16 per cent of the time. 
But she also goes for bold colours, opting for stark black and white combinations nine per cent of the time, pink eight per cent and red seven per cent. 
Green is her colour choice nine per cent of the time, purple and black four per cent each, while she has worn brown or yellow on three per cent of occasions each. 
But blue is without doubt her favourite. Kate wore a sapphire jersey dress by Brazilian fashion house Issa for her famous engagement interview and a cobalt blue dress from high street store Zara for her going-away outfit the morning after the Royal Wedding. 
Despite her splashes of colour, the Duchess has made nude tones a trademark. From cream through to champagne, blush and white, neutrals account for 32 per cent of her wardrobe

Despite her splashes of colour, the Duchess has made nude tones a trademark. From cream through to champagne, blush and white, neutrals account for 32 per cent of her wardrobe 
Like the Queen, Kate¿s favourite hue is Royal blue, making up 21 per cent of her colour choices

Like the Queen, Kate¿s favourite hue is Royal blue, making up 21 per cent of her colour choices 
When she made her first-ever speech in East Anglia earlier this year, she opted for a Royal blue dress from Reiss

When she made her first-ever speech in East Anglia earlier this year, she opted for a Royal blue dress from Reiss 
And when she made her first-ever speech in East Anglia earlier this year, she opted for a Royal blue dress from Reiss. 
Kate refuses to hire a personal stylist and has been dubbed the Duchess of Thrift because of her habit of recycling her outfits and buying high street frocks, making her style seem more accessible for her myriad admirers. 
And despite her splashes of colour, the Duchess has made nude tones a trademark. From cream through to champagne, blush and white – a colour she recently wore to Wimbledon in the form of an elegant Ralph Lauren dress – neutrals account for 32 per cent of her wardrobe. The £185 neutral Sledge platform court shoes she has from high street store LK Bennett are her trusted choice of footwear. 
Green is her colour choice nine per cent of the time, purple and black four per cent each, while she has worn brown or yellow on three per cent of occasions each

Green is her colour choice nine per cent of the time, purple and black four per cent each, while she has worn brown or yellow on three per cent of occasions each 
Last week the US magazine Vanity Fair declared that the Duchess of Cambridge had topped their best-dressed list for a third time

Last week the US magazine Vanity Fair declared that the Duchess of Cambridge had topped their best-dressed list for a third time 
Kate recycled an elegant white military-style Alexander McQueen coat dress for the Order of the Garter Service in Windsor in June and set the tone – the Duchess of Cornwall and the Countess of Wessex echoed her look in elegant neutral colours and cream court shoes. 
But, like the Queen, Kate knows how to use colour to send out a message. 
In Ottawa on Canada Day she thrilled crowds by dressing in the national colours of red and white and, for an Olympic exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery last month, she wore a brilliant blue crepe dress by British designer Stella McCartney, who designed Team GB’s kit. 
Kate also goes for bold colours, opting for stark black and white combinations nine per cent of the time, pink eight per cent and red seven per cent

Kate also goes for bold colours, opting for stark black and white combinations nine per cent of the time, pink eight per cent and red seven per cent 
Like the Queen, Kate knows how to use colour to send out a message

Like the Queen, Kate knows how to use colour to send out a message 
When she visited the Irish Guards on St Patrick’s Day, Kate experimented with an emerald green coat dress by designer Emilia Wickstead. 
But although the Duchess has become bolder with colour, grey remains an important part of her £100,000 wardrobe, which is financed largely by the Prince of Wales. Last week for a reception at the Royal Academy of Arts, she wore an elegant, dove-grey cocktail dress by Serbian-born designer Roksanda Ilincic. 
The colour may have been deemed drab by some, but Kate’s choice of a cutting-edge designer highlights exactly why she’s the world’s most colourful style icon.