
Scottie Andrew
Culture Writer at CNN
writer, culture @cnn & reluctant florida woman // she/her
Articles
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1 week ago |
cnnbrasil.com.br | Scottie Andrew
Mal vemos o vilão cartilaginoso de "Tubarão" antes que ele despedace uma banhista, um cachorro, um menino e um pescador confiante demais. Leva quase duas horas até finalmente vermos o grande tubarão branco saltar da água para engolir o veterano mal-humorado Quint. Até então, só conseguimos ver sua barbatana dorsal antes que as vítimas sejam puxadas para baixo das ondas enquanto a água ao seu redor se torna da cor de ketchup. "Tubarão" é creditado como o inventor do blockbuster de verão.
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1 week ago |
cnnbrasil.com.br | Scottie Andrew
Mal conseguimos ver o vilão cartilaginoso de “Tubarão” antes que ele ataque uma banhista solitária, um cachorro, um garotinho e um pescador excessivamente confiante. Demora quase duas horas até finalmente vermos o grande tubarão-branco saltar da água para engolir o veterano durão Quint. Até lá, só conseguimos ver de relance sua barbatana dorsal antes que as vítimas sejam puxadas para debaixo das ondas, enquanto a água ao redor delas assume a cor de ketchup.
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1 week ago |
cnn.com | Scottie Andrew |Brook Joyner
When “Jaws” started filming in Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts, in 1974, all signs pointed to disaster. The mechanical figures, meant to portray the massive white shark that terrorizes Amity Island, kept failing, delaying production and frustrating the cast and crew. Director Steven Spielberg was then just 26 and new to big-budget filmmaking. Filming on the ocean, coupled with mechanical shark problems, caused production to run late and over budget.
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1 week ago |
cnn.com | Scottie Andrew
Hooper (Richard Dreyfuss, left) and Quint (Robert Shaw) finally come face-to-face with their toothy nemesis in this scene toward the end of "Jaws." The shark (spoilers) commits one more kill before its work is done. Universal/Kobal/Shutterstock CNN — We hardly see the cartilaginous villain of “Jaws” before it tears through a skinny-dipper, a dog, a little boy and an overconfident fisherman.
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3 weeks ago |
cnn.com | Scottie Andrew
Tinder and other dating apps let paying users set height preferences for potential partners. But are we too preoccupied by how tall our love interests are? mapodile/E+/Getty Images See all topics Email Link Copied! In her Tinder bio, Natasha Burns would tantalize potential matches with a few words: “Probably taller than you.” Men readily slid into the model’s DMs ready to compare heights.
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