So I decided to check out Flannagans new show and the diversity pandering is full tilt on the main cast with 2 “white” characters, 4 black, 1 Asian, 1 Indian. What’s hilarious is the main black girl is adopted by a white guy, and the only black guy is a teenager dying from aids. The entire premise is teens dying from terminal diseases in a haunted house, and the gay black teen is the only one dying from his lifestyle choices….
I mean the concept in itself is good, it’s a hospice for dying teens and they form a ghost story club, but the hospice itself has a sordid history with occultism.
Wonder if it will depict actual cancer with the frailty and puking and getting winded from standing up to go to the bathroom, or after school special cancer with being normal but wearing a bandana over a shaved head.
There are a lot of cancers that can be treated (especially early on) with closer the result of the second scenario.
Source: wife currently undergoing treatment for brain tumors. Has mostly experienced the second scenario. She wore a beanie instead of a bandana though.
So I decided to check out Flannagans new show and the diversity pandering is full tilt on the main cast with 2 “white” characters, 4 black, 1 Asian, 1 Indian. What’s hilarious is the main black girl is adopted by a white guy, and the only black guy is a teenager dying from aids. The entire premise is teens dying from terminal diseases in a haunted house, and the gay black teen is the only one dying from his lifestyle choices….
Sorry, what? Is this what people want in (I'm assuming) horror?
I mean the concept in itself is good, it’s a hospice for dying teens and they form a ghost story club, but the hospice itself has a sordid history with occultism.
putting terminal cancer patients in the same category as a person who got AIDS from unprotected sex and a spoiled brat pathological liar. very based.
Wonder if it will depict actual cancer with the frailty and puking and getting winded from standing up to go to the bathroom, or after school special cancer with being normal but wearing a bandana over a shaved head.
Depends on the cancer.
Chemotherapy would result in the first scenario.
There are a lot of cancers that can be treated (especially early on) with closer the result of the second scenario.
Source: wife currently undergoing treatment for brain tumors. Has mostly experienced the second scenario. She wore a beanie instead of a bandana though.