Can we go back to beating women again until this type of shit stops existing?
Women should be loved and cherished.
Cute girls going on an adventure??? I'M BEING GENOCIDED!!!
>>217441908>this poster's location: india>op's location: india
Better pony up for this game of chance
>>217441853>lesbian sex scene>no titties or pussy shotsdropped
>>217441853No. I'll never stop beating women no matter what. I live for this.
>>217442048Plenty of male nudity from humiliated background actors, though. Funny how that works.
>>217442102Peacock is openly, as in it's part if their Mission Statement, a streamer for metro women and gays. Don't act surprised now.
>YUO SEE... Ivan Ivanovitch Ivanovsky xDD >suka blyat vodka balalaika>grey mud brown cold everywhere>Moscow and Saint Petersburg are le only good places, though in US movies even they are le grey-brown post-WW2 ruins>SLAV SQUAT babooshkaWhy is it that Russians basically never portray Americans in a negative light and basically almost never even include any American characters, while the US has an endless conveyor belt of this kind of stuff?
>>217441908Kek
>>217442177Bupkis was for the fellas
>>217442431>Why is it that Russians basically never portray Americans in a negative lightVanya, you don't evin believe this yourself.
It's out? How's the show?
>>217442431Name a good place aside from Moscow or Saint Petersburg
>>217441853>Anon watches a show featuring two women as the main characters, clearly aimed towards female audiences>"WHAT THE FUCK IS THIS FUCKING SHIT REEEEEEEEEE"Repeat after me: this was not made for me and that is okay
>>217442177I only use peacock for NBC shows.
>>217442523Beat me to it. No idea what this show is.
>>217442523The point is virtually every fuckin show that comes out is the same shit again again, also suck my dick
>>217441853So..... is this shit worth watching?
>>217441853>In 1977 Moscow, two "PONIES" ("persons of no interest" in intelligence speak) work anonymously as secretaries in the American Embassy. That is, until their husbands die under mysterious circumstances in the Soviet Union, and they are thrust into the CIA. Bea Grant is sharp, over-educated and fluent in Russian -- a child of Russian immigrants, trying to make sense of a life that hasn't turned out the way she expected. Twila Hasbeck is a small-town firecracker: abrasive, bold and more fearless than she should be. Thrown together by grief and circumstance, the two dig into the vast conspiracy their husbands were killed for.I searched for the premise to quote it with a soijak, but this actually sounds interesting.
>>217441921that's moscow