Feb 23, 2021
We thought Love, Victor was a hole where young gay audiences could take refuge.
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Isaac Abdecker and Elizabeth Berger met fifteen years ago during a writing workshop on college benches in New York. Then they went to Hollywood and made the first scripts (” Not a round Apt remembers the optician) and is now one of the best experts in what is known as family fiction. Generators of the “It’s Us” event, a longtime companion of an American family spanning two generations (and 5 seasons), adapted their novel “Love, Simon” into cinema, a high school student on the outskirts of Atlanta.
Available on the Disney + platform’s new addition “Star”, their new series “Love, Victor” is a variation and the official sequel to the film.Téléobs. – “Love, Victor” is a new kind of cycle: the sequel, the sequel to the movie “Love, Simon”, in which a new character follows in the footsteps of the previous hero
Isaac Updecker. – That’s all. When we got the chance to write a sequel to the film, we thought ” Why not take up issues and face different characters? Basically, telling someone else to come out is a question for inserting into the structure and the codes that the film’s fans have attached themselves to: Creekwood High School, a small suburb of Atlanta, correspondence …
How does Victor find his own identity?
Elizabeth Berger. – He is naturally isolated from Simon by the uniqueness of his family. To define it, we
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Westwood has career-low at Bay Hill and takes 1-shot lead
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Lee Westwood made a pair of 30-foot putts over the final three holes Saturday, one for eagle and the other a closing birdie, for a 7-under 65 that gave England’s ageless wonder a one-shot lead in the Arnold Palmer Invitational.
Westwood turns 48 next month and is feeling younger by the years, coming off a third European Tour title and still easily among the top 50 in the world.
Now he goes up against U.S. Open champion Bryson DeChambeau, whose 68 included a birdie on the par-5 sixth hole in which he cut off so much of the water he had only 70 yards for his second shot on the 531-yard hole.
Corey Conners of Canada, who started with a one-shot lead, could only manage a 71 on a cool, breezy day at Bay Hill with only a few drops of rain. He also was one shot behind.
“It’s nice to still be playing in these tournaments,” Westwood said. “You’ve got to be top 50 in the world and if you would have said to me 20 years ago will you still be top 50 in the world at 48 I might have been slightly skeptical. And it just shows that I’m still capable of playing well in these tournaments with all the good young players around me and obviously contending, because that’s what I’m doing this week.”
Sunday was shaping up as another thriller at Bay Hill.
Jordan Spieth opened with a birdie and a hole-in-one, took the lead by holing a bunker shot on the par-3 seventh, saved par after a tee shot into the water and shot 68 with the kind of round he’d rather do without. Spieth prefers boring golf, and this was anything but that.
He was two shots behind, along with former PGA champion Keegan Bradley, who had the low score of the week at 64.
Spieth didn’t have the only ace. Jazz Janewattananond made on on the 14th hole that thrust him into the ix with a 69, leaving him four shots behind in a group that included Rory McIlroy, who bogeyed the last for a 72. Despite such a pedestrian round, McIlroy was very much in contention.
They will be chasing Westwood, who first played the Arnold Palmer Invitational in 1998. He was at 11-under 205.
Westwood posted his lowest score ever at Bay Hill and made only six pars. He had eight birdies and the eagle on the 16th hole, along with a pair of three-putt bogeys.
Westwood has five victories since turning 40, including last year in Abu Dhabi, among the strongest fields on the European Tour. He rallied to win the Race to Dubai late last year, his third time finishing the year as Europe’s No. 1.
So this didn’t surprise him, especially on a course that fits his eye, even though he has only one finish in the top 10.
“I haven’t lost any of my length and I haven’t lost any of my enthusiasm to go and work and work in the gym,” Westwood said. “My nerves are still intact, I still get into contention and enjoy it rather than kind of back off.”
Spieth is getting used to being in contention, too. He had chances in Phoenix and Pebble Beach, and he was in the peripheral of contention at Riviera.
Starting four shots behind, he made up ground quickly with an 18-foot birdie on the first hole and then hit a 5-iron that rolled up the right side of the green, turned toward the cup and dropped for an ace.
“That was obviously a really cool moment,” Spieth said.
He will play Sunday with Tommy Fleetwood, who had a 68 and was three behind. Spieth had to play as a single most of Saturday when Justin Rose, who made a 9 on the third hole, withdrew soon thereafter citing back spasms.
DeChambeau got one of the loudest cheers of the day by hitting into the rough. The biggest gallery lingered behind the sixth tee to see if he would go for the green. He aimed well to the right, but it still was a thrill to them to see DeChambeau grab driver and blast away.
The fans packed behind the ropes on the other side of the water let out a huge cheer when his ball descended and tumbled into the rough, 70 yards from the pin.
“Oh, man, I felt like a kid again, for sure,” DeChambeau said. “It was exciting, especially when you pull it off. It was almost like winning a tournament. It’s kind of the feeling I had. It was like, ‘Oh, I did it.’ I got the same chills and feeling when I saw it clear and there was no splash. I gave the fans what they wanted.”
The tournament isn’t decided until Sunday, and with hardly any rain, the greens are unlikely to lose their speed and firmness. McIlroy likes his position. Westwood likes his even more.
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