Phoenix new times chasing amy
I mean, I was raised Catholic, for God's sake. Jay : Saint Shithead. Silent Bob : Do something. Silent Bob : So I'm totally weirded out by this, right?
And then I just start blasting her. I don't know how to deal with what I'm feeling, so I figure the best way is by calling her a slut, right? And tell her she was used. I'm out for blood. I really wanna hurt this girl.
I'm like, "What the fuck is your problem? And she's just all calmly trying to tell me, like, it was that time and it was that place and she doesn't think she should apologize because she doesn't feel that she's done anything wrong.
I'm like, "Oh, really? I walk. Silent Bob : No, idiot. It was a mistake. I didn't hate her. I wasn't disgusted with her. I was afraid. At that moment, I felt small, like But, what I did not get, she didn't care.
She wasn't looking for that guy anymore. She was But, uh, by the time I figure this all out, it was too late, man. She moved on, and all I had to show for it was some foolish pride, which then gave way to regret. She was the girl, I know that now. But I pushed her away.
So, I've spent every day since then chasing Amy Sign In. His wife, in shorts with hands on hips, leans in and reads the restaurant's hours posted on the window aloud: 5 to 10 p. They smile at each other. Amy's Baking Company is closed! The man chuckles, and he and his wife, shaking their heads, turn to leave. Some bystanders take his place, cupping their hands over their faces to peer into the restaurant. Others linger on the outdoor patio and look over the menu. Some take pictures.
I went to Amy's Baking Company in Scottsdale last week, weaving my car through the Shea Scottsdale Shopping Center's parking lot until coming upon the suddenly infamous restaurant, the one with the scalloped red banner across from Harkins Theatres Shea The standard reasons I visit restaurants as a critic — the food, the wine, the atmosphere, the pedigree — didn't register in this case.
Amy's hadn't signaled the faintest of blips on the Valley's radar of must-try dining — ever. I had come because of the Internet. And I wasn't happy about it. Like everyone else outside the restaurant that afternoon, I was nothing more than — depending on how you looked at it — a gawker at a freak show or a rubbernecker at the scene of a terrible accident.
Probably a little of both. Although Amy Bouzaglo and her husband, Samy, started their restaurant in , it's difficult, given the events that have unfolded over the past two weeks, to imagine Amy's Baking Company as ever being just a restaurant. But of course, it was. Get the latest updates in news, food, music and culture, and receive special offers direct to your inbox. Support Us Phoenix's independent source of local news and culture.
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Laura Hahnefeld. Contact: Laura Hahnefeld. Don't Miss Out. Certainly he is the grown-up in debates with his sidekick, Banky played by Jason Lee, a skateboarding star turned actor, who was the best thing in "Mallrats" and is again darkly funny here. And he has a cool, contained manner that suggests he has seen everything, though it turns out he hasn't seen anything quite like Alyssa Joey Lauren Adams before.
This bitsy-voiced blond first turns up at a lecture, where Holden's effeminate and very funny friend, Hooper Dwight Ewell , is pretending to be a macho black militant as he attacks racism in the "Star Wars" trilogy. Hooper's riff, which insists that the Jedi conquest of the galaxy is a form of white gentrification, is typical of the enjoyable little sidelines that "Chasing Amy" offers.
And when Holden begins sparring with Alyssa, he finds her a quick-witted, mischievous intellectual match. Then, as he starts finding himself sexually attracted to her, he discovers there's a hitch. Alyssa likes women and has no sexual interest in men. The stubborn style of "Chasing Amy" makes this a beginning, not an end.
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