'90 Solar day Fiancé': Steven Wants to Take the Baby to the Park – in the Incorrect Machine Seat (Exclusive Video)
Dad of the year over here
Best of luck, Steven and Olga's baby. The newborn on "ninety Day Fiancé" is gonna demand it, every bit his dad weirdly has no problem knowingly putting the innocent, defenseless child in the wrong auto seat.
Apparently, Steven really, Really wants to go to the "fancy park" — like, at all costs. His Russian helpmate-to-be Olga tries to talk some sense into this idiot — err, young male parent.
Simply become for a walk around the neighborhood, dude.
Besides Read: '90 Day Fiance': Asuelu Could Not Be More Embarrassing - No, Wait, There Goes His Shirt (Sectional Video)
Watch a preview of Sunday'southward "90 Day Fiancé" episode via the video above.
Here is TLC'due south bio for Steven, 20 (Bowie, Maryland) and Olga, twenty (Russian federation):
When Steven and Olga met on the beach, Olga was only in the U.Due south. for the summer and the 2 of them were simply having fun. After just a month and a half, Olga became meaning throwing them for a loop and irresolute what they thought would be merely a summer romance. One time Olga arrived back home in Russia, the 2 discussed their plans moving forrad and decided to get engaged and bring Olga to the U.S. in society to the raise the baby there. Steven's begetter passed away when Steven was just 7 years-former then he is determined to have a presence in his son'south life, and the young couple believes that obtaining a One thousand-1 VISA is what they must exercise to be together. But volition Olga's VISA go approved before Steven has to return to the U.S.?
TLC'south "ninety Day Fiancé" airs Sundays at eight/7c. The series and its spinoffs are produced by Sharp Entertainment.
13 Christmas Movies That Definitely Aren't for Kids (Photos)
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Certain, Christmas is a time of joy for children of all ages, but that doesn't mean that grown-ups can't have the cinematic equivalent of a spiked egg nog. Subsequently you've packed the little ones off to bed, savor these movies, from the hilarious to the horrifying, that are aimed at developed audiences.
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"Blackness Christmas" (1974)
A decade before making the archetype "A Christmas Story," managing director Bob Clark invented the holiday slasher with this still-chilling cult fave near sorority sisters fending off an obscene phone caller. (A new remake slays in theaters in December 2019.)
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"The Silent Partner" (1978)
Depository financial institution teller Elliott Gould and robber Christopher Plummer play a mortiferous game of cat-and-mouse; this twisty thriller was an early success for the late Curtis Hanson, who scripted.
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"Christmas Evil" (1980)
John Waters' favorite Christmas motion-picture show involves a man obsessed with Santa (Brandon Maggart) who takes his naughty listing to homicidal extremes.
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"Some Girls" (1988)
Long before he was McDreamy, Patrick Dempsey played a horny college student bugged past three sisters (played by Jennifer Connelly, Sheila Kelley and Ashley Greenfield) in an early on Sundance hit that's yet underappreciated (and still sexy).
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"Metropolitan" (1990)
Writer-director Whit Stillman scored a dynamite debut -- and made a low-budget indie look neat by shooting in holiday-decorated Manhattan -- with this smart and sprightly tale of young debutantes in dear.
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"Become" (1999)
Author John August and director Doug Liman keep the twists and the wisecracks coming in this ensemble piece virtually immature L.A. types chasing downward ecstasy. The cast is full of before-they-were-famous folks.
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"Optics Wide Shut" (1999)
If you don't remember of this as a Christmas moving-picture show, you oasis't seen it lately; manager Stanley Kubrick inserts twinkle lights and trees all over his sexual thriller starring Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman.
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"Kiss Kiss Bang Blindside" (2005)
One of Robert Downey's best pre-Marvel roles was equally a struggling actor caught upward in a Christmastime conspiracy, trading quips with scene-stealers Val Kilmer and Michelle Monaghan.
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"A Christmas Tale" (2008)
Catherine Deneuve isn't the usual mom-with-cancer; this matriarch demands her kids give her a bone marrow transplant in this bitter, bright family story.
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"Better Watch Out" (2017)
This clever vacation horror-one-act takes the youthful sadism of "Home Alone" and ratchets it up a few notches, with teenage Luke (Levi Miller, "Pan") hiding some real darkness behind that sweet face.
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"A Bad Moms Christmas" (2017)
The bad moms just desire to have fun, even when their own bad moms come up rolling into town to celebrate the season. Santas will strip, and the egg nog volition be spiked.
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"Anna and the Apocalypse" (2018)
Information technology's Christmastime! But thank you to a zombie outbreak, it's also the stop times, and our high schoolhouse heroes dispatch the undead with bloody fervor. And did we mention this is too a musical?
"Blackness Christmas" isn't the only film that brings an R-rated sensibility to the holiday season
Sure, Christmas is a time of joy for children of all ages, merely that doesn't mean that grown-ups can't have the cinematic equivalent of a spiked egg nog. After you've packed the little ones off to bed, savor these movies, from the hilarious to the horrifying, that are aimed at adult audiences.
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