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- 30 de Nov, 2017
This is all spot on, except we all know that Olly refers to himself as an" actress".One famous ac-tour to another, I have a proposition..."
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This is all spot on, except we all know that Olly refers to himself as an" actress".One famous ac-tour to another, I have a proposition..."
I've saw yout typical normie spam pop news pages hying this shit out, seems that the establishment is trying to push him into action female roles and that he is trying the "muscle mommy" gimmick, after high profile failures like The Acolyte , Dracula's Ex-Girlfriend and the declining popularity of LGBT pandering how is he getting more work?
Abigail Thorn Brings Fire and Fury to Sharako Lohar in Season 3 of ‘House of the Dragon’
June 15, 2026
Jamie Broadnax
In a recent conversation with BGN, Abigail Thorn opened up about stepping into the role of Sharako Lohar, a character defined by power, pain, and an all-consuming mission of vengeance.
When BGN asked whether Sharako believes she is making the right choices or simply surviving, Thorn didn’t hesitate to locate the character in a far more dangerous emotional space.
“She is so focused on her mission of vengeance against the Sea Snake,” Thorn explained, “that she’s willing to sacrifice anything—anything—to get there.” That singular drive, she noted, doesn’t just shape Sharako’s actions. It defines her entire authority.
Sharako, as Thorn describes her, is not merely a warrior navigating chaos — she is a commander who has had to fight to be believed. Leading a host of men who do not question her authority is not incidental; it is something hard-won. The power she holds is inseparable from the struggle it took to claim it.
But beneath that control is something far more volatile.
Thorn revealed that she modeled Sharako on literary and cinematic figures defined by obsession and internal fracture, citing Captain Ahab from Moby Dick and Ricardo Montalbán’s iconic turn as Khan in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.
“Because that’s very inspired by Ahab and Moby Dick,” she said. “She has this charm and sophistication on the surface, and underneath there’s this real pain and rage.”
At the heart of Sharako’s vengeance, Thorn suggests, is not just anger but fear. A fear of what remains when the mission is over.
“I think what she’s afraid of is staying as that person,” she added. “She believes that if she can just kill her white whale… she could go home, and she won’t have to do this anymore.”
In a recent conversation with BGN, Abigail Thorn opened up about stepping into the role of Sharako Lohar, a character defined by power, pain, and an all-consuming mission of vengeance.
When BGN asked whether Sharako believes she is making the right choices or simply surviving, Thorn didn’t hesitate to locate the character in a far more dangerous emotional space.
“She is so focused on her mission of vengeance against the Sea Snake,” Thorn explained, “that she’s willing to sacrifice anything—anything—to get there.” That singular drive, she noted, doesn’t just shape Sharako’s actions. It defines her entire authority.
Sharako, as Thorn describes her, is not merely a warrior navigating chaos — she is a commander who has had to fight to be believed. Leading a host of men who do not question her authority is not incidental; it is something hard-won. The power she holds is inseparable from the struggle it took to claim it.
But beneath that control is something far more volatile.
Thorn revealed that she modeled Sharako on literary and cinematic figures defined by obsession and internal fracture, citing Captain Ahab from Moby Dick and Ricardo Montalbán’s iconic turn as Khan in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.
“Because that’s very inspired by Ahab and Moby Dick,” she said. “She has this charm and sophistication on the surface, and underneath there’s this real pain and rage.”
At the heart of Sharako’s vengeance, Thorn suggests, is not just anger but fear. A fear of what remains when the mission is over.
“I think what she’s afraid of is staying as that person,” she added. “She believes that if she can just kill her white whale… she could go home, and she won’t have to do this anymore.”
It’s a striking contradiction: a woman driven forward by rage, while simultaneously imagining a peaceful life she may never be able to return to.
Thorn also connected Sharako’s internal world to her physicality, particularly in how the character moves through violence and intimacy. After seeing the fight choreography, she realized it revealed something deeper than combat style, it exposed emotional distance.
“That moment tells me so much about her relationship with intimacy,” Thorn said, “her relationship with her body… probably her relationship with sex.”
Then came one of the most blunt, revealing character insights of the interview:
“One of the earliest things I discovered about her character… is that I think she stinks,” Thorn added candidly. “I don’t think she wants anyone to touch her or come near her.”
It’s a harsh, almost humorous detail — but one that underscores Sharako Lohar’s emotional isolation. She is a leader surrounded by followers, a warrior defined by control, and a person actively resisting closeness of any kind.
Through Thorn’s lens, Sharako Lohar becomes something more complicated than a traditional figure of vengeance. She is a study in contradiction: powerful yet guarded, commanding yet deeply fractured, certain of her mission while secretly dreaming of an exit that may not exist.
Season 3 of House of the Dragon debuts June 21st on HBO and is available to stream on HBO Max
“Reposted by Bob Chipman” is just like some flare that the trannies of BlueSky get, right?
He isn't. Aside from the film he was shilling that doesn't even have distribution yet, HotD is his only acting credit since 2024, and it's a bit part at best.after high profile failures like The Acolyte , Dracula's Ex-Girlfriend and the declining popularity of LGBT pandering how is he getting more work?
There's a YouTuber I watch called Coach Kolton and he mainly covers steroid abuse in the BB community, but he also used to compete and has a lot of insider knowledge about the industry.It always feels like they bulk and cut to be seen instead of just happening to be strong.
As to why Toob is doing it...well I certainly hope this isn't a prelude to the OF arc, but the acting gigs are drying up fast.
I know is kind of pointless but the main reason the muscle mommy meme makes me recoil in cringe is that women (yes, real women too) that capitalise on it pose like men for men (compare old school female bodybuilders to your instathot muscle mommies). It always feels like they bulk and cut to be seen instead of just happening to be strong.
There's something about seeing Choob try it that just makes it all click. At least he is putting more of an effort than Anisa.
He popped that cap on his first E syringe with the reassuring words of a thousand imaginary casting directors thirsting at him from the future.
If it keeps him from making porn I say cast him in any role he asks for. We need more Game of Thrones and less Queen's Fart Thrones.Toob still hasnarcissistic delusionsstars in his eyes that enable his natural pigheaded gumption.