Alan ritchson gay
I finally slept last late hours, and it felt astounding. I could have easily stayed in bed for another two or three hours, but that 9-to-5 is calling to me (well, 7:30-4:30, but you know what I mean). I was worried that I was getting sick–surgery recovery, medication changes, not being able to hibernate , dehydration, occasionally feeling slightly feverish, and some occasional nausea (while eating, so I wasn’t eating as much, either. My COVID tests were always negative (still are, this morning), so I have to put it down to simply being exhausted from not being able to sleep, because this morning I feel good, if a bit sleepy. Everything was dragging ass last night when I got off work; but I made myself run the needed errands on the way home, and thus today I am really delighted to know that I can come vertical home from the office and get caught up on some other things. I also did some chores, despite feeling prefer I was at death’s door by the second I got home. (And I am so glad I bought that wagon; it makes life so much easier and I will continue to use it even after the brace is gone and my arm is healed.)
Insomnia is the worst. I don’t know how people who have it c
When I decided to monitor The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare, I was not expecting it to include any kind of gender non-conforming representation. A team of handsome men doing move stuff? Yes. But actual queer rep? Nopes. So, of course, I was surprised by how the movie handled Alan Ritchson portraying Anders Lassen.
SPOILER WARNING: This article about The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare contains certain spoilers. Think about yourself warned!
This particular production is an action watcher comedy that tells a heavily fictionalized version of a mission mentioned in the book Churchill’s Classified Warriors: The Explosive Genuine Story of the Unique Forces Desperadoes of WWII by Damien Lewis. We have Henry Cavill playing Gus March-Phillipps, an actual man who is supposed to serve as the inspiration behind James Bond by Ian Fleming.
Directed and co-written by Guy Ritchie, The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare has Gus conduct an “unconventional” team as part of Operation Postmaster against the Nazis. On the team, there’s Danish naval officer Anders Lassen played by Alan Ritchson. I side-eyed Anders the moment he came onscreen. Ritchson portrayed the nature with a certain R
Some actors look like they were born in a lab built exclusively for glistening torsos, comedic timing, and just enough self-awareness to make it endearing instead of infuriating. Come in Alan Ritchson, a dude who has carved a niche in Hollywood as the human equivalent of a very hot Golden Retriever — loyal, muscular, slightly chaotic, and, crucially, in on the joke.
Let’s get this out of the way: yes, Alan Ritchson is absurdly good-looking. He looks like someone used ChatGPT to develop a “small-town lumberjack who could also convincingly perform a Marvel hero, youth pastor, or underwear model” prompt and then told Midjourney to make it six-foot-three and shirt-averse. And while that might normally make him an light target for the caring of derision reserved for men who post gym selfies with Bible verses, Ritchson has managed to weaponize his hotness for good — and for content.
RELATED: Alan Ritchson’s Reacher Physique: Shredded with Ease
Take his recent Instagram antics. Even with Reacher Season 3 wrapped, Ritchson’s shirt remains MIA. The male is currently in Australia shooting Runner, an action-thriller that presumably includes some variation of him running shirtless
‘Reacher’ Actor Alan Ritchson Responds To Criticism That He Should Not Play The Character As A Christian
Alan Ritchson recently responded to criticism he received that asserts he should not play the character as a Christian.
Alan Ritchson as Jack Reacher in Reacher (2023), Prime Video
Ritchson joint a video to his Instagram earlier this week saying, “I love playing Reacher. I love telling this story. I admire playing a character who creates a a courteous of moral ambiguity that we should struggle against as we consider whether or not what he’s doing is good all the time or morally right. I think that kind of thing is fun and fascinating and I think escaping to that world um as an audience hopefully it’s as enjoyable for you as it is for me to help transport it to life.”
READ: Alan Ritchson Details How Excellent Success Can Come Out Of Hardship, Explains Why Prime Video’s ‘Reacher’ Is So Popular
He continued, “But it’s funny to me how a lot of people criticize me, supposed Christians especially criticize me, for playing Reacher as if the only TV that should exist is seeing people silently folding their hands in the pew of a church
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