It takes Rue all of two minutes before she launches into The Sad Ballad of Rue and Jules, but Fay’s got other things on her mind: namely, shooting heroin into her thigh while a slightly freaked-out Rue wonders if that’s a great idea. The guy he’s dealing with has a girlfriend, Fay, who also gets put in the backseat while the males do business. Fezco makes a stop to do some business, telling Rue to stay put. Because the more you move up in the world, the more enemies you make.”ĪULD ACQUAINTANCE | Next thing we know, it’s New Year’s Eve, and a somewhat high Rue is in Fez’s car, rapping along to Tupac’s “Hit ‘Em Up” in the backseat while an armed Ash rides shotgun. “And however hard he thought life was, it got harder and more complicated. “The next thing he knew, he had a business to run and a little brother to take care of,” Rue says. And when she collapses one night after dinner while Fez is still a young boy, he drives her to the hospital rather than call the ambulance to come to the house, which adversely affects her condition. “They were a family,” Rue tells us, allowing that it wasn’t always an ideal situation: During an angry attack on someone who wronged her, for instance, Grandma accidentally hits Fez in the head with a crowbar and gives him a concussion. The baby becomes known as Ashtray - aka the younger kid that hangs around Fezco in the present-day storyline - because he tries to eat discarded cigarette butts near the start of his time in his new home. Grandma essentially adopts him, too, though Fez does most of the childcare. One day, a woman buying Grandma’s product leaves her baby son as collateral… and never returns to collect him. Though this may sound grossly negligent, it’s very clear that Grandma loves Fez and wants the best for him. He quickly becomes his drug-dealing grandmother’s business partner, accompanying her on deals and handling the books. You’re going to come live with grandma now.”Īs we watch the boy grow up in the blonde woman’s care, Rue’s voiceover clues us in that we’re watching Fezco’s story. Back at her car, a little boy with a black eye is waiting quietly in the passenger’s seat. “Hey, f–kface!” the blonde woman calls out, then shoots him once in each leg and walks out. She walks into a strip club and makes her way to the back office, where a man is being serviced by a woman wearing very little in the way of clothing. But if you missed anything, don’t worry, we’re gathering up all of the best makeup moments from Euphoria season two.The Wonder Years Recap: Phoebe Robinson and Tituss Burgess Drop by the Season 2 Premiere - Grade It!įUNDAMENTALS OF FEZCO | The hour opens on a blonde woman holding a gun and wearing a jacket that reads “Gods Word, God’s Will” on the back. And while the bright colors and glitter that made Euphoria a mecca of beauty inspiration will be present, expect a bit more nuance in the looks shown week to week. “She has her full glam moments but then switches to super minimalism.”įor the most part, Davy and her team ditched foundation this season for dewy, natural skin (with the exception of Alexa Demie’s Maddy who always goes all out with makeup). “There’s a steady ‘quiet’ to her, until she’s suddenly loud,” Davy said of the makeup. “It’s not a repeat of season one,” she said, but instead “more refined and more subtle.” In fact, on Instagram, she referred to the season two makeup looks as “season one’s more introverted sister.” Of course, that doesn’t mean the show will be without its iconic glitter and eye liner. The mind behind the HBO show’s headline-worthy makeup, Doniella Davy, told Us Weekly that this season, she’s describing the looks as “discoverable” as opposed to in-your-face. If you’re watching Euphoria season two for another round of envelope-pushing makeup looks, you’ll have to look a little closer this time.
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