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URVASHI MORE
My Portfolio
Welcome to my portfolio. Here you’ll find a selection of my work. Explore my projects to learn more about what I do.


"I could have been a villain" – D’Arcy Carden Talks About the Unseen Twists of Her Character
When I saw D'Arcy Carden was joining The Handmaid’s Tale, I thought, “Oh, she’s going to be terrifying.” Turns out, she thought the same thing.
“I joked with the showrunner,” she said, “‘I’m either going to die in episode one or I’m the villain.’” But what actually unfolded was far more layered, and completely unexpected.
As Aunt Phoebe, she walks into Gilead looking like just another enforcer. But behind the harsh uniform and rigid posture, there’s a twist brewing. “Even I didn’t know she was working with the resistance,” Carden revealed. The scripts were redacted, secrets were kept, and then one day, there it was, her line: “Let the revolution begin.”
Mic. Drop.
It’s not just a line, it’s the season’s tagline. It’s a signal that Aunt Phoebe might be one of the most subversive players in the game. And yes, Carden delivers it with spine-tingling conviction.
Joining this dystopian world in its final act wasn’t just another role for her, it was a deep dive into ambiguity, rebellion, and what it means to resist from the inside. “There’s something exciting about being in a show where truly anything can happen,” she said, and her character proves exactly that.
“I joked with the showrunner,” she said, “‘I’m either going to die in episode one or I’m the villain.’” But what actually unfolded was far more layered, and completely unexpected.
As Aunt Phoebe, she walks into Gilead looking like just another enforcer. But behind the harsh uniform and rigid posture, there’s a twist brewing. “Even I didn’t know she was working with the resistance,” Carden revealed. The scripts were redacted, secrets were kept, and then one day, there it was, her line: “Let the revolution begin.”
Mic. Drop.
It’s not just a line, it’s the season’s tagline. It’s a signal that Aunt Phoebe might be one of the most subversive players in the game. And yes, Carden delivers it with spine-tingling conviction.
Joining this dystopian world in its final act wasn’t just another role for her, it was a deep dive into ambiguity, rebellion, and what it means to resist from the inside. “There’s something exciting about being in a show where truly anything can happen,” she said, and her character proves exactly that.


Rewatching Friends as an Adult Made Me Realize Ross and Rachel’s “Break” Was Exactly What They Need
Rewatching Friends through an adult lens reshapes the long-debated Ross and Rachel "break" storyline, showing it as more than just a dramatic twist, it was necessary. While younger viewers often sided with Rachel and painted Ross as the villain, maturity brings clarity: both were emotionally unequipped to support each other. Ross was driven by insecurity and fear of losing Rachel, while Rachel was overwhelmed and trying to grow into her independence. Their relationship was already cracking, with patterns of jealousy, miscommunication, and control surfacing in moments like Ross's clingy surprise office picnic or his discomfort with Rachel’s success at Bloomingdale’s. These weren’t isolated missteps, they revealed a relationship struggling to evolve.
The article emphasizes that the break wasn’t the problem, but rather the space they both needed to confront who they were outside of each other. Rachel used that time to chase her ambitions without guilt, while Ross was forced to reflect on his possessiveness. Their separation, messy as it was, mirrored the complexities of real-life relationships, where love alone isn’t enough without trust, compromise, and growth. In the end, Friends didn’t romanticize perfection; it gave viewers a flawed but genuine love story, proving that sometimes, taking a step back is exactly what makes moving forward possible.
The article emphasizes that the break wasn’t the problem, but rather the space they both needed to confront who they were outside of each other. Rachel used that time to chase her ambitions without guilt, while Ross was forced to reflect on his possessiveness. Their separation, messy as it was, mirrored the complexities of real-life relationships, where love alone isn’t enough without trust, compromise, and growth. In the end, Friends didn’t romanticize perfection; it gave viewers a flawed but genuine love story, proving that sometimes, taking a step back is exactly what makes moving forward possible.


I watched Stranger Things again and couldn’t stop thinking about what if there was a twisted ending
After watching Stranger Things, I couldn’t stop imagining a much darker ending, one where everything unravels and hope is completely lost.
In this twisted version that played out in my head, Vecna wins. Eleven doesn’t just lose the fight, she’s pulled into the Upside Down, her mind shattered and twisted until she becomes something else entirely. Hawkins turns into a nightmarish wasteland ruled by cults that worship Vecna, while the core friend group breaks apart in desperation.
Nancy becomes a lone fighter holding on to fading hope, Mike sets out to find the version of Eleven he once knew, and Will? Will becomes Vecna’s pawn, helping him break into the real world. It’s not the coming-of-age triumph we’re used to, it’s an apocalypse, pure and simple.
This darker ending haunted me because it felt so real, so possible. It’s unsettling, yes, but also unforgettable. Sometimes I wonder, would Stranger Things have hit even harder if it embraced the darkness all the way?
In this twisted version that played out in my head, Vecna wins. Eleven doesn’t just lose the fight, she’s pulled into the Upside Down, her mind shattered and twisted until she becomes something else entirely. Hawkins turns into a nightmarish wasteland ruled by cults that worship Vecna, while the core friend group breaks apart in desperation.
Nancy becomes a lone fighter holding on to fading hope, Mike sets out to find the version of Eleven he once knew, and Will? Will becomes Vecna’s pawn, helping him break into the real world. It’s not the coming-of-age triumph we’re used to, it’s an apocalypse, pure and simple.
This darker ending haunted me because it felt so real, so possible. It’s unsettling, yes, but also unforgettable. Sometimes I wonder, would Stranger Things have hit even harder if it embraced the darkness all the way?


Landman season 1 finale ending explained: What happens to Monty, Tommy, and the Norris family?


“He uses a handful of us over and over again“— Landman star reveals the challenges of collaborating


Landman season 1 episode 10- Release date, cast, plot, and everything we know so far


Where was The Madness filmed? All filming locations explored


Is The Children's Train based on a true story? Explained
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