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  • Lez Keep it Real blog

    Owner: Lez Keep it Real
    URL: www.lezkeepitreal.com
    Join Date: Fri, 20 Apr 2007 10:23:18 -0500
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    Site Description:
    There’s no reason to beat around the bush, so to speak. Let’s get it all out in the open, basically - Lez keep it real. Real opinions, real discussion, real stories. Writer and professional people watcher, Lyndsey D’Arcangelo, will keep you up to speed wi
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Notable Lesbians
2007-05-17 14:11:31
This week’s Notable Lesbian is: Audre Geraldine Lorde February 18, 1934 - November 17, 1992 Audre Lorde was born in New York City to parents of West Indian heritage. The youngest of five children, she grew up in Harlem, hearing her mother’s stories about the West Indies. She wrote her first poem when she was in the eighth grade. Her first volume of poems, The First Cities, was published in 1968. n the 1980s, Lorde and writer Barbara Smith founded Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press. She was the poet laureate of New York from 1991-1992 and died of breast cancer in 1992. Interesting tid bit: While studying Library Science after getting her BA from Hunter College, Lorde supported herself working various odd jobs: factory worker, ghost writer, social worker, X-ray technician, medical clerk, and arts and crafts supervisor. Lorde was also nearsighted and legally blind. “I have come to believe over and over again that what is most important to me must be spoken, made ver


Going rural for Pride
2007-05-16 14:51:00
With Pride season upon us, I thought I’d lighten things up a bit from the previous posts and give you all some exciting places to visit to celebrate GLBT Pride. I’m not really a Pride person myself. I enjoy a festival as much as the next person, but I’ve been to enough Pride celebrations to appreciate the experience for what it is. I feel as though I celebrate myself each and every day of my life. Plus, some Pride events can get a little out of hand with the Out & Proud vs. Out & Loud factor. For more on that, read Adri’s view of the matter. Back to Pride. My first Pride experience was when I was living in Boston and if there is any Pride parade you should attend at least once in your life, it’s the Boston Pride parade. It was amazing and for a Pride virgin, it literally took my breath away. I’ve also attended Toronto Pride and Buffalo Pride. I give my home city props for organizing the event on such a small scale because for what it is, the Pride committee here in
Read more: Going

What constitutes a hate crime anyway?
2007-05-15 16:09:25
In light of the post I wrote yesterday and the amount of responses and attention it garnered, I thought that today I would do a bit of a follow up post – not so much on Erin and her “fag bug” but on the crime committed against her itself. Or should I say, “hate crime.” There were many people who commented yesterday (not below but on other sites) about the term “hate crime” and what it meant or what it claimed to mean. I thought I’d take this opportunity to revisit this term and define it properly. According to the dictionary, a hate crime can be defined as a “crime, usually violent, motivated by prejudice or intolerance toward a member of a gender, racial, religious or social group.” What happened to Erin’s car was definitely a crime, as her car was vandalized. What made it a hate crime is the fact that there were homophobic slurs used. Had someone simply written “u suck” or “dumb ass” on the car, it would have been different. But the culprit, or cul


Come Out & Play: telling your doctor
2007-05-18 14:28:46
Doctor: What’s wrong? Patient: I have a sore throat. Doctor: Anything else? Patient: Yes … I’m gay. Sounds easy, doesn’t it? But, as we all know, coming out is never an easy task – no matter who it is. This week’s Come Out & Play post spotlights coming out to your doctor. Some people think that coming out to a health care provider is pointless and that it’s none of his or her business. But, knowing all we know about STDs and the psychological effects that affect many gay people (depression, self-hated, ie.), it is an important fact that any health care provider should be aware of. Often, we are apprehensive to let our doctors know our sexual orientation for fear of rejection. But wouldn’t it be better to know if your doctor cared enough about you that your sexual orientation wouldn’t be an issue? Wouldn’t you want someone who prescribes medication, advises you on your health and well-being, and discuses intimate details of your life with you to be someone who


The punishment fits the crime
2007-05-22 07:44:45
What punishment would you inflict on a teenager convicted of a violent homophobic crime ? ~ Yahoo news Flip the script on them so to speak or make them walk a mile in a gay man’s shoes. Brighton’s hate crime unit ordered a homophobic teenager to spend a day working as an intern at the gay magazine 3SIXTY as part of his sentence. The boy had been part of a group who attacked a gay high school teacher in Dukes Mound, Brighton, early one Sunday morning. Craig, the teacher, sustained a damaged lymph system, a scratched cornea and cuts and bruises across his face and body. He was hospitalized the following week with an infection that threatened to spread to his brain and was readmitted later with blood clots. Craig was determined the offender should receive an appropriate sentence. He said, “As a gay man, I have experienced low-level homophobia throughout my life, such as name calling. I learned to roll the punches, but for me this punch was one blow too far. “I like


To be or not to be: is homosexuality a choice?
2007-05-21 07:45:51
To those of you who expected a religious or scientific debate on this matter, I hate to disappoint you. I’m not going to approach this subject from either a religious or scientific point of view. Instead I am going to discuss this sensitive topic and draw from the best possible resource at my disposal - my own personal experience. I wasn’t going to write on this subject, I didn’t want to. But certain signs kept pointing me in its direction. First, there was the special on Sixty Minutes last week called, “Nature vs. Nuture.” Then I got into an intellectual conversation with another 451 blogger who offered her own insight based on personal experience. I knew then that I wanted to write about whether homosexuality was a choice, but I also knew that I didn’t want to base my article merely on statistical information, scientific jargon or religious doctrine. What I wanted to do was look inward and decide whether or not I had made a conscious choice to be a le


Come Out & Play: Takeshii
2007-05-25 05:00:14
This week’s Come Out & Play post spotlights Takeshii, a 22-year-old Japanese-American engineering student: My story isn’t that loud or spectacular, but.. I think it’s the way it happens for a lot of people. I didn’t really come out, people just.. eventually guessed and prodded until I admitted it. It became apparent to everyone by my junior year of high school. My sisters both suspected because I never dated, but my friends were surprised because I don’t have the stereotypical tell-tale signs. They just thought I was a shy FOB and American girls were too scary for me. Eventually my sisters asked and I just shrugged and said “..Yeah.. I like guys.” I guess I’m lucky that my step-mom was as liberal as they come, and was cool about it. Maybe it was because I’m not her actual son. My dad, though.. He’s the kind of guy who likes to pretend to be a good guy, and wants everyone else to believe it too. He acts like he’s accepting of it, and me. But he makes a


Notable Lesbians
2007-05-24 08:38:18
This week’s Notable Lesbian is: Gertrude Malissa Nix Pridgett Rainey September, 1882 – December 22, 1939 Better known as Ma Rainey, this extraordinary woman one of the earliest known professional blues singers and one of the first generation of such singers to record. She was billed as “The Mother of the Blues.” She did much to develop and popularize the form and was an important influence on younger blues women, such as Bessie Smith, and their careers. Although she married fellow vaudeville singer William ‘Pa’ Rainey in 1904, it was widely known, though less discussed, that she was bisexual. Interesting tid bit: Rainey signed with Paramount Records and, between 1923 and 1928, she recorded 100 songs, sometimes accompanied such jazz notables as Louis Armstrong, Kid Ory, Fletcher Henderson, and others. The 1982 August Wilson play Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom was based on her career Went out last night with a crowd of my friends, They must have been wom


Screened Out: Gay images in film
2007-05-23 07:40:45
TCM, otherwise known as Turner Classic Movies, is doing something special. Or, at least I happen to think it’s pretty special. It’s Pride season and TCM has decided to explore over six decades of Pride & Prejudice in film. Forty-four movies tracing stereotypes, innuendos and honest portrayals of gays and lesbians in cinema. Co-hosted by Screened Out author Richard Barrios, and featuring interviews with Alan Cumming, Tab Hunter, Armistead Maupin, Michael Musto, Ron Nyswear and more. Barrios, with degrees in musicology and cinema studies, worked in the music and documentary film industries before turning to film history. His award-winning works include A Song in the Dark: The Birth of the Musical Film and Screened Out: Playing Gay in Hollywood from Edison to Stonewall. He has written for numerous publications, including The New York Times, and has lectured on film at the Smithsonian and American Film Institutes, among other venues. For Turner Classic Movies, he narrate


Learn how to plan the perfect GLBT wedding
2007-05-28 08:31:38
Tenafly, NJ– RainbowWeddingNetwork.com (RWN) will produce the “Same Love, Same Rights”® GLBT Wedding and Family Expo at the Clinton Inn Hotel on August 12, 2007 from noon to 5pm. RWN was created in 2000 to bridge the gap between same-sex couples in need of wedding , travel, life planning and family resources and gay-friendly businesses that support equal rights. To date, RWN has produced thirteen wedding and family expos in cities including San Francisco, Atlanta, Boston and Hartford. The upcoming Expo in New Jersey is free to the public, and all supporters of marriage equality are encouraged to attend. The “Same Love, Same Rights”® Wedding and Family Expo will feature over 50 GLBT-friendly vendors and pro-gay organizations. Entertainment company Ultrax Disc Jockeys will emcee the event, with live acts scheduled throughout the day including singer/songwriter Lucie Blue Tremblay. The Clinton Inn Hotel’s catering staff will provide food samples and host


Come Out & Play: Lance Bass
2007-06-01 08:08:55
This week’s Come Out & Play post spotlights Lance Bass, former NSync member, aspiring astronaut and wanna be actor. Lance Bass burst onto the pop scene with his smooth, baritone that often held NSync’s signature harmonies together like super glue. With their synchronized dance moves and titillating live shows (in which they never sunk to Ashley Simpson or Britney Spears standards by using a backing track I might add), it was easy to see why billions of weeping prepubescent girls, trillions of significantly sexually neglected housewives, and hoards of closeted lesbians (myself happily included) fell desperately in love with each and every band member. Lance was billed as the shy one, since he was hardly animated in interviews and often let his harmonizing counterparts bask in the limelight while he stood contently in the background. He never spoke of girlfriends, conquests or otherwise. And, when asked, he made up the “qualities” he’d like to find in a woma


The “fag bug” has been spotted
2007-05-31 07:53:55
Remember the “fag bug?” Here’s an update from Erin Davies herself: Last week while i was out at a bar for 2 hours, someone took a razor blade to my driver’s side window and removed the f, the a, and most of g of “fag” from my car. This ultimately puts me in an awkward position given some of the responses I’ve had. Do I restore it or not? I feel like this person either wanted to stop me from doing my trip or wants to put me in a position to put it back on myself so he can continue to blame me for doing it myself or he is the one who did it to my car to begin with and is so upset that it is getting a positive response rather than the humiliation and guilt he intended on placing upon me by doing this. The more things that unravel with this, the more I believe it to be all three of those. In the end my decision is to restore the word “fag” on my car exactly as it was because that was my choice to keep it there, and it is my decision to


Notable Lesbians
2007-05-31 07:08:20
This week’s Notable Lesbian is: Anne Lister 1791–1840 Anne was called “Gentleman Jack” by Halifax residents, and is known as the “first modern lesbian.” She was a well-off Yorkshire landowner and self-conscious lesbian who suffered from recorded harassment for her sexuality. Anne is best known for her coded journals in which she recorded her daily life, romances, and seductions, as well as her rigorous program of study. She also traveled widely. Her affair with a wealthy heiress, Ann Walker, was a story of local repute. Interesting tid bit: During her life she wrote a four million word diary. Around one sixth of the diary is encrypted and describes quite graphically her lesbian nature and affairs. “I love and only love the fairer sex and thus beloved by them in turn, my heart revolts from any love but theirs.” ~ Anne Lister View Anne’s Journals If you have a suggestion for a Notable Lesbian, e-mail me at lyndsey.darcangelo@451press.net


Ten moments when the mainstream adopted gay culture
2007-05-30 12:45:55
I’m not sure if anyone else saw this yesterday, but I thought it was worth checking out. It’s always fun to look back in time and see how our culture has influenced the mainstream, and in turn, to see how the mainstream had embraced our culture. The Phoenix - In our post–Queer Eye for the Straight Guy world, many people — particularly younger people — take for granted that the divide between gay culture and mainstream culture is as thin as the latex of an expensive condom. This has not always been the case. Since the Stonewall Riots of 1969, the underground gay counterculture has consistently, and vitally, influenced mainstream popular culture in style, music, fashion, language, sexual mores, and politics. Here are 10 moments — all of them decisive — that chart the gradual, but irrefutable, queering of American culture. 1970: Bette Midler, camp out In 1970, Bette Midler, mixing an outrageous blend of camp, sex talk, and Andrews Sisters tunes began performing a


A case of reverse prejudice or a viable precaution?
2007-05-29 11:03:27
I’m a firm believer in the phrase, “Two wrongs don’t make a right.” Here’s another little ditty I enjoy: “Treat others as you would like to be treated.” We, as homosexuals, are sometimes treated as second-class citizens, discriminated against and often seen as sick or disturbed by certain religions based organizations. The emotional and mental effect is down right staggering. As a result, we have created numerous organizations to battle this kind of treatment on a daily basis. We want others to sympathize with us, to understand the kind of scrutiny we face. We want an equal playing field on which to live our lives and yet, some of us take things to such an extreme, or should I say obtuse, angle that we undoubtedly don’t need to go to. Australia - A gay pub in the city of Melbourne has won the right to ban heterosexuals - the first time such a decision has been made in Australia. The Victorian state civil and administrative tribunal ruled the Peel Hotel could ban patron


The many colors of the lesbian rainbow
2007-06-04 08:39:54
Let’s face it. Lesbians come in all sorts of colors – from femme to butch to everything else in between. However, I wasn’t aware of this kind of categorization when I first came out, until a friend of mine teased me about being attracted to “femmes”. OK, I thought, whatever that means. Since then I’ve heard about a billion and one different names to describe this or that type of lesbian. So I did a little digging to see what the most common categories were. I talked with friends, looked on the Internet and consulted some magazines. Here is what I came up with. (Some of which flat out made me laugh!) (more…)


An “ex-gay” Doc for Surgeon General?
2007-06-07 10:22:29
Sigh. As if this administration couldn’t get any worse. It seems that Bush is trying to pull out all the stops before his run is over. We’re only a year and a half from the end of his reign, but the decisions he makes from here on out could affect us for years to come. He’s nominated and appointed numerous corrupt individuals, liars, shady business associates and all-around scum to critical government posts. And now you can add “bigot” to the list. It’s nepotism at its finest. (more…)
Read more: Surgeon General , General , Surgeon

Notable Lesbians
2007-06-07 07:21:11
This week’s Notable Lesbian is: Kathryn Ann “Kate” Fleming October 6, 1965 - December 14, 2006 Kate was the owner and executive producer at Cedar House Audio, an audio production company specializing in spoken word. After a stint as a professional actor, she branched into audio books in the mid-1990s. In 2004 she won the distinguished Audie Award for Unabridged Fiction for All Over Creation by Ruth Ozeki - which in a review was called “just about perfect.” Some of her favorite works to narrate included Bel Canto by Ann Patchett, The Falls by Joyce Carol Oates and any title by Louise Edrich. Unfortunately, Kate died on December 14, 2006 in a freak accident. She is survived by her partner of nine years, Charlene Strong. Interesting tid bit: Kate narrated over 250 audio books and was known worldwide for her superb narration work under the name of “Anna Fields.” Anna Fields was Kate’s great grandmother. She was an actress at the turn of the last century. Kno


What’s the best reason to legalize gay marriage?
2007-06-06 09:40:55
Money, apparently. According to a study called, “Love Counts: The Economic Benefits of Marriage Equality for New York,” the 50,854 same-sex couples that rare registered as residing in New York state would cause a huge influx of revenue from local taxes, city marriage license fees and personal spending. The Advocate - “Legalizing marriage for same-sex couples in New York would have impacts beyond allowing individuals to make the full legal commitments to their partners that opposite-sex couples take for granted,” Comptroller William Thompson said in the report. The report also foresees more than 56,000 couples from other states visiting the Big Apple to get married, including those from nearby New Jersey, Connecticut and Pennsylvania. Nancy Swartz, a videographer based in New York who specializes in capturing gay ceremonies, said that she anticipates a significant growth in her business if same-sex marriage is passed. “My business did increase from New Jer


What happened to separation of church and state?
2007-06-05 09:46:09
Excuse my ignorance, but I thought that our forefathers built this nation on one sound principal, paving the way for future governing bodies to abide by in order to maintain a sense of balance and unbiased decision making. I thought that separation of church and state was still a known and active governing rule. My bad. It seems that now more than ever, the whole idea of separation of church and state is falling by the wayside. Even on the Democratic side of things, 2008 candidates are being pressed about their religions beliefs. If separation of church and state really mattered, then why would people care if Hillary’s (now portraying herself as a martyr) faith in God got her through her marital strife? They wouldn’t wonder if Barack Obama practiced Muslim or that Mitt Romney was a Mormon. But people do care. Otherwise it wouldn’t be all over the news. Gay.com - The personal faith of candidates has become a very public part of the 2008 presidential campaign. Seven y


Come Out & Play: Courtney
2007-06-08 08:06:39
This week’s Come Out & Play post spotlights Courtney , an 18-year-old student at University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Courtney e-mailed me her story through OurChart, a lesbian social-networking site spun from the L Word. This is Courtney’s story: I knew I was gay all throughout high school. Coming out, on the other hand, I had decided to push off until college… that was until I couldn’t take pretending to be straight anymore. One of my best friends was the resident lesbian in our medium-sized conservative high school. I’ll call her “Jordan.” She was beautiful, smart, and always knew what she wanted. Yet, at the beginning of my junior year Jordan was the last of my friends that I came out to. It was Monday morning late November. I pulled her away from our loud, and quite large, group of friends. I came out, and she was surprisingly shocked. She thought she had the best gaydar possible, but missed me by a mile. Later that day she asked me t


The “fag bug” has been spotted
2007-06-08 07:48:36
Remember the “fag bug?” Here’s an update from Erin Davies herself: So this past week, after nine days of having my car re-vandalized, I finally restored my car to the way she was. I asked several body shops to restore it for me but none of them would touch it. Everyone was afraid they’d lose their jobs or wife and kids. I felt that even though it was one of the most awkward things I’ve ever had to do, to do it myself, I think I was meant to face that challenge. Knowing I’ve had one person accuse me of doing it myself go out of their way to remove it and try to stop my campaign and cross country trip, well I just have to be confident in my decision. It is in line with everything I’ve done so far. I chose to keep the words on my car to not “cover” them up and make them visible. So I am not going to let someone “cover” them up for me. It is my choice when and if I am going to do that, not someone else’s. To view pict


Gay author wins coveted award
2007-06-13 09:14:51
The author of America’s most celebrated novel about fictional gay athletes has garnered yet another literary distinction with her first nonfiction book about real-life sports figures titled, The Lavender Locker Room: 3000 years of Great Athletes Whose Sexual Orientation Was Different. Patricia Nell Warren, whose 1974 landmark novel, The Front Runner, became an international bestseller and the first modern gay love story to become successful in mainstream America, has won the Independent Publisher Gold Medal this year for Best Gay/Lesbian book. Chosen as one of the top independent tomes out of 2,690 entries from all fifty states, eight Canadian provinces, and 17 countries overseas, Warren’s winning entry is an anthology of historical essays which chronicle the lives of real gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender athletes over the past three millennia. Among the sports figures featured in The Lavender Locker Room are golfer Babe Didrikson, boxer Wilhelm von Homburg, pilot Amelia Ea


Once a tomboy, always a tomboy
2007-06-12 08:14:18
I’ve been a tomboy for as long as I can remember. I liked to play in the mud, tossed around the football with my brothers and even ran around with my shirt off. My mom used to complain that she would have to tie my hair in ribbons and constantly pull up my pants. Five minutes later my hair would be running wild, the ribbons would be sprawled out across the lawn and my pants would be hanging slightly below my hips. Not much has changed since then. (more…)
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Don’t ask, don’t tell - they asked, she told
2007-06-11 08:57:27
Lee Quillian took hold of the zipper that had become her tongue and unzipped her mouth, letting loose the long-held secret that she was not only gay, but a decorated Navy officer. After serving 20 years under the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy, Quillian courageously and proudly told her story of silence to over 100 members of Congress. The Advocate - “I didn’t want to lie about my life, but I didn’t broadcast,” Quillian told The Advocate Wednesday in a phone interview. “I had to be quiet about the people I was spending my time with back home.” Invited by Massachusetts Representative Marty Meehan and Senator Hillary Clinton of New York, Quillian, with three other service members, discussed with members of both houses of Congress the implications of being a gay service member under the military’s ban on openly gay service personnel. While in the Navy, Quillian earned two commendation medals and four achievement medals an


Come Out & Play: Chi
2007-06-15 09:02:18
This week’s Come Out & Play post spotlights Chi from Arizona. Chi told me her story through OurChart, a lesbian social-networking site spun from the L Word. This is Chi story: I am probably a classic case … busted by a love letter. I was 15 years old staying the weekend at my Grandma’s so since I couldn’t see my girl and was going crazy I figured I’d write a scrumptious love note telling her how I was going out of my mind not being able to see her. So I sat down and wrote this love letter filled with all these detailed feelings and actions a hormonal 15-year-old would write (definitely something you would not want your parents to see), tossed in a nice poem, folded it up and set it in my dresser drawer and went about my day. Well the next morning I wake up and at breakfast my Grandma asks me if there is something I want to tell her … why does family ask that, it is such an open-ended question you don’t even know how to respond and then they


Notable Lesbians
2007-06-14 07:51:36
This week’s Notable Lesbian is: Margarethe “Grethe” Cammermeyer March 24, 1942 - Margarethe is a former colonel in the Washington National Guard and a gay rights activist. She was born in Oslo, Norway, and became a United States citizen in 1960. In 1961 she joined the Army Student Nurse Program and received a B.S. in Nursing in 1963 from the University of Maryland. In response to a question during a routine security clearance interview in 1989, Margarethe unknowingly disclosed that she was a lesbian. The “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy was not yet in effect at the time, and the National Guard began military discharge proceedings against her. On June 11, 1992, she was honorably discharged from the military. A lawsuit was filed against the decision in civil court. In June 1994, Judge Thomas Zilly of the Federal District Court in Seattle ruled her discharge, and the ban on gays and lesbians serving in the military, unconstitutional. Margarethe retu


MTV’s Coral exploring her “lesbian qualities?”
2007-06-20 07:57:28
These days it seems that just about everyone is a lesbian. Maybe that’s what’s really going on here. Maybe, we are all gay inside and we all just need a little prodding here and there to finally admit it. Or maybe I drank to much gourmet coffee this morning. When my friend Allison sent me this story I thought it was a publicity stunt of some kind, but it’s legit. Coral currently pinch hits for the Lesbo Lovers … I wonder if she’ll stay on the roster? Why do you think you were picked for The Real World? To this day, I really don’t know. It could possibly be my breasts. They’re very large. I did talk a lot of shit. I was very outgoing. Maybe they thought it would be easier to shoot me than some introvert. You weren’t exactly the “nice person” that season. I was the bitch of my season. Not the ‘Oh my God, I hate that bitch and want to kill her!’ It was more like ‘She’ll tell me what she thinks. She’s outspoken and not going to let anyb
Read more: qualities

The “fag bug” has been spotted
2007-06-19 08:00:09
Remember the “fag bug?” Here’s an update from Erin Davies herself: Last weekend, fagbug was in her first pride parades, Syracuse (my hometown) and Albany (where I live now). My mom, sister, niece and girlfriend marched with me at Syracuse Pride. As we were lining up to be in the parade everyone that was involved noticed my car and had a dialogue about it. It’s interesting to see how gay people respond in a gay setting versus the general public outside of a gay setting. Because I was at a gay pride event people seem to wonder if it’s a real thing or not. In the general public when I’m getting gas or groceries no one seems to question it. They take it for face value. Someone spray painted my car. The morning I went to get ready for Albany Pride, I went to my car and received my 6th note on my car. It read, “I saw what someone did to your car a week or so ago and it really made me sad. I think hate like that hurts everyone whether they be gay o


What’s more important - Paris or a hate crime?
2007-06-18 08:52:04
Apparently, Paris is. Sigh. I’m not all that keen about starting off the week on such a depressing note. After all, it’s Monday. And on Mondays, people need a little boost to get them going, they need a little pat on the back, a smile, perhaps an encouraging word or two that will add a slight kick to their step, Fred Astaire-like, and entice them to get lost in an optimistic montage of expectations that maybe the week won’t be as bad, that maybe Mondays can actually be enjoyable … But no. I had to go and deliver some crappy news that will not only damper your Monday, but will most likely cast an ominous shadow across the country as a whole for weeks to come. Case in point: Paris Hilton getting thrown back to the slammer was considered “breaking news” on every major news station as well as every major affiliate. Even the little scroll-thingy sliding every so discretely across the televisions informed you of the Paris situation, which was apparently so essential, that you we
Read more: crime

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