i still think that the T-Cell/Klepty feud is more than about the stealing dancers fiasco. T-Cell was probably mad Klepty dated John Mayer. and we all know ex-bfs are just off limits to friends, i mean that's just like the rules of feminism!
she said its what her mom told her, as in trying to make her feel better about her own body. not really difficult to understand
Did she need to make a song about it? And I'm not even giving much importance to this btw, the whole EP sounds like it was written by a 5yo, she is just stupid and temporarily successful because of her weight.
Did she need to make a song about it? And I'm not even giving much importance to this btw, the whole EP sounds like it was written by a 5yo, she is just stupid and temporarily successful because of her weight.
why not, if this was a song about having abs and a sexy body no one would blink twice. let a bigger girl love her body sh*t
why not, if this was a song about having abs and a sexy body no one would blink twice. let a bigger girl love her body sh*t
It sounds to me that it was the only way to get attention she could come up with. But yes, let's let ha live, maybe she will find a bit of intelligence and maturity somewhere.
It sounds to me that it was the only way to get attention she could come up with. But yes, let's let ha live, maybe she will find a bit of intelligence and maturity somewhere.
It's not what you did. It's what you didn't do. I expected you to post K-Stew reviews!
Quote:
Still Alice is such a rich, well-observed piece that it even finds time to flesh out Alice’s daughters. In the beginning, Anna is the favoured, successful child while Lydia is the disappointment floundering in a go-nowhere acting career out in Los Angeles. But once Alice’s condition is spotted, the two daughters respond in different ways and for very specific, understandable reasons. With nuance, Bosworth and Stewart both play women who seem to have been profoundly shaped by their impressive mother, and we feel the characters’ confusion at having her influence suddenly ripped away from them. (Stewart especially shines, initially playing a prototypical starving-artist type who surprises her family by her response to Alice’s diagnosis.)