Wow! Do they still use that term in America?Nanohedron wrote:........ninny.
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I thought it went out with sandshoes and mohair socks.
Wow! Do they still use that term in America?Nanohedron wrote:........ninny.
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He does! He always looks so comical to me, playing the piano with those stubby little fingers. And yet the music he plays is beautiful. Anyway, just felt the need to express my opinion, which unlike vomitbunny, is always highly intelligent and correctCranberry wrote:He actually has short stubby fingers to play piano so well.
And let's be frank (or ginger) and admit that his was not a particularly violent outburst... I mean he called them "pigs"... here they would have been much more likely dubbed something far more... um... "colorful"... and more closely related to a less respected portion of the anatomy.peeplj wrote:Perhaps a little public stir now and again can actually help a career along by keeping the person in the public eye?
However, reporters do sometimes go too far. It may simply be they were in his space, in his face, and he just suddenly found himself angry. Celebs are people, too: they get angry, they get tired, and sometimes they make bad choices.
--James
My first reaction was to say "who?"Cranberry wrote:Don't tell that to Martha Stewart.Darwin wrote:Famous people are like Gods. They can do whatever they like.
Some of us are not ones to pass up a good word when it fits to a tee. I think of it as upholding tradition. I also use "groovy", "threads", and "chortle", among others.talasiga wrote:Wow! Do they still use that term in America?Nanohedron wrote:........ninny.
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