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Geez, lighten up! I'm sure if you tried, you could find something insulting about every commercial.
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by All Fired Up Posted Mon February 5, 2007 @ 6:15 PM
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Wow, it is people like you who hurt the feminist movement... wait, it is femininists like you that hurt any movement.
I am a corporate America male (TG) with a number highly intelligent female contemporaries and superiors, and one thing I have learned from the best I know. If you feel a need to shout "Hear Me Roar." You have some security issues. You will earn respect and know you have arrived when you can say "I am woman, don't make me roar."
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Rawr?
by Blackrack Tue February 13, 2007 @ 12:23 PM
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by lj Posted Sat February 3, 2007 @ 10:11 PM
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LOL. Thanks for the laugh!!
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by Richard S. Posted Fri February 2, 2007 @ 11:27 AM
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I will let you know when the "You are Woman, Mop my floor" Commercial is in production so you can offer advice.
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by ECHOHAWK Posted Thu February 1, 2007 @ 4:26 PM
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Please let me know when the next bra burning is. I have a digital camera now.
...a song lead women out of subservience into ..., just when did this "Classic" come out?
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"Feminist". Wow. People like this always smack me to be rather off.
How about being a "humanist", hmm? If you truly want everyone to be equal, it shouldn't matter what sex you are.
I haven't seen the new Burger King commercial, and frankly, I don't care to. I haven't been in a Burger King since I got a raw burger from them several visits in a row, to all different stores several years ago.
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by blondie615 Posted Tue January 30, 2007 @ 1:09 AM
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lately its the food thats insulting, I've even complained via this web site and heard nothing from them except the freaky commercials blaring on the tv. burger king has really went downhill since I was young.
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by Juicy Jade Posted Mon January 29, 2007 @ 12:33 PM
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How exactly is this commercial insulting?
Some guy just wants to eat something a little more filling.
Get off of the high horse.
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by Bill French Posted Sun January 28, 2007 @ 7:27 PM
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In how many ways, shapes, and forms can you enter a Burger King, anyway?
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by mary jo Posted Sun January 28, 2007 @ 12:22 AM
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I love this commercial and so does my 7 year old son. LOL! Personally I think its great. I think men have lost their voice in the last 20 years and its time they find it again.
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by Cindy R Posted Fri January 26, 2007 @ 3:35 PM
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That Burger King mascot guy they use in the commercials is pretty freaky. I hate watching them!
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by franese Posted Fri January 26, 2007 @ 1:10 PM
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Jessica, I don't know how old you are but I'm old enough to remember when I am Woman came out . . .believe me . ..it did NOT inspire women out of subservience, etc., etc. It was just a commercial song. (with one really dumb line "I was just an embyro")
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by Sarah H Posted Fri January 26, 2007 @ 1:02 PM
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Stop being such a feminist. This commercial is funny. Don't take life so seriously and you'll enjoy it much more. And remember, this is post women's suffrage, women do have rights now. Life's not as hard for us as you make it sound.
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Thank you
by Rapunzel676 Fri January 26, 2007 @ 9:54 PM
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by A A Posted Fri January 26, 2007 @ 12:12 PM
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Jessica, how about you calm down and get me a beer?
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by Horsetuna Posted Fri January 26, 2007 @ 9:53 AM
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I haven't seen this commercial but it sounds like something I would crack up laughing.
The world needs more laughter. I think it was Max Bialystock from The PRoducers who said "Laugh and the world laughs with you."
Or something like that.
Personally I'm getting tired of the 'sex wars' as it is. I've heard too many times of women getting bonuses for being women while men still have to deal with the same old (IE, women can have their own health clubs, but men cannot). Poor guys.
But back on topic, I still eat at BK on occasion, and while the new song seems a little chauvinistic, again I think its' taken from a satirical point of view about men and shouldnt' be something anyone to get their panties in a knot about.
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by Courtney C Posted Fri January 26, 2007 @ 5:32 AM
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I LOVE this song! I think its funny and cute. It also gets stuck in your head for hours and hours.. but it's still cute. Every time I see it, it reminds me of all of my male friends and boyfriend. I thinks its clever and no matter how hard I search, I have a really hard time finding something in it that insults women.
By the way, your little hero, Helen Reddy, isn't exactly the best person to be all googly over. The composer of "I am Woman" was a man and he happened to be a foreigner. EBcause of work permit rights, he had a hard time collecting straight from the companies when the song became huge and Ms. Reddy just decided not to pay him his fair share. He finally had to sue her in 1998 to get royalties she had withheld from him since 1972. He got some, but not nearly the change that she pocketed. So, does it really surprise you that she sold out and handed over this "women's anthem" to a fast food place? She's in it for the money, honey.
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um...
by Courtney C Sat January 27, 2007 @ 1:51 AM
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Interesting background on the song:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Am_Woman
It's a good thing I don't take the Grammys too seriously because this song WON one!
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by Retail G Posted Thu January 25, 2007 @ 9:42 AM
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Is woman-friendly anything like user-friendly?
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by MommyG4 Posted Wed January 24, 2007 @ 11:05 PM
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The best advise I can give, do what my hubby does, switch channels. I hardly ever get to see a commercial cause he usually has the remote and it will NOT be on a commercial if he has anything to do with it.
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by middleclassdad Posted Wed January 24, 2007 @ 4:45 PM
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were women mistreated in prior generations ??
certainly
are women mistreated now ?
absolutely
was that song inspirational ?
yes (i liked it and i'm a guy)
should we all fight for FAIRNESS ? definitely
but the whole "subserviance" thing is taken a bit out of context
childbirth is required to propogate our kind
and FOR WOMEN childbirth was often fatal (or debilitating) prior to modern surgical and medical techniques
(it's no picnic now)
but now , we take so many things for granted -- things that have changed roles for men and women --
things like modern medicine, birth control, indoor lighting and plumbing and appliances, differences in patterns of sending kids to school, automobiles, commuting to work, automation etc etc etc
not that life is easy now but for the middle and lower classes, life was much harder for men and women prior to the 20th century
what the upper classes did then (and do today) left (and leaves) much to be desired -- but they make up a minority of the total population (and always have)
and wasn't it primarily men who were drafted to war, who died building dams and bridges and tunnels, who either worked hard on the farm while their spouses also did so OR traveled away from the comforts of home by necessity to work hard and mail money back home
sure women had hard times but so did most men
and people worked to survive and didn't sit around watching TV and wondering how their gender or demographic group was being mistreated
I think sometimes we buy into the myth that our lives are supposed to be like june or ward cleaver or carol and mike brady but those images were always myths that never actually existed anywhere and if we have unrealistic expectations, chances are we will be disappointed and/or bitter
and I agree , the commercial is a bit annoying
but as for that one word "subserviant" -- if and when that word is used to generalize or stereoptype prior generations, don't forget you are then describing our grandfathers as abusive and our grandmothers as doormats - that's not a fair generalization
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I agree!
by It-doesn't-pay-to-behave Tracy Wed January 24, 2007 @ 1:38 PM
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Ive said...
by KamenRiderOsaka Wed January 24, 2007 @ 2:00 PM
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The longer the penis is erect, the likelier that there is a blockage that is keeping the blood from LEAVING it. And when that happens, the blood can actually "spoil" (start to die), which means the penis may have to be amputated in order to save the life of its owner.
Seriously. The commercial is wrong when it says "call your doctor immediately." What a man should do is go to the ER!
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by >Leanne< Posted Wed January 24, 2007 @ 4:04 PM
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.
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by Jeffrey Posted Wed January 24, 2007 @ 4:05 PM
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I'm squirming, here.
I know some men who's rather NOT be saved if they had to lose their, ah hem, best friend.
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from an MD
by middleclassdad Wed January 24, 2007 @ 4:11 PM
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LMAO
by BlueTuesday Starlight22203 Wed January 24, 2007 @ 2:44 PM
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from an MD
by middleclassdad Wed January 24, 2007 @ 4:08 PM
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sometimes
by middleclassdad Wed January 24, 2007 @ 6:04 PM
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hilarious
by middleclassdad Wed January 24, 2007 @ 5:01 PM
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LMAO
by Thirsty Thursday Starlight22203 Fri January 26, 2007 @ 2:20 PM
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Um
by Courtney C Fri January 26, 2007 @ 3:03 PM
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Oh man...
by Thirsty Thursday Starlight22203 Sat January 27, 2007 @ 10:50 AM
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I see so many people on PFB who apparently alter their lives according to the commercials they like or don't like.
How odd.
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from an MD
by middleclassdad Wed January 24, 2007 @ 4:14 PM
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Grow up. There was nothing chauvinistic about the commercial except for the portrayal of all men as mindless eating machines bent on devouring fatty fast food and breaking stuff. If anyone should be complaining it's men, but we've got a sense of humor. Your post is an insult to women everywhere. You portray women as uptight, thin-skinned, shrill naggers. I pity the man or woman involved in a relationship with you.
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by JuliePie Posted Wed January 24, 2007 @ 11:05 AM
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What about all the comercials that portray men as beer-swilling, chest-butting, woman-chasing Neantrathals (sp?)??
Parody is a two-way street. Sorry. Sounds like you're a wee bit too sensitive. But thank you for posting this and letting us "hear you roar".
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by "The One and Only" MA Loper Posted Wed January 24, 2007 @ 10:02 AM
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"You have taken a song that inspired and lead women out of subservience into a position of greater power."
Subservience? I hate to point out but the women's rights movement took place in the late 19th/early 20th century, some 50 years before Helen Reddy (the writer and artist of the song in question) was even born.
Female subservience was over LONG before this song became a hit and feminist empowerment was already well underway.
If you are so shallow you'd boycott a fast food chain over a commercial and try and pin it on anti-feminist sentiment, gives the impression of being incredibly transparent and faux.
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by Jeffrey Posted Wed January 24, 2007 @ 9:08 AM
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It's parody, clear and simple.
It's offensive to men. It's offensive to women. It's offensive to construction workers and mini-van owners.
It may be a stupid ad.
But, in the end, it's very clear parody.
That said, if you want to tell BK that the ad doesn't resonate with you, go ahead. They need feedback like that. On the other hand, they have other ways of measuring the success of an ad.
(P.S. You're not the target audience)
OK... But...
But what if this ad used another another song in a parody way? Suppose, oh, it used a Hebrew traditional song to sell a new pork sandwich?
Would we still find it acceptable parody or funny?
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Well-said
by Rapunzel676 Wed January 24, 2007 @ 12:33 PM
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by Gino Version 1.2 Posted Tue January 23, 2007 @ 11:32 PM
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As a woman friendly man, I take more offense at the "vonage" commercial with the blonde wanting to swim with the sharks (thinking they are dolphins) than this BK "Spoof"
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by nick l Posted Tue January 23, 2007 @ 10:28 PM
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Okay, here's your apology:
I'm sorry you are so easily offended.
How, exactly, did a song "lead women out of subservience into a position of greater power?" Isn't that something other women did?
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by Banrion Posted Tue January 23, 2007 @ 8:37 PM
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I actually thought the commercial was pretty funny.
I am however anti-feminist and just generally anti-ist. I don't want to be treated with kid gloves just because I don't have a "piece." Everyone should stand on their own merit and be treated in a manner consistent with their attitudes and abilities. It doesn't matter what "equipment" you have, what color your skin is, or which deity you worship.
I have found in my experience, that it is women like YOU who make it harder for women everywhere nowdays. Being hyper-sensitive only increases the problems, and solidifies stereotypes.
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It's not even a good song! And it's just Helen Reddy (isn't it?). I'm 38. I assure you, no women my age or younger thought of that song as our "anthem." I'm betting most women older than I feel the same way.
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I'm 30
by Rapunzel676 Wed January 24, 2007 @ 12:09 PM
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by vc Posted Tue January 23, 2007 @ 8:13 PM
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I'm as friendly to women as the bouncers or restraining orders will allow.
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by KamenRiderOsaka Posted Tue January 23, 2007 @ 8:00 PM
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Turn the channel, thats what remotes were invented for. Im sure that you dont let your hubby hold the remote at all seeing as how youre a proud woman and all.
As a female, I find the commercial funny, and darn it, it makes me wanna have Burger King! The only thing I have a problem with is "The King" as he is creepy as hell.
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The King
by BlueTuesday Starlight22203 Tue January 23, 2007 @ 8:57 PM
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by ed wilson Posted Tue January 23, 2007 @ 7:58 PM
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Another letter writer that wants to influence other people not to shop at somewhere they don't like. If you don't like a business, good - why the quest to get everyone else?
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by donno Posted Tue January 23, 2007 @ 7:32 PM
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change the channel. This one will give you high blood pressure, if the "regular" fast food doesn't. This was a wonderful diversion from the usual, however.
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by Peregrina Posted Tue January 23, 2007 @ 7:19 PM
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I hate to say it, but in spirit at least, I agree with ole' whassiname on the Grey's Anatomy letter. Some people really need to stop watching TV if they get this het up over stuff.
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by mary jo Posted Tue January 23, 2007 @ 6:59 PM
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Please set away from the television and the computer.
Its JUST A COMMERCIAL! And its a funny one at that.
I consider myself fairly feministic (is that a word? LOL) but that commerical is funny and who ever came up with it did a great job.
There are lots of things to get worked up and offended about but a Burger King commerical isnt one of them. Well...at least not THIS commercial.
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I never eat fast food, but I have to laugh at the utter stupidity of the commercials from Burger King, at least they show it for what it is, fattening and nutritionally empty. They admit it is not good for you unlike McDonald's which tries its hardest to make you think they serve health food.
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by Brian D. Posted Tue January 23, 2007 @ 5:59 PM
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Well, for one, that commercial is over a year old. They are just bringing it back.
What I don't like about it is that it seems Burger KIng is condoning vandalism when the men push the mini-van off that bridge
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by DragonflygrrlTheGreat Posted Tue January 23, 2007 @ 5:00 PM
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I really think if anyone should be offended by this ad campaign, it would be men. Here are some of the lyrics of the original song:
Oh yes I am wise
But it's wisdom born of pain
Yes, I've paid the price
But look how much I gained
If I have to, I can do anything
I am strong (strong)
I am invincible (invincible)
I am woman
As you say, inspirational stuff. Helen Reddy is telling us that we as women have suffered, and have been made strong through our suffering. And not just strong, but actually invincible. Now that's the kind of thing that makes you hold up your head and feel good about yourself, am I right? I know it does me. Makes me feel like nothing can get to me. Especially not a stupid commercial for a cheeseburger.
Now here's a sample of the "I Am Man," version:
Oh yes I'm a guy
I'll admit I've been fed quiche.
Wave tofu bye-bye
Now it's for the purest beef I reach
I will eat this meat
'Till my innie turns into an outie
I am starved
I am incorrigible
I am man.
Hmmm, now that is interesting. Apparently, Burger King believes that men are unsophisticated jerks that only enjoy eating American fast food. Not only that, but men are disgusting gluttons that if left to their own devices will eat until they actually herniate themselves.
I don't know about you, but if someone said that about my gender I'd be pretty bent out of shape. I might even write an angry letter. :)
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by CandyPickletoes Posted Tue January 23, 2007 @ 4:56 PM
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I'm lost. Exactly how did the song "I am woman, hear me roar" inspire and lead women out of subservience into a position of greater power? It is my opinion that WOMEN inspired and lead other women out of subservience into a position of greater power. But, that's just me, I guess.
I haven't seen the commercial you are speaking of but I agree that the freak that I've seen running around on some BK commercials is quite scary looking!
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I love it!!
by DragonflygrrlTheGreat Tue January 23, 2007 @ 5:02 PM
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by >Leanne< Posted Tue January 23, 2007 @ 1:58 PM
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The one thing that disgusts me in that commercial is that smiling plastic man who shows up anywhere to scare the whatever out of you.
I haven't seen the one you are talking about yet. Or maybe I have and I didn't take offense to it.
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*Shudder*
by tickytack Tue January 23, 2007 @ 2:45 PM
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The more
by >Leanne< Tue January 23, 2007 @ 7:09 PM
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by tickytack Posted Tue January 23, 2007 @ 12:56 PM
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Speak for yourself; I am a woman and I find it hilarious.
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