Fiction=judgmental readers.
Consider the celebrities (now) who used to be ordinary people, with opinions and beliefs, thrust into a spotlight, and then everything they say do and are, is scrutinized, carefully.
So my blog about being addicted and slogging through sleet and snow to satisfy cravings, will get judged, so forget that!
Plus, my reading glasses broke.
Plus, did I misspell a word, or did I make a grammatical error?
Have you *seen* Edgar Allen Poe's house?
It was closed when I got there but it sure looked like the bedroom of an apartment, all tiny.
It was super tiny, not like this mansion (but it's similar to what I saw) (That section on the right, with the bushes, looks familiar) |
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https://www.businessinsider.com/rupert-murdoch-make-trump-non-person-after-january-6-2023-2
is one non-fictional story, and another is the governor of Florida taking over Disneyland.
B o r i n g!
Me walking a mile through slush sounds better, but I'll never write it.
JK Rowling,
Elton John,
A member of the royal family (pick one),
John Lennon,
So (fucket) here's to you, brave people who broke out of your shell to sing, write, make movies. Your popularity is fleeting, and people will hate you eventually.
What's it called when another train of thought gets created...
Charismatic people who get famous or become government officials, and sports fans (you'd think) have nothing in common, right?
In other words...(lemme see) are you wielding your opinion like Thor's hammer, or the spanish inquisition, or ...?
This next link is topical, I swear...not for the actual historical event, but what it eventually became in people's minds.
https://www.mouseplanet.com/12952/The_1970_Yippie_Invasion_of_Disneyland
My forum avatar is an old man from a show in 1965 (or so). I'm getting "frosted". (lol) "hard core" isn't allowed.