Nic Cester said he used to live in a bungalow with only two rooms, a bedroom and a toilet, so he would often sit on the toilet, lid down, and play around on his guitar. "Are You Gonna Be My Girl" originated there. He wrote it sometime between the ages of 17-19, when one of his main life goals was "trying, unsuccessfully, to shag as many girls as possible!" He wrote this song while frustrated about one girl, and the original hook was "She's just like every other girl", but his bandmates thought it was too negative and convinced him to make it more positive.[6] The cough was an accident in the demo, but the producers thought it should be in the final mix. Nic refused to fake the cough, so they copied it from the demo and put it in the final mix.[6]

The music video is shot in black and white, and shows Jet performing in a blank studio. As they play, black ink starts pouring out of their equipment and forms a landscape resembling the cover art on their album Get Born, the Beatles album Revolver and silhouettes of dancing girls. The video was shot at Vinopolis, London. Cameron Muncey can be seen wearing an AC/DC shirt.


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Through our cookie program the girl scouts teach entrepreneurial skills such as goal setting, decision making, money management, people skills, and business ethics. We are helping to build our future leaders and our leaders are girls!

These are SO going right in my freezer! (By the way, if you don't freeze your Girl Scout cookies I don't know if we can be friends). Here's another fun fact...these cookies are not coming out of a warehouse somewhere... Ferrara's Bakery owns Little Brownie Baker and they make all the Jersey Shore girl scout cookies fresh-baked to order!

The only bummer? Cookie season is not until Jan 8th...but you can prepare by finding your local girl scout here to make sure your order gets in as soon as they are available! These are going to be a top-seller. Put the Jersey Shore Morning Show with Lou & Shannon down for a box...or two...or three! Lou's treating ;-)

Ruhy Patel, 17, lives in Doylestown, Pa. When she was 15 she was planning to run for student council office. "All the other people running were boys," she says, "and people were like, 'Well, you're not going to win.' You feel intimidated because you're the only girl in the room. It makes you question if you'd be OK in the field of politics."

Unlike the 62 million out-of-school girls, these Girl Up girls are all in school. They're thinking about college; they lead comfortable lives. Sometimes their friends can't understand their activism. "They don't think we're able to make a difference," says Janet Ho, 18, who lives in Los Angeles. But that's not true, she says.

Kennede Reese, 18, from Denver, mentions a SchoolCycle fundraiser. The proceeds were used to send bikes to girls in Malawi: "Because even though they have the school supplies, there's no way to get to school to get the education they need. We think of the small things."

Ishana Nigam, 17, from Charlotte, N.C., visits India every year or so. That's where her parents are from. The girls she meets have "a lack of education, poor health care," she says. "But they're not jealous of me. They always tell me, 'I'm thankful for what I have, thankful just to be breathing.' And that takes a toll on me because I have so many more things than they have."

The aggression and violence that girls perpetrate on other girls is certainly cause for concern. But the media frenzy that greeted the lurid and voyeuristic video of girls fighting other girls is also worrisome.

Reviewed by:  Bad Girls, Bad Girls: Whatcha Gonna Do?  Deborah Stevenson   Voigt, Cynthia Bad Girls, Bad Girls: Whatcha Gonna Do? Atheneum, 2006 [448p] ISBN 0-689-82474-2$17.95 Reviewed from galleys R Gr. 6-9 The title isn't just a riff on a catchy song: bad girls Mikey and Margalo (from Bad Girls, BCCB 4/96, etc.), now in ninth grade, find themselves encountering a series of challenging situations that tax their problem-solving abilities. First, they need to stop the merciless bullying of their friend Hadrian Klenk by a trio of upperclassmen, but that turns out to be just a warmup for the big events: Margalo, working hard to earn funds for college, has over $200 stolen from her knapsack during play rehearsals, and Mikey, the ace tennis player, is thrown off the team when she refuses to obey her coach and fudge line calls to her own advantage. The story is shaped as much by the passing of the school year as by events, so the pace is on the deliberate side, but that doesn't really impair the book: ultimately, this is a character drama, exploring the continuing development of two fascinating personalities. Mikey, the inflexible pragmatist, to whom nuance is a foreign concept, and Margalo, the stealth powerhouse who loves to pull the strings from behind the scenes, have the thoroughgoing mutual knowledge of a long-married couple and they're as formidable and self-confident a partnership as ever ("We're what normal is," says Mikey with absolute certainty. "It's everybody else that's getting it wrong"). Yet they're also ninth-graders believably developing new skills, expanding their worlds, and even beginning to soften their rigorous judgments ("It's not as simple to hate somebody as it used to be," Mikey wistfully observes); both girls are adjusting to changes in their family, and both girls begin to see that the achievement of victory may not always be clearcut. Knowledge of previous books will enrich the readerly journey, but even new readers will recognize the charisma of this pair of friends and appreciate the perceptive wit of their chronicle.

Also, Harlots actually addresses the whole racism thing in a way that makes sense while Bridgerton just lazily explains that the king married a black lady, so there\u2019s equality in this version of history, unless the narrative requires racism as a plot device, in which case, the one darkskinned character on the show experiences it. They would\u2019ve been better off not addressing the race stuff at all. Also, I\u2019m sorry but that little white girl who plays the lead looks like a sickly child next to the grown hot ass man that is Reg\u00E9-Jean Page.

You see, the show focuses on one girl, Daphne Bridgerton, and her quest to get her hands on some jizz. I mean, technically, it\u2019s about her finding a husband and starting a family, but the show is actually just about this one girl learning what jizz is and how it works. Without spoiling anything, she sadly falls in love with a man who has taken a vow to never have children and thus, will never give her the jizz. Instead, he has decided to cum in his hand for his entire life because his daddy was mean to him.

Literally, the cliffhanger for an entire episode is whether or not she got the jizz. At another point, the biggest issue is that he lied about the jizz. At another point, she\u2019s angry with her mother for not explaining the jizz. There are also so many hilarious shots of the Duke of Hastings rushing to pull out so he can deny Daphne the jizz and I demand the internet make a supercut of these moments. Since the central drama of the show is whether or not this girl is gonna get the jizz she desires, I won\u2019t spoil it for you. 0852c4b9a8

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