2/28/16

The Daily Buzz For Feb 29



Justin Bieber Bares Birthday Suit On Clash Magazine Cover
He loves showing off his toned physique and Justin Bieber decided to go full-on naked on the front page of Clash magazine’s 100th issue.
The “All That Matters” crooner opens up about his battle to clean up his life and get his head on straight following a tumultuous year in 2015.

Bieber explains his belief in God has been the key to his sanity- "I feel like that's why I have a relationship with Him, because I need it. I suck by myself. Like, when I'm by myself and I feel like I have nothing to lean on? Terrible. Terrible person. I was doing this on my own, I would constantly be doing things that are, I mean, I still am doing things that are stupid, but...It just gives me some sort of hope and something to grasp onto, and a feeling of security, and a feeling of being wanted, and a feeling of being desired, and I feel like we can only get so much of that from a human."



#EGGPLANTNATION! Meet Muscles Mcgillicuddy!
Ladies and the rest of you Eggplant voyeurs! Meet Muscles Mcgillicuddy! He’s tanned Caramel and all STACKED for you! I’m sure you want to see the goods. So GO HERE TO SEE THE PICS!  NSFW!

Thank me Later!



#RHOA: Kim Fields Reportedly Joining Dancing With the Stars?
From Facts of Life, becoming a producer, to joining the Real Housewives of Atlanta, Kim Fields likes to stay active in the entertainment world. As she has made a comeback returning to the TV screen with the Georgia peaches, rumor has it that she is joining another venture, Dancing With the Stars.  

US Weekly was the first to report the story claiming that “multiple sources confirm” that Fields will be joining season 22 of DWTS. The official cast reveal will be on Good Morning America March 8th with the season kicking off March 21st. Are you surprised? It could be true as fellow Housewives NeNe Leakes, Lisa Vanderpump, Kim Zolciak-Biermann Lisa Rinna and Joanna Krupa have showed their moves on the show



NEW MUSIC: K. MICHELLE – TIME
Following “Not A Little Bit,” “Ain’t You” and “Mindful,” K. Michelle returns with another surprise release off her anticipated third album More Issues Than Vogue.

The R&B vixen has now liberated the classic styled piano ballad “Time,” which finds K singing out to her ex about finding a better man and a better situation for herself.

“Here I go again, worrying about you, before me / This time I’m going to get everything that I need,” she sings with a harmonizing chorus behind her.

More Issues Than Vogue is due in stores March 25, you can pre-order the album on iTunes now. Take a listen to “Time” below! HERE:

Thoughts?



IN CASE YOU MISSED IT! Watch: ‘Empire’ Season Two – Mid-Season Trailer
Empire makes it return to FOX in a little over a month, and now the network is offering viewers a peek at what’s going on in the Lyon’s den. From the looks of things, it’s about to get a little more hectic for the family. Naomi Campbell (playing Camilla) resurfaced in the mid-season finale of the show, and she’s definitely shaking things up.

She asks Hakeem (Bryshere Y. Gray) how would he like to be the CEO of Empire, he insists it’s his birthright, and it flashes to a scene of him holding a scepter of a lion’s paw. After Camilla shows up with the cops to kick Lucious (Terrence Howard) out of his office — so that she and Hakeem can run things – it leads to Cookie (Taraji P. Henson) joining forces with her ex to “take back [his] kingdom.”
“You’re falling for him again,” Jamal (Jussie Smollett) tells his mother, as he sees how close she and his father are getting. “What me and your father got is very deep,” she explains to him. “You just don’t throw all that away because of a few misunderstandings.”
The show picks back up on March 30th. Get a sneak peek below.

EMPIRE | Way Down | Trailer
Without family...the music dies. Here's your exclusive first look at the spring premiere of Empire, coming March 30 to FOX!
Posted by Empire on Thursday, 25 February 2016
Get ready folks!



AND THE OSCARS GO TO…………………………
The 2016 Oscars winners list
Here's the list of nominees for the 88th Academy Awards. Winners are noted in red. And yes they were VERY WHITE…LOL!

Best picture
"The Big Short"

"Bridge of Spies"

"Brooklyn"

"Mad Max: Fury Road"

"The Martian"

"The Revenant"

"Room"
"Spotlight" (WINNER)


Best actor
Bryan Cranston, "Trumbo"

Matt Damon, "The Martian"

Leonardo DiCaprio, "The Revenant" (WINNER)

Michael Fassbender, "Steve Jobs"

Eddie Redmayne, "The Danish Girl"


Best actress
Cate Blanchett, "Carol"

Brie Larson, "Room" (WINNER)

Jennifer Lawrence, "Joy"

Charlotte Rampling, "45 Years"

Saoirse Ronan, "Brooklyn"


Best supporting actor
Christian Bale, "The Big Short"

Tom Hardy, "The Revenant"

Mark Ruffalo, "Spotlight"

Mark Rylance, "Bridge of Spies" (WINNER)

Sylvester Stallone, "Creed"


Best supporting actress
Jennifer Jason Leigh, "The Hateful Eight"

Rooney Mara, "Carol"

Rachel McAdams, "Spotlight"

Alicia Vikander, "The Danish Girl" (WINNER)

Kate Winslet, "Steve Jobs"


Best director
"The Big Short," Adam McKay

"Mad Max: Fury Road," George Miller

"The Revenant," Alejandro G. Iñárritu (WINNER)

"Room," Lenny Abrahamson

"Spotlight," Tom McCarthy


Best original screenplay
"Bridge of Spies," by Matt Charman and Ethan Coen & Joel Coen

"Ex Machina," by Alex Garland

"Inside Out," by Pete Docter, Meg LeFauve and Josh Cooley; original story by Pete Docter and Ronnie del Carmen

"Spotlight," by Josh Singer and Tom McCarthy (WINNER)

"Straight Outta Compton," by Jonathan Herman and Andrea Berloff; story by S. Leigh Savidge & Alan Wenkus and Andrea Berloff


Best adapted screenplay
"The Big Short," Charles Randolph and Adam McKay (WINNER)

"Brooklyn," Nick Hornby

"Carol," Phyllis Nagy

"The Martian," Drew Goddard

"Room," Emma Donoghue


Best costume design
"Carol," Sandy Powell

"Cinderella," Sandy Powell

"The Danish Girl," Paco Delgado

"Mad Max: Fury Road," Jenny Beavan (WINNER)

"The Revenant," Jacqueline West


Best production design
"Bridge of Spies," production design by Adam Stockhausen; set decoration by Rena DeAngelo and Bernhard Henrich

"The Danish Girl," production design by Eve Stewart; set decoration by Michael Standish

"Mad Max: Fury Road," production design by Colin Gibson; set decoration by Lisa Thompson (WINNER)

"The Martian," production design by Arthur Max; set decoration by Celia Bobak

"The Revenant," production design by Jack Fisk; set decoration by Hamish Purdy


Best makeup and hairstyling
"Mad Max: Fury Road," Lesley Vanderwalt, Elka Wardega and Damian Martin (WINNER)

"The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed out the Window and Disappeared," Love Larson and Eva von Bahr

"The Revenant," Siân Grigg, Duncan Jarman and Robert Pandini


Best cinematography
"Carol," Ed Lachman

"The Hateful Eight," Robert Richardson

"Mad Max: Fury Road," John Seale

"The Revenant," Emmanuel Lubezki (WINNER)

"Sicario," Roger Deakins


Best film editing
"The Big Short," Hank Corwin

"Mad Max: Fury Road," Margaret Sixel (WINNER)

"The Revenant," Stephen Mirrione

"Spotlight," Tom McArdle

"Star Wars: The Force Awakens," Maryann Brandon and Mary Jo Markey


Best sound editing
"Mad Max: Fury Road," Mark Mangini and David White (WINNER)

"The Martian," Oliver Tarney

"The Revenant," Martin Hernandez and Lon Bender

"Sicario," Alan Robert Murray

"Star Wars: The Force Awakens," Matthew Wood and David Acord


Best sound mixing
"Bridge of Spies," Andy Nelson, Gary Rydstrom and Drew Kunin

"Mad Max: Fury Road," Chris Jenkins, Gregg Rudloff and Ben Osmo (WINNER)

"The Martian," Paul Massey, Mark Taylor and Mac Ruth

"The Revenant," Jon Taylor, Frank A. Montaño, Randy Thom and Chris Duesterdiek

"Star Wars: The Force Awakens," Andy Nelson, Christopher Scarabosio and Stuart Wilson


Best visual effects
"Ex Machina," Andrew Whitehurst, Paul Norris, Mark Ardington and Sara Bennett (WINNER)

"Mad Max: Fury Road," Andrew Jackson, Tom Wood, Dan Oliver and Andy Williams

"The Martian," Richard Stammers, Anders Langlands, Chris Lawrence and Steven Warner

"The Revenant," Rich McBride, Matthew Shumway, Jason Smith and Cameron Waldbauer

"Star Wars: The Force Awakens," Roger Guyett, Patrick Tubach, Neal Scanlan and Chris Corbould


Best animated short film
"Bear Story," Gabriel Osorio and Pato Escala (WINNER)

"Prologue," Richard Williams and Imogen Sutton

"Sanjay's Super Team," Sanjay Patel and Nicole Grindle

"We Can't Live without Cosmos," Konstantin Bronzit

"World of Tomorrow," Don Hertzfeldt


Best animated feature film
"Anomalisa," Charlie Kaufman, Duke Johnson and Rosa Tran

"Boy and the World," Alê Abreu

"Inside Out," Pete Docter and Jonas Rivera (WINNER)

"Shaun the Sheep Movie," Mark Burton and Richard Starzak

"When Marnie Was There," Hiromasa Yonebayashi and Yoshiaki Nishimura


Best documentary, short subject
"Body Team 12," David Darg and Bryn Mooser

"Chau, Beyond the Lines," Courtney Marsh and Jerry Franck

"Claude Lanzmann: Spectres of the Shoah," Adam Benzine

"A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness," Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy (WINNER)

"Last Day of Freedom," Dee Hibbert-Jones and Nomi Talisman


Best documentary feature
"Amy," Asif Kapadia and James Gay-Rees (WINNER)

"Cartel Land," Matthew Heineman and Tom Yellin

"The Look of Silence," Joshua Oppenheimer and Signe Byrge Sørensen

"What Happened, Miss Simone?" Liz Garbus, Amy Hobby and Justin Wilkes

"Winter on Fire: Ukraine's Fight for Freedom," Evgeny Afineevsky and Den Tolmor


Best live-action short film
"Ave Maria," Basil Khalil and Eric Dupont

"Day One," Henry Hughes

"Everything Will Be Okay (Alles Wird Gut)," Patrick Vollrath

"Shok," Jamie Donoughue

"Stutterer," Benjamin Cleary and Serena Armitage (WINNER)

Best foreign-language film

"Embrace of the Serpent," Colombia

"Mustang," France

"Son of Saul," Hungary (WINNER)

"Theeb," Jordan

"A War," Denmark


Best original song
"Earned It" from "Fifty Shades of Grey"

Music and lyric by Abel Tesfaye, Ahmad Balshe, Jason Daheala Quenneville and Stephan Moccio

"Manta Ray" from "Racing Extinction"

Music by J. Ralph and lyric by Antony Hegarty

"Simple Song #3" from "Youth"

Music and lyric by David Lang

"Til It Happens To You" from "The Hunting Ground"

Music and lyric by Diane Warren and Lady Gaga

"Writing's on the Wall" from "Spectre" WINNER

Music and lyric by Jimmy Napes and Sam Smith


Best original score
"Bridge of Spies," Thomas Newman

"Carol," Carter Burwell

"The Hateful Eight," Ennio Morricone WINNER

"Sicario," Jóhann Jóhannsson

"Star Wars: The Force Awakens," John Williams

Congrats to All!




#BLACKSTARPOWER! Idris Elba & ‘Beasts Of No Nation’ Co-Star Abraham Attah are BIG WINNERS at The 2016 Spirit Awards
While the Oscars decided to turn a blind eye, Idris Elba is still racking up awards for his role in the hit Netflix film Beasts Of No Nation.
Major congrats are in order after the 43-year-old actor won the Best Supporting Actor Award at the Film Independent Spirit Awards held at the Four Seasons Hotel. He brought his Beasts co-star Abraham Attah on stage with him to accept the award, presented by actress Patricia Arquette.
And by the way Idris wasn't the only Beasts Of No Nation actor to win an award....
15-year-old Ghanaian actor Abraham Attah nabbed his own award! He won the Best Actor Award for his role in Beasts Of No Nation. And get this, this was his very first movie.

Congrats to both of them!




Beyoncé Goes Natural & Colorful For ‘Garage Magazine’
Clean and simple, Beyoncé is here with her first magazine feature of the year, in the new issue of Garage Magazine.
Showcasing her natural skin, sans make-up, Bey rocks tight blonde cornrows, like in the video for “Formation,” with just small hoop earrings in the first look shot from the magazine spread.
Her face is surrounded by red, orange and yellow brushstrokes, painted by renowned artist Urs Fischer, who according to the mag, delivered a sharp collection of portraits with the global superstar. The feature story also includes some exclusive words from Bey, who has refrained from doing interviews recently.

Check out two more preview shots below.
CUTE!



Have they come to the END OF THE ROAD? Nicki Minaj & Meek Mill Are Reportedly in Couples Trouble!
Uh Oh? There are reports that Nicki Minaj and Meek Mill are at each other’s throats and fighting non-stop. Is this the beginning of the end? Find out inside….

Looks like there is trouble in paradise for Nicki Minaj and Meek Mill. TMZ reports the twosome has been fighting non-stop, but their latest argument took things to a whole new level.
Since Meek is stuck in Philly on house arrest (for a minimum of 90 days), the MMG rapper asked the Young Money raptress to move in with him while he serves his time. But, Nicki wasn’t keen on the idea.
The “Anaconda” raptress allegedly said she’s not putting her life on hold due to his legal woes and is reportedly in L.A. In fact, she has been in L.A. for the last week and it’s unclear when (or if) she’s going to return to Philly. Welp.

The last time we saw Nicki and Meek out in public together was last month at a Sixers game in Philly. We’ve noticed both of them have seemingly slowed down posting up coupledom shots on their social media accounts. Hmph.

WOMP!



Oh? Oprah Blamed For Weight Watchers Stock Crash?
Is Oprah Winfrey to blame for Weight Watchers recent stock results?
According to multiple reports, the brand was expecting impressive results after she endorsed the popular weight loss program.

Last year, Winfrey and Weight Watchers partnered selling the former daytime talk show queen with a 10% stake for $43.2 million. She also joined the company’s board of directors, became a spokesmodel for the brand, and went on its diet.
Winfrey enlisted her BFF CBS morning anchor Gayle King on the diet.
Initially, the strategy worked, with the company’s stock soaring from $6.79 per share in October to $26.61 a month later.
Reportedly, on Thursday, the company reported a suprise 21% drop in fourth-quarter revenue, which sent its shares tumbling more than 28%, down to $11.25 a share.
That cost Winfrey $27 million on paper, though the share price is still above what she bought them for originally.

Some argue that if Winfrey still had her talk show, which ended it’s run in 2011, her stamp on Weight Watchers may be much different.



Meryl Streep defends ‘we’re all African’ comments: Inclusion ‘is important to me’
Wait for it! As we all know by now, Meryl Streep, African, declared her allegiance to the mother continent in Berlin. Meryl was appointed as president of this year’s Berlinale jury, and during the press conference for the jury, Meryl was asked some questions about the all-white jury and whether she, personally, would understand the viewpoints of artists and directors from Africa and the Middle East. At first, Meryl’s answers to those questions came off as offensively dismissive, as we thought she just huffed, “We’re all Africans, really.” The AP issued a correction/clarification a week later – go here to read. There was some added context in Meryl’s answer, and while I still think she could have come up with a better answer, with the clarification Meryl did not sound AS bad and dismissive.

So, instead of dealing with this controversy in real time during the Berlinale, Meryl waited until the festival was over to write an essay about how she’s totally not a blithe, oblivious African woman dismissive of calls for increased diversity. And she’s totally not racist because she gave an award to a Tunisian!!! Here’s African Meryl Streep’s HuffPo essay:

Something wonderful happened at the Berlin Film Festival this past weekend, something about which American audiences may be unaware or indifferent. In Fire At Sea, which won the top prize, Gianfranco Rosi takes a hard look at the overloaded boats filled with despairing, half-dead immigrants from Africa who land on the tiny Italian island of Lampedusa en route to Europe. Those who are not drowned at sea encounter the overwhelmed and dedicated people of the island, whose simple actions are evidence of the best in human nature, where one part of the human family helps another.

The Silver Bear for Best First Film went to a Tunisian, Mohamed Ben Attia, whose film Heditells the story of a diffident but dutiful second son, who runs away from a proscribed future into the complicated present. Set in this Islamic North African nation so recently tested by bombings of its museum and tourist sites, it brings the big issues of irreconcilable differences tenderly down to a human level. Another Silver Bear went to the 8.5 hour A Lullaby to the Sorrowful Mystery, Lav Diaz’s saga of the Philippine people’s journey to independence from their colonial past, and the Cinematography Award went to Crosscurrent, a brilliant, elegiac film from China, directed by Yang Chao.

The lede was buried in the story of the Berlin festival, the largest in the world. These stories of people from China, Somalia, Mali, Sudan, and Tunisia — testaments to the impact, importance and diversity of global cinema — have been smothered in the U.S. by the volume of attention given to five words of mine at an opening press conference, which is too bad.

The German director of the Berlin festival convened his jury, of which I was president, and this one consisted of Polish, Italian, French, British, German and American people. As with any artistic jury, even as president, I had no input into who would serve with me.

Contrary to distorted reporting, no one at that press conference addressed a question to me about the racial makeup of the jury. I did not “defend” the “all-white jury,” nor would I, if I had been asked to do so. Inclusion — of races, genders, ethnicities and religions — is important to me, as I stated at the outset of the press conference.

In a longwinded answer to a different question asked of me by an Egyptian reporter concerning the film from Tunisia, Arab/African culture, and my familiarity with Arab films specifically, I said I had seen and loved Theeb, and Timbuktu, but admitted, “I don’t know very much about, honestly, the Middle East, …and yet I’ve played a lot of different people from a lot of different cultures. And the thing I notice is that we’re all — I mean there is a core of humanity that travels right through every culture, and after all, we’re all from Africa originally, you know? We’re all Berliners, we’re all Africans, really.”

I was not minimizing difference, but emphasizing the invisible connection empathy enables, a thing so central to the fact of being human, and what art can do: convey another person’s experience. To be in Berlin is to see proof that walls don’t work.

I do defend all the choices the jury made. This is work we took very seriously. I hope the press will shower Yang Chao, Lav Diaz, Mohamed Ben Attia, Gianfranco Rosi and the other artists we honored with as much energetic attention as that directed at my misconstrued remarks. Their work is newsworthy, and deserves celebration. It reflects a diversity of place, race, viewpoint and humanity that should not be invisible in America.

[From HuffPo]

It sounds like the awards were given to racially, ethnically and religiously diverse filmmakers, so good for the (all-white) jury. But even with Meryl restating her original comment, there’s still something sticking in my craw. Like, I get that Meryl wasn’t asked specifically about the all-white jury – something she genuinely did not choose – but there was an implicit racial aspect in the journalist’s question, about whether a white American woman would be able to empathize with the stories being told in Arab and African films. And of course there was a simple answer: of course Meryl would be able to empathize and understand, because the human experience is universal. But Meryl heard the racial implication in the question, which is why she went to “we’re all Africans, really,” which will always be a boneheaded deflection away from a legitimate conversation about diversity. Which is why she’s still Meryl Streep, African.



ESSENCE Black Women In Hollywood 2016 Photos: Oprah, Kelly Rowland, Tina Lawson, Tracee Ellis Ross, Zendaya & More
ESSENCE’s 9th Annual Black Women in Hollywood event was held at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel, Thursday evening.
The star-studded event brought out some of the hottest celebs to celebrate, as the evening’s host, Oprah, says “the magic of our sisterhood.”
Guests in attendance included Kelly Rowland, Tina Lawson, Tracee Ellis Ross, Zendaya, Tika Sumpter, La La Anthony, Chris Rock, Keke Palmer, Evelyn Lozada, and many more.

The show aired on OWN, on Saturday.
ESSENCE has host of photos, clips and moments from the event. Catch a few candids from the evening here, and head over to the Essence.com, for more. 
My Black is always BEAUTIFUL!



IN THE POLITICS FIX! Hillary Clinton wins South Carolina primary!
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton came another step closer on Saturday to securing the Democratic nomination to run for the White House by winning the South Carolina Democratic primary.
Major media outlets declared Clinton the winner in the State over her rival Bernard Sanders apparently based on exit polling results shortly after polls closed in the state at 7 pm.
Clinton’s win in the state was expected. For weeks, Clinton enjoyed a significant lead in polls among Democrats in the state. According to Real Clear Politics, the average lead for Clinton over Sanders in South Carolina was greater than 28 points.
But the actual win was even bigger. With 99 percent of precincts reporting, Clinton won 73.5 percent of the vote in the South Carolina primary, followed by Sanders with 26 percent, making for a whopping 47.5 percent margin of victory.

In her victory speech in Columbia, S.C., Clinton said South Carolina voters sent a message that “in America when we stand together there is no barrier too big to break” and made an allusion to the upcoming contests in 12 states on Super Tuesday.
“I know it sometimes seems a little odd for someone running for president these days and at this time to say we need more love and kindness in America,” Clinton said. “But I’m telling you from the bottom of my heart, we do, we do. We have so much to look forward to. There’s no doubt in my mind that America’s best years can be ahead of us. We have got to believe that, we’ve got to work for that, we have to stand with each other, we have to hold each other up, lift each other up, move together into the future that we will make.”

According to exit polls, Clinton owes her victory in South Carolina to the support she enjoys in the black community. NBC News reported exit polls show Clinton lost among white voters, 42-58, but won among black voters by a tremendous, 84-16 margin.
Early exit polls, according to NBC, revealed about 61 percent of voters in the South Carolina primary identified as black, but only about 35 percent said they were white. That percentage of black voters is greater than it was in the South Carolina primary in 2008, when 55 percent of the voters were black and 43 percent were white.

Fifty-three delegates were up for grabs as a result of the South Carolina Democratic primary, which awards delegates in a combination winner-take-all and proportionate basis. The winner of the primary obtains 18 delegates; the remaining 35 are awarded proportionally based on voting in the state’s seven congressional districts.
South Carolina has additional six superdelegates for a total of 59 delegate. Of the six superdelegates, four are committed to Clinton and two are undecided.
The Republicans had their primary in South Carolina last week. Donald Trump had a strong finish, taking a plurality of 32.5 percent of the vote, the entire 50 delegates in the state and booting former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush from the Republican primary.
The next contest in the presidential primary for both Democrats and Republicans is Super Tuesday, when voters in 12 states will either caucus or go to the polls. The results of Super Tuesday should provide clarity on who’ll receive the nomination of the major political parties in a tumultuous race.



RACIAL ANIMUS! 3 People Stabbed After KKK Rally in Anaheim Turns Violent
Police said three people were stabbed, and 12 were arrested, in separate incidents at a Ku Klux Klan gathering that turned violent in Anaheim on Saturday.
Police were still searching for one man believed to be involved in the melee late Saturday.
The stabbings broke out about 11 a.m. near the site of an planned afternoon rally at Pearson Park located in the 400 block of North Harbor Boulevard, according to Sgt. Daron Wyatt with the Anaheim Police Department.
Police had said Friday that the department was aware of a KKK "walking protest" planned at the park for 1:30 p.m. Saturday, and that the group had held similar rallies before in Orange County. "APD will be monitoring the situation for any violations of law," the department said on its Facebook page.
The attacks began when a group of Klansman pulled up in a vehicle near the corner of Cypress Street and Harbor Boulevard where a group of counter protesters had gathered, Wyatt said.
A Klansman stabbed a counter-protester in the chest with an eagle figure at the end of the flag, according to Wyatt. The protester was transported to a local hospital in critical condition.
Counter-protesters stomped on Klan members, injuring them, Wyatt said.
Police said six Klan members and seven counter protesters were arrested following the brawl.
Ultimately, seven were booked, four were released and one detained was a juvenile.
Firefighters also treated another protester who suffered a minor stab wound.
Tyler Matias-Lopez, 16, was in the park with his family watching as the violence ensued.
"There was one guy that got kicked in the face. But there was around 10 people that just started hitting the guy," Matias-Lopez said.
According to the Anaheim police Facebook post, the KKK rallies typicaly involve literature being passed out – a process that is protected under the First Amendment.
"It is not uncommon for these groups to place their literature in yards and driveways in the surrounding area prior to or immediately following their gathering. This dissemination of literature is not illegal," the post says

UGH!




AND FINALLY FROM THE CRAZY PEOPLE SHOPPING AT WALMART FILES
‘LOOKIN’ LIKE A CENSOR BAR’
You look like a rodeo calf tied up too tight. Just kinda there, all confused, fat popping out the sides. Not good.



HAVE A GREAT WEEK AHEAD EVERYBODY!!!
EFREM

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