Doing Hair.Being me.Painting.John Waters movies.Chillin.CottonCandy.Clubs.Carnival Rides.Cupcakes with Sprinkles.loitering.Photography.Dorking out to teenybopper Pop.Parties.Concerts.Pretty days Outside.Pale Skin.Playing pranks on people.Gettin' crunk with it.Big furry coats.Blood and Gore.Presents.Butterflies&Lightning Bugs.Getting packages in the mail.Computer Geek's.Playing dress up every day.Makeup.Heals.My Hair.Massages.Ebay.Sick Humor.Going to the Movies.Full Moons.Rraves.Hair Shows.Giggle attacks.Strippers.Dreadfalls.Spraypainting.Makeing clothes.The internet.False eyelashes.Meeting new people.The mall.The beach at night.Standng on top of sky scrapers.
Spineless sugar liped Bitches.Cheaters.Lliars.Backstabbers.People who do nothing but complain.Bllshitters.People who are two faced & Most people in general.Pro-lifers.Drunk Drivers.When people judge you solely based upon appearance.Talking on the phone.Snide, Sarcastic remarks.People that assume things about me when they don't even know me.Animal Abusers.Body Hair.Bad Hygiene.WHEN PEOPLE COPY ME.Bible thumpers and people who get all up in my face about religion.Littering.When people i don't know come up and grab me or touch me.People who try to intentionally piss me off.Shittalkers.Homophobes.Closemindedness.Dumbasses.
trance
hardhouse
happy hardcore
deathmetal
blackmetal
experimental
hardcore
dark wave
glam
punk
rap
electro
80's
industrial
goth
Joe StrummerAs frontman and main songwriter of the Clash, Joe Strummer created some of the fieriest, most vital punk rock of all time. Strummer expanded punk's musical palette with his fondness for reggae and early rock & roll, and his signature style lent an impassioned urgency to the political sloganeering that filled some of his best songs. Since the Clash disbanded in 1986, Strummer has sporadically pursued film acting and released the occasional solo album, though seemingly only when it suits him. Joe Strummer was born John Graham Mellor on August 21, 1952, when his father, a diplomat, was stationed in Ankara, Turkey. During his time at London boarding schools, the teenage Strummer immersed himself in rock and reggae, and began busking on the streets under his newly adopted stage name. In 1974, he formed the pub rock group the 101'ers, and though they rocked pretty hard, they couldn't quite match the raw fire Strummer discovered when he saw Johnny Rotten and the Sex Pistols. Strummer promptly quit pub rock to join the fledgling punk movement, and co-founded the Clash in 1976; the rest was history. Six albums, many more singles and EPs, and one frequently brilliant body of work later, the Clash broke up amidst rancorous infighting and uncertainty of direction. Strummer contributed two songs to the soundtrack of Alex Cox's Sid and Nancy, a 1986 chronicle of the doomed Sex Pistols bassist; the two hit it off so well that Strummer acted in Cox's next two films, Walker (which Strummer also scored) and the bizarre Western Straight to Hell. His relaxed, natural screen presence earned him further work with directors Robert Frank (1987's Candy Mountain) and Jim Jarmusch (1989's acclaimed Mystery Train); Strummer also wrote five songs for the soundtrack of 1988's Permanent Record. In 1989, Strummer released his first solo album, Earthquake Weather, which blended straight-up rock & roll with touches of world music. However, following a temporary stint filling in for Shane MacGowan in the Pogues (both as rhythm guitarist and in-concert lead vocalist), Strummer largely fell silent after the very early '90s. The first peep of a return to the music scene occurred in 1996, when Strummer appeared on the Black Grape single "England's Irie." The following year, Strummer scored the John Cusack hitman comedy Grosse Pointe Blank, which relied heavily on new wave and British ska revival for its song selections. In 1999, Strummer released his second solo album, Rock Art and the X-Ray Style, which largely forsook straight-ahead rock & roll in favor of eclectic, rhythmic, world music flavored compositions, plus elaborate singer/songwriter-ish lyrics.
Strummer further refined this new direction with the follow-up, 2001's Global A-Go-Go. In December 2002, he was in the midst of recording his fourth solo album when he died suddenly of a heart attack at his home in Somerset.
Emma GoldmanEmma Goldman, undoubtedly one of the most notable and influential women in modern American history, consistently promoted a wide range of controversial movements and principles, including anarchism, equality and independence for women, freedom of thought and expression, radical education, sexual freedom and birth control, and union organization and the eight-hour day. Goldman's advocacy of these causes, which many deemed subversive at the time, helped set the historical context for some of today's most important political and social debates. Goldman's role in securing the right to freedom of speech in America is especially significant. She herself was frequently harassed or arrested when lecturing--if her talks were not banned outright. She worked with the first Free Speech League, which insisted that all Americans have a basic right to express their ideas, no matter how radical or controversial those ideas might seem. Directly out of this work came the founding of the American Civil Liberties Union, setting in motion the beginnings of the modern free speech movement in the United States. Goldman's impassioned advocacy of politically unpopular ideas and causes like free love, anarchism, and atheism earned her the title "Red Emma" and led many of the powerful to fear and hate her. Attorney General Caffey wrote in 1917, "Emma Goldman is a woman of great ability and of personal magnetism, and her persuasive powers make her an exceedingly dangerous woman." But others stressed Goldman's role as an educator, one who in nationwide lecture tours spread modern ideas and practices to a young and provincial country. One newspaper editor described her as "8,000 years ahead of her time." Now, over fifty years after her death, Emma Goldman's commitment to freedom and equality, her political courage and personal resilience, continue to inspire the public--and stir up controversy.