Wednesday, January 27, 2016

as a point of fact we need to blame it on a variable of dynamite

Much of the world is wondering

“So where and when did the great American vaginal tragedy truly begin.”

It begins with the media of course! Now I can talk about NBC, ABC, CBS, public television, and any other number of other media outlets and sources.

But basically we're going to have to start juggling dynamite for you to understand the bigger problem and tragedy associated with the American vaginal situation.

I always say, start with the easiest things first, then go to the more difficult, it's easy if you just think about it.

Now world the first thing I do is go to the media and then gravitate to the badges.

Here we need to concern ourselves with female badges and then you can see the downfall of the great American vagina although it still does have a lot of curbside appeal.

Then I can go into some artwork, the party completed day or we can do something else.
Now much of the world might not have access to this so I'm going to help you along.

At first it's just going to be me reporting the news and then, unfortunately I'm going to have to start adding footnotes because I'm clearly taking far too much liberty along someone else's able hands.

I know that doesn't read right because my mouth didn't say it right because my mouth has problems specifically when I speak.

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The great American vaginal tragedy begins in the state of Georgia with a very special group of evil people who like to be associated with explosive dynamics.

“Gone With the Wind” had its premiere held in Atlanta, Georgia – Turner's hometown and the headquarters for the Demise Of The American Vagina Group. [ DOTAVG ]






The Closer

The thoroughly innocent man Roger Stimple:

“You don't understand. If they put me back in general population, they'll beat me. They'll beat me.”

The psychotic female Police Chief Brenda Leigh Johnson:

“No, Roger, I do understand. What I'm tryin' to tell you is - I don't care!”

And as if that was not enough [ DOTAVG ] didn't stop there:





Rizzoli and Isles

Or as Harmon put it more succinctly to the LAT, “I hate to disappoint, but these characters are straight. If we lose viewers because of it — sorry!”
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Harmon began acting in 1995 after being discovered on a plane by David Hasselhoff.[4] She then starred in several television series, including Baywatch Nights, Baywatch and C-16: FBI. She also appeared in the 1998 film, Lawn Dogs, which received only a limited theatrical release. In the late 1990s, Harmon became better known by joining the long-running NBC series Law & Order, playing ADA Abbie Carmichael from 1998 to 2001. During this time, she also voiced Barbara Gordon in the animated film Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker, succeeding Stockard Channing in that role.

Harmon left Law & Order to concentrate on her film career, saying that she preferred working in film to television.[5] After appearing in the 2001 direct-to-video film Good Advice, she had a supporting role in Agent Cody Banks (2003), playing the CIA handler of a teenage agent (Frankie Muniz).[6] In 2006, Harmon co-starred with Cuba Gooding Jr. and James Woods in the direct-to-DVD political suspense drama End Game.

In 2006, Harmon starred as the lead in the ABC pilot Secrets of a Small Town,

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of ethnic Serb descent, was born Suzana S. Drobnjaković (Serbian: Сузана Дробњаковић0 in Los Angeles, California. She began acting in school productions in the seventh grade. She also was an ice skater, but stopped due to a knee injury. She continued acting through high school and college, then moved to New York to act in summer stock and Shakespeare festivals. She graduated from the University of Southern California's School of Cinema-Television, where she was a member of the sorority Kappa Alpha Theta.

Career

Alexander got her acting start on two short-lived series: the medical drama Presidio Med and ABC's twenty-something drama Wasteland. She achieved widespread media attention and critical praise when she appeared in the fourth season of Dawson's Creek as Gretchen Witter, the sister of Pacey Witter, and dated the title character. Alexander was also in an episode of the short-lived Fox comedy series Greg the Bunny, in which she played the role of a lesbian TV Guide reporter and shared an onscreen kiss with Sarah Silverman.

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copycat was John Stark (Brendan McCarthy), a soldier who met Hoyt in medical school, had his identity erased for CIA black operations, and mimicked Hoyt's MO in a killing spree during said operations. Meanwhile, Hoyt escapes from prison and rejoins his apprentice to continue in his killing. Later Rizzoli's home is broken into, and she is told by someone posing as part of BPD that her neighbor had been killed; she rushes into the van to see the body but finds Hoyt instead. Hoyt and his apprentice knock Rizzoli out and kidnap her. 

When she wakes up they attempt to kill her, but she manages to disarm them by tasing them and burning Hoyt's eye with a flare. In self-defense, she shoots the apprentice to death, and when Hoyt reaches for Rizzoli's gun she shoots him through the hands, giving him injuries similar to the ones he gave her.

New twists are introduced when Rizzoli and Isles discover that a recent murder victim is actually Isles's previously unknown half-brother, resulting in her discovery that her father is notorious criminal Patrick Doyle.

Hoyt returns 18 months later through another apprentice, Lola, in "I'm Your Boogie Man". 

Having murdered Lola's abusive husband two years earlier, Hoyt uses her Stockholm syndrome to]

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