Thursday, 27 September 2012

12.20-
Katyia
27 September 2012 11:57AM

i notice she's doing head dresses to hide her face recently - - - 


Yet the social media-powered blitz connected to this week's drop of Lady Gaga's third album, "Born This Way," is bordering on epic, with partnerships ranging from Starbucks to FarmVille, and virtual giveaways of the album's 17 tracks. It also represents the kind of bold, new business model that could help rejuvenate a deflated music industry

um not when she's so sensitive about copyright - - -

Starbucks ? typically home to easy-on-the-ears artists like Emmylou Harris

eh? 

is selling her album as well as launching a "digital scavenger hunt" for Gaga-inspired goods; Google Chrome debuted a commercial with Gaga with a track from the album; the online fashion outlet Gilt Groupe partnered with Gaga to offer Gaga-inspired clothing and VIP performances
ha ha so the scandinavian version was a flop then - - - a bit two dimensional perhaps
- - - no Gaga really is para about copyright honest - - -
and you just don't know what is behind that - - - 

LADY GAGA DISSES NICKI ON THE SNEAK?
I was under the impression that these two were friends, sisters in the struggle of life. But, no. It appears that Lady Gaga has finally turned into a basic b. She slick dissed Nicki Minaj on her site littlemonsters.com for wearing an outfit that closely resembled an outfit that she wore in the past. Now Gaga really didn?t say a lot to a vid that called out Nicki. She simply said: ?I?m have no comment tbh, hahahhahahahha?.
But in true online gang fashion, the Barbz went on the attack until the video was taken down. These chicks are cult leaders

http://allhiphop.com/2012/09/11/hip-hop-rumors-chris-and-rihanna-are-back-lady-gaga-calls-out-nicki-minaj/
actually Gaga was doing that kind of cringe style before Minaj although Minaj does it with more class and sophistication ?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j5TWzZNcMwQ
and look at those girls - - - thats hot like Alexandra Burke those girls are a much better screw for having bit of meat on them - - - 

"Just with the diminishing music labels, you want to find quality partners where you know you can reach new audiences and being able to push boundaries as well."

I see why this is a sub article - - - Gaga is very protective of her boundaries - - - 

"There's nothing about Gaga that's subtle, so I don't see why her marketing campaign would be any different," he added.
I don't know I mean tap tap revenge at least will teach people to try out different rhythms - - - 

"I am more concerned about piracy and people stealing the music. If you can get somebody to experience the music at that sort of price for one day only, I think it gets a lot of attention for the album," he added
there you see the copyright issues are always brought up in Gaga articles - - -
the idea of applying the monster idea to children is cool - - - Gaga is very original and not just a clone of another artist - - - well as far as I know that is - - - does not spend all day as a barnacle on someone else boat - - -\

Katyia
27 September 2012 1:07PM

too right BadDog its ok for people to say things like mong and spaz
here but not to cal the spaz haters a pleb what the hell is this ?

pleb
one who's inferior intelligence results in them making a complete titface out of themselves in public
one who has had their brain replaced with a mall cucumber whilst visiting the doctor fora routine check up
also used as the verb 
plebbed, or to pleb
"jonny francis is a right pleb," cried cristina
"don't tell me that billy has fucking plebed it up again!"
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=pleb

Kawtara1
27 September 2012 1:15PM
Did anyone see this piecehttp://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/opinion/2012/0925/1224324359767.html
by Fintan O'Toole (Irish Times) telling of an Irish Gulag system which witnessed a state imprison hundreds of thousands of it's own citizens - a horrific history which has not yet been addressed
This story is one of those in which the plain facts seem like hysterical exaggerations, making reality incredible. Breathtaking numbers of citizens were kidnapped, confined and enslaved with the active collusion of the State. Ireland operated a huge, highly organised system of unlawful imprisonment into which hundreds of thousands of people disappeared, sometimes for good. Shamefully, the State is still refusing to face this fact.
In a very important recent book, Coercive Confinement in Ireland, Eoin O’Sullivan and Ian O’Donnell have brought together documents and statistics that begin to map the system. By “coercive confinement” they are not talking about what that term would mean in a normal society – people being sent to prison by the courts because they have been found guilty of breaking the law. For most of the history of the State, the lawful prison system was dwarfed by the shadow system of confinement, made up largely of industrial schools, Magdalene homes and mental hospitals.
These institutions were much worse than prisons. Prisoners had finite sentences, adequate food, protection against assault, and the right to appeal to the courts against abuses. The shadow system offered no such luxuries. It was much closer to what might be expected under a totalitarian regime – arbitrary, closed and not subject to law. I don’t think the vast majority of Irish people have any idea of how enormous the system was.
At any given time between 1926 and 1951, there were about 31,000 people in these institutions. That’s 1 per cent of the entire population. If the system were a town, it would now be the fourth largest in Ireland – a shade smaller than Bray but much bigger than Navan, Ennis, Kilkenny or Tralee. Even in 1971, when the system had shrunk to 20,000 people, it was as large as Athlone or Mullingar are now.
One part of the system – the industrial schools – has been acknowledged by the State, with a formal apology, the Ryan report, and a compensation scheme. The children’s rights amendment to the Constitution, though it also has practical significance, is in part a symbolic response to the crimes against children.
But with the other two main parts of the system – the mental hospitals and the Magdalene homes – the State is, in one case, entirely ignoring the problem and in the other engaging in deliberate obfuscation.




thegreatfatsby
27 September 2012 1:58PM
The Tory fairy cries when you mention plebgate.

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