I agree that "emotional kidnapping and psychological rape" are three exits past rational, but what were the school administrators thinking, showing an R-rated movie (any R-rated movie) to 9th graders, without parental consent? An R-rating stands for something like "Restricted" and I think the age tag associated with it is 17 years old. Ninth graders are typically 13 and 14 years old, and maybe 15, in some cases. I'd be pissed if the school showed my ninth graders an R-rated film without my consent.
Wash ,'Our Mrs. Reynolds'
Natter 46: The FIGHTIN' 46
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
coffee roll
I can't imagine suing, however. I'm far too lazy.
Ooh - I found a better one:
The title Modern Coelacanth has a 41.4% chance of being a bestselling title!
The only way I can break the 10.2% curse is to make them titlefight:
The title Super Karate Monkey Death Car has a 69.0% chance of being a bestselling title!
The title Lick My Love Pump has a 44.2% chance of being a bestselling title!
Super Karate Monkey Death Car WINS!
One summer when I was a kid in day camp, it was raining on a day when we were supposed to do something outside, so they took us to the movies at the last minute. To see Kramer vs. Kramer. I'm pretty sure no one sued, but there were plenty of pissed off parents.
The title Valley of the Dolls has a 26.3% chance of being a bestselling title!
The title Super Karate Monkey Death Car has a 69.0% chance of being a bestselling title!
The title Lick My Love Pump has a 44.2% chance of being a bestselling title!
That last one really should have had the 69% result.
The title The Bible, King James Version has a 10.2% chance of being a bestselling title!
And I bitch about our developers: [link]
Download and construct your own coelacanth out of paper: [link]