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"Don't be Intimidated by Fear. Keep Marching Forward." REMEMBERING FARRAH


"She really was someone who could look fear in the face and conquer it...When all of us reflect on our own lives, the emotion which controls us so greatly is fear.  I think that was Farrah's message to us in the way she conducted her own journey, is:

"Be as fearless as you can be.  Don't be intimidated by fear.  Keep marching forward.  Do what you think is right.  Fight for what you want to fight for, whether you are losing the battle or not."  (emphasis mine)

--Dr. Lawrence Piro, President, Angeles Clinic and Research Institute, personal physician to Farrah, in an interview with Barbara Walters for ABC.

 

When I remember Farrah Fawcett, I don't think of her dazzling smile or the famous poster in the red bathing suit.  I don't even think of her tabloid personal life--her romantic tumult, her drug-addicted son--I think of her talent, and her guts, and I'm not just talking about the three years she spent battling incurable cancer.

In order to truly understand Farrah's courage, you have to take her life in context of growing up in the 50's and coming of age in the '60's and '70's, especially if you were a pretty girl from the South. 

Pretty girls coming of age in those days were taught to be pleasers.  They were taught to always smile, no matter what, to defer to men in every way, to mask their own intelligence if it meant that other people (read, men) would be threatened by that, and that the only ambition suitable for the time was to find a good husband to take care of you, settle down, and care for him and your houseful of children for the rest of your life. 

If, like Farrah, you were truly beautiful, you were supposed to parlay that beauty into the position it afforded: choice.  By that I mean, you were supposed to choose the man with the most earning potential, the most political power, the most POTENTIAL.  (He, in turn, was to be commended for winning the hand of the prettiest girl in the room.)

You weren't supposed to have any potential of your own, beyond being pretty and pleasing for him.

After a beautiful girl got married, she was supposed to "represent" her husband by how she conducted herself, how she helped propel his career, how she kept her home and raised her children.  If she did everything right, that meant a fine home in the best neighborhood, kids who qualified for the best schools, and so on.

Even when she gave birth, she was not identified in the paper by her own name, but by her husband's.  In fact, for her entire life, her identity was supposed to be a reflection of her husband's, and later, her children's.

It wasn't just pretty girls from the South who rebelled against this corset of an existence.

(Full disclosure: My despairing mother enrolled me in "Charm School" when I was 12, in hopes I would learn how to do things like walk straight with a book on my head, sit properly like a "lady," with my hands lying passively in my lap and my ankles crossed demurely, and deal with any disaster with a smile.  So, in the class, I kept up a steady stream of sarcastic wisecracks which, ultimately, got me kicked out, much to my mom's chagrin.) 

Anyway, as everyone knows, Boomer women rebelled big-time in the '60's and 70's, but it took a couple of decades for their battles to make the kinds of changes that people who were born in the '70's now take for granted.

So, at the time, American culture was still dominated by male-centric themes.  (In that respect, it still is in many ways.  Check out the latest blockbuster movies and see how many have female leads, or females in any serious capacity beyond being The Girlfriend or The Tortured Victim Awaiting Rescue.)

No one could capitalize on the male-dominated themes better than Aaron Spelling, and when he created "Charlie's Angels" and cast three hot, incredibly sexy unknowns in the lead roles, he created a phenomenon that comes along once a decade, if that.

Those of us who were budding feminists enjoyed the program simply because it showed women being brave and intrepid and solving the crime and dodging danger and saving victims--even if they did it in bikinis.  Our husbands and boyfriends enjoyed it for the obvious reasons.

And nobody was a bigger hit than Farrah.  She was a terrible actress at that time, but there was something about her, a quality that went beyond sexiness to seduce us all.  Part of it was the dazzling smile, of course, but it was more than that.  She was fun.  She was playful.  She didn't take the part seriously because she knew nobody else did, so in a way, she was winking and nudging her audience as if to say, "It's okay.  I get the joke, too."

We all fell in love--by the bazillions--so when, after only one season on the program, she suddenly quit the show, it caused a cultural tsunami that makes Jon and Kate's divorce seem like child's play.

You have to understand how hard that was for her.  Aaron Spelling was the most powerful man in Hollywood at the time and had limitless legal options to destroy her, which is what he tried to do.  She was still under contract, and there were suits and countersuits that would tie up much of her time and most of her fortune for years.

Not only that, but because she'd signed a contract with the program for several years, then she was not permitted to work in the business for years after that.  Not just because of the obvious reasons, but because Spelling was so powerful that nobody really wanted to cross him.

Farrah Fawcett's decision to leave Charlies Angels was part of a multi-pronged effort to reinvent herself and rechannel her career.  She also fired her agent and her manager, and left her husband, Lee Majors, who was himself a huge TV star at the time.

She could see that if she had stayed with the TV show season after season, she would be branded as the T-and-A girl, the ingenue, the sexpot lead.  And she knew how short the careers are for girls who base their careers on that, and that alone.

That was not what Farrah wanted.  She wanted to be taken seriously as an actor, and she knew that the longer she stayed entangled in the Spelling spiderweb, the less chance she'd have to achieve that goal.

During her time out of the limelight, she studied acting, and she read, and she painted and sculpted, and she tried to get people to see past the hair and the teeth.

In an interview with Barbara Walters in 1980, her famous hair was straight, as if she'd just gotten out of bed and run a brush through it.  She said that her looks were sometimes "a curse," which I'm sure most viewers took as arrogance but was in fact, raw honesty.

When Hollywood failed to give her any leeway, she left for New York, where she got the lead of a small play off-Broadway called "Extremities," which is about a rape victim who, several years later, encounters her rapist--who does not remember her at all--when he shows up at her home in an official capacity as some kind of repairman.  (Been a while since I've seen it.)

She turns the tables on him by using his short memory against him, luring him into a trap she sets for him in which she keeps him imprisoned and proceeds to torture him in revenge.

For the part, Farrah cut off her famous hair in a short shoulder-bob, and delivered the performance of her life; it was searing, raw, almost too painful to watch, and so powerful that it landed her the lead in the TV movie based on the play.

That role relaunched her career and garnered her an Emmy nomination--the first of three. 

After that, she played her most memorable part as a wife who is so horrifically abused by her husband that she sets fire to him in bed.  Based on a true story, in which the woman was not convicted for the crime because the jury was so horrified by the details of her abuse at her husband's hands, changed public discourse on the battered wife and put Farrah on the map as a talent to be reckoned with.

Her next Emmy nomination came for playing the lead role in Ann Rule's "Small Sacrifices," about a woman who killed her three children (actually one survived, but barely), because her boyfriend didn't like kids.

These roles were gritty and tough, and for the better part of a decade, Fawcett held our attention in one TV-movie after another, proving herself time and again, but unfortunately, that's not what interested the tabloids.

Yes, I would like to have seen Farrah be as forceful and tough in her personal life as she was in her career.  She got involved with more than one man who turned out to be abusive.  All I can say is, it takes a long time to throw off that pleaser-trait that's been so closely bred into you throughout your childhood and adolescence, especially where men are concerned.

She did eventually kick them all out, living on her own for years until her longtime-love, Ryan O'Neal was himself diagnosed with lieukemia eight years ago and then her own devastating illness, after which he never left her side.

As Farrah aged, the scripts that were offered her were fewer and further between, (a fate typical of most actresses), leaving her in a virtual career-desert throughout most of her 40's, so in typical Farrah fashion, she threw it all back in their faces by posting for Playboy magazine at 48 and again at 50--the bestselling covers the magazine ever had.

You have to understand something here.  Before Farrah, beautiful actresses did not take parts where they chopped off their trademark hair and allowed the camera to show them ravaged.  It just was not done.

Years later, when Charleze Theron gained weight and butched her way to an Oscar by playing serial killer Aileen Wuornos in Monster, she had Farrah Fawcett to thank for giving her the courage to do it.

And see, before Farrah, women in their late 40's and early 50's wouldn't have been caught DEAD in Playboy magaine or anywhere else that displayed their bodies.

It just was not done.

But Farrah did it.  She lived her life on her own terms--mistakes and all.

The David Letterman show was a disastrous mistake.  Ryan O'Neal, her lover of 30 years, insists that Farrah was not drunk or stoned or on any kind of prescription drugs when she made the appearance as a spaced-out aging beauty queen who could barely hold a thought. 

She told him, he says, that she thought it would be funny.  It was--but at her expense.

A few more years passed, but Farrah refused to go to the elephant burial grounds of all aging ingenues.

She produced, directed, and starred in a show for the Playboy network in which she painted giant murals with her own nude body, covered in paint, while O'Neal sat nearby and watched.

It was outrageous; it was bodacious; it was glorious.

Until that special, most people did not even realize that Farrah Fawcett was a gifted artist in her own right, a sculpter of sweeping sensuality and delicate beauty.

She just kept fighting, you see, long after all the others had given up.

When Fawcett was diagnosed in 2006, at the age of 59, with a very rare form of cancer, she did something that might have struck so many as unexpected but really wasn't if you'd been paying attention to more than just the smile and the body: she picked up a handheld video camera and took it along with her to chemotherapy and doctor's visits, eventually enlisting friends to help.

They told her she was going to die but she was so sure that she could beat it that she thought, this way, she could demystify so much that terrifies the rest of us about cancer, maybe help fellow sufferers by giving them courage and heart for their own battles.

When her magnificent hair began falling out in huge gobs, she filmed it.

When chemo made her vomit, the camera did not turn away and neither did she.

When her hair was gone for good, she showed off her brave bald head and kept on fighting.

And when the doctors told her that the tumors had spread and spread and that, even though she'd been feeling so much better, she was not, in fact, going to beat it, she cried and did not ask the cameras to quit filming.

This was Farrah, the REAL Farrah, the Farrah who'd been there all along for anyone to see who'd been looking beyond the red bathing suit.

(The resulting documentary special, Farrah's Story, is going to be re-aired on NBC tonight, I believe.  You'll have to channel-check because it won't be on any TV guide schedules.) 

Farrah Fawcett was, arguably in her prime, the most beautiful woman in the world.  But her beauty went far beyond the smile and the hair and the body.  It went soul-deep.  She was funny and fiesty and brave and talented and gentle.  She loved her family and friends with ferocity and passion, taking time even in her dying days to hand-write letters of love to each of them in her graceful, flowing script.

We can learn so much more from Farrah than how to fix our hair.

As her grieving doctor so eloquently put it, we can learn to fight for what we want to fight for, whether we are winning the battle or not.

Good night, sweet beautiful Farrah.

And thank you.


24 Comments

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Thanks Deanie.

She really was someone.

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Did you know that the song "Midnight Train to Georgia" was inspired by Farrah? The songs writer, Jim Weatherly, was a friend of Lee Majors, both were football stars. Jim called to speak to Lee but Farrah answered the phone. She told Jim that she was going home to Houston - evidently she and Lee were again arguing. She said she was taking the midnight plane to Houston. Jim heard a song and immediately wrote it in 45 minutes. Gladys Knight fell in love with the song, and was given permission to change it slightly to Midnight Train to Georgia. Absolutely true story. I heard this story first hand from Jim Weatherly.

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Oh Faroff, thank you sooo much for sharing that! I did not know that at all, and I LOVE that song. I'll listen to it now in a whole new way. Thank you for sharing that!

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Deannie, This was especially meaningful to me today. I just found out last night that my son wants to join the Army. There are many good reasons for him to do this, and I understand why he feels it is what he needs to do, but I am terrified. I just don't want him to be blown up or shot. I can't stand this feeling, and I have to get myself put together before I see him/

Any advice?

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Oh CVille Dem, God bless you dear; my heart goes out to you.

Let me ease your mind in several ways. For one thing, only "line companies" actually see real combat, and they represent maybe 30% of the armed forces. Line companies make up units like Infantry and Artillery.

For every one soldier who goes into harm's way, there are TEN who work in support capacity. In Iraq, for example, there are enormous bases with things like Burger King and swimming pools, which are staffed with tens of thousands of soldiers who never see "outside the wire."

These troops do things like maintenance on vehicles and work on headquarters staff and repair helicopters and man communications centers and process Intelligence that comes in from the field.

So just because your son joins the Army it does not necessarily mean that he will be shot at or blown up.

Joining the Army offers so much for young people that many people do not realize. It is a sense of belonging to an organization that you believe in and working for a cause that is greater than yourself. It is comraderies and friendships.

But more than that, men and women in the armed forces see themselves tested in ways that civilians will never know--even just going through Basic Training. When a man or woman is pushed to his or her limits--and excells--it gives them a confidence and self-assurance that no one else can know.

And if they do deploy, no matter which company they belong to, then in life, when they encounter stresses, they will think, "Hell, this is nothing compared to Iraq" (or whatever).

There are also Army bases all over the world that are staffed in places like Germany and Kosovo and even Alaska. He could wind up there.

Still, the fear that you describe? Honey, that is absolutely normal, and I'm afraid you just have to learn to live with it. YOu have to "pretend" a lot, with your military child. The way I looked at it when Dustin was deployed was that I had to be at least as brave as he was.

But you don't have to do it alone. It's a tight little group, we military moms, and we hold each other together when one or the other of us loses it.

YOu can e-mail me, dear, at deaniemills@yahoo.com, and we can talk further. I'll even give you my phone number.

In the meantime, just take a big breath, and wait and see. But it is hard, no doubt about it. Like I said, tho, I know a number of military moms whose kids have been in the service for several years and have not yet deployed to war.

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Deannie, what a generous and reassuring response! I went out this morning to visit the recruitment center here in town and when I got to where it said it was, it wasn't there! I called the number and they were closed. On a Saturday! I began to think all kinds of nefarious things and my imagination was carrying me away. I went right to Mr Mac and fired him up, hoping you might have seen what I wrote and responded.

You really make me feel so much better; and as I told my ex-husband last night when he broke this news (preceded by, "Jan, take a breath"), I kind of always knew this would be Lucas's direction. From the time he would defend little guys on the playground when he was 4 years old against bullies far bigger than himself. Then he got into paintball; his favorite movies are all war movies, and his favorite tv watching is the History Channel. Did I mention that he is a born leader?

Thank you so much for offering your email to me. I won't abuse it; I'll probably just send you a test to get it into my browser. I plan to print out yours and Stilli's kind words and keep them with me through this.

Again, thanks so much. I'll let you know how things go.

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CVille, you e-mail me any time. I'll consider it an honor.

As far as your "nefarious" fears, let me reassure you that this is very common among military parents who have no background in the military. Every little thing just frightens them to death.

For instance, if their child is deployed and they don't hear from them, they worry themselves sick thinking that something terrible must have happened, he must be injured or sick or dead. But the Army will notify you ASAP if anything happens. I have one friend who got a call from the Family Readiness Officer when her son was deployed--he was calling to tell her that her son had injured his FINGER and had gotten some medical attention and was fine.

But as soon as she heard, "This is so-and-so, the FRO..." she screamed and dropped the phone! She thought he was calling her to say her son was dead!

(FYI, they don't tell you that kind of news over the phone; always in person.)

I know civilian moms who are practically on anti-anxiety drugs just during boot camp!

I know one who said she had the Drill Sergeant's e-mail, and she'd e-mailed him and "He was so nice."

(FYI, for God's sake, don't e-mail the Drill Sergeant during Boot Camp!!! Your kid will do a million push-ups!!!)

Might I recommend something that will sound silly, but you might find it very helpful. Go to Netflix and rent the first season of ARMY WIVES. You will learn a great deal about military life in that way. And they deal honestly with all kinds of issues that you might not expect.

I'm not surprised that your son is a born leader. So many who are called to military service do so for a reason. Our son was the same way.

Be proud. You did good, MOm.

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Jan...My husband is retired law enforcement, my daughter followed in his footsteps and my son was in the Army and is now trying to get into the Air Force reserves. The only way I survived knowing that every time I said goodbye I might never see them again, was to adopt the philosophy that when it is your time, it's your time, regardless of whether you are killed in the line of duty, or slip and fall in the shower. At least if they were to die, they would do so doing something they loved. (I put that in the past tense because my husband is now retired, but my daughter is active duty and my son may be, as well.)

I have the ability to compartmentalize things in my brain. It allows me to put things I can't deal with in a box that I keep closed as much as possible, opening it only when I need to, then closing it again so I can function on a day to day basis...

My son hated leaving the military. He did it because his wife wanted him to. If she said he could, he'd go back in a heart beat, even with the world the way it is now, and a new baby.

My heart goes out to you...but you are strong, Jan. You WILL get through it. Let me know if I can help.

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Good advice, as always, Stilli, to CVille Dem. I wish I had your ability to compartmentalize. My husband and my daughter have that gift, and on scary days during Dustin's deployments, my husband would bury himself in his work or would play computer Solitaire for hours.

I couldn't do it. Dustin and me, we think globally, as does my sister-in-law whose Marine son did three deployments. We obsess and brood and feel every emotion in every moment.

So we coped by becoming activists. My sister-in-law went the USO, Care Package, airport-greeting, a billion yellow ribbons on her car route, and has done an unbelievable amount of things for the troops, even tho her own son, like mine, is out of the service now.

Because I opposed the war in Iraq, I used what talents I had to bring that war to an end, with my son's full support. For me, writing was like excising an infected wound. I'd start to go crazy and put up a post and read comments from other military families who felt the way I did, and it would ease the terror and pain.

I would also do Yoga as often as possible, sometimes out back under the stars at night, and I would cry and pray to the stars for my boy, and get through a long night in that way.

Also, for me, the military moms I "met" through my blogposts were an amazing source of support. We all remain friends to this day, exchanging phone numbers and encouraging each other to visit one day.

So it's important to figure out how best each of us copes, and to work within that framework. For you, that was even more important than most. I spent many years working closely with law enforcement officers, and most people have no idea what a different world they inhabit than the rest of us, how stressful it can be, and how hard it is to say good-bye every day.

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Deannie, I hope my comment and its subsequent replies don't threaten to derail your beautiful and thoughtful blog about Farrah Fawcet. It told me so much about her that I never knew before, and it was so personal...did you know her? Were you always interested in her? You did a wonderful job of humanizing an icon of beauty, who I never realized was such a role model.

Thanks for that, and everything else.

Jan

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Didn't derail it at all, and so what if it did? Doesn't bother me.

I didn't know Farrah, but she was a Texas girl, so I was curious. It was after I saw her in "Extremeties" that my admiration for her just soared. After that, I watched everything she did.

I love gutsy broads.

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(hugs to C'Ville)

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Stilli, Thanks so much for such a meaningful, and reassuring response. So glad all yours are fine, and that they did what they wanted to do (and well). I am already better, thanks to you and Deannie. I'm having dinner with the boys tomorrow night, and I'll wait to see if he tells me then. He did ask me once some time ago how I would feel if he did this; I did what I knew was the right thing -- I told him that I respected all he had done to get to the point of considering it, and that if it was what he wanted I would support him. Then I asked him to make me a promise: Not to sign anything after visiting a recruiter until he talked to his dad and me -- just to let us all talk it through. He did. Then I tried to convince him to join the Coast Guard instead -- tee hee! Didn't work!

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When our son told us he was enlisting, we just asked him to pick an MOS that would give him training to help him get a good job when he got out...so what did he do? Sign up for the 82nd airborne...never did figure out what jobs there are that require you to jump out of perfectly good airplanes...These kids do what they want to do! But I'll tell you, this military experience can be a good one. He has turned out to be a wonderful young man (who was headed nowhere fast before he went in) and we are so proud of him.

My e-mail address is on my bio page...please feel free to write if you ever you need a shoulder. I don't have all the answers, but I do have broad, soft, shoulders.

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Thanks, Stilli - I'll be in touch for sure, I appreciate your generous offer. Jan

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Deanie this was so well written and humanizing I had to recommend it. In many ways Farrah became a regular citizen instead of a propped up celebrity, and the popular fondness for her that you explore sees the best in people who saw her not just for her external appeal. It presupposes that large numbers of people will recognize and prefer internal appeal, qualities that make us souls. What this says about our purpose as human beings is a huge theme drawn from an individual eulogy like this one.

I also appreciate that factoid from Faroff about Midnight Train to Georgia. Totally unknown to me.

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I am not in the habit of "following" actors. The fact that you are gifted at pretending to be someone you are not has never been a trait I felt deserving of "pedestal" status, particularly when many of them eventually go off the deep end. Your look at Farrah, the woman, the trail blazer, puts her life in a light that DOES elevate her to "pedestal" standing in my mind. Thank you for such a thoughtful look at her life.

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Well, Stilli, my daughter became an actor, which was the last thing any of us ever dreamed when she was a shy little country girl in braces and glasses.

And then we saw her in her first serious play, and it gave us chills.

Since then, we've watched her work herself half to death getting a degree in Theater ARts, then studying for a year in London, then living on her own and working her heart out in New York holding two jobs and doing off-off Broadway plays and taking classes. Her exhaustion caught up to her and she contrated tuberculosis. She nearly died and had to spend a year recuperating here at home.

Then she packed up everything she could into her little Yaris and took off for L.A., where she's been for two years, moving slowly into film.

And thru the years, watching her and her bright and beautiful friends, I've reached a whole new appreciation for what it really costs and just how hard it is to excell in this heartbreaking and very difficult business.

In a way, it took my daughter as much courage to leave her loving family and take off for the unknown of New York as it did my son to deploy. Starting all over again in L.A. was just as gutsy.

It may not seem like much of a craft on the surface of things, but I do know that I would not have made it thru those deployments if I could not have "lost" myself in DVD's and movies. A couple of hours free of that anxiety, while laughing or crying or sitting on the edge of my seat was my therapy.

So, it can be an honorable thing to do, in its way, if you do it with integrity and courage, and we can learn something from actors on how to pursue an impossible dream.

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One of the things I so appreciate about being here at TPM is the ability to learn so much about the world through the eyes of those you have come to respect. I have a whole new perspective on many things, and now I add another!

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I know what you mean, Stilli, and I'm still trying to come up with my things-I-love list, since my B-Day is tomorrow. One problem: all I can think is, "Rainbows and roses and whiskers on kittens...These are a few of my fav-or-rite things..." ;-D

Re: Acting. I think many people get the stupid world of celebrity confused with the world of actors seriously trying to do their work. It's easy to do.

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I've been trying to keep it simpler. I just want to have one thing I'm looking forward to; it can even be having coffee with a friend in a day or two. I had gotten to the point where I wasn't able to do that, and even acknowledging that I am looking forward to something gives me a positive thing to focus on.

Happy Birthday ( a day ahead) - hope it is wonderful!

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I want to see that list!

re: actors...I do have an appreciation for the talent that goes into making us "believe" a role, it's the stature of "celebrities" and some people's need to follow every little thing they do, and buy every little thing they have, and watch as they squander their "riches" that makes me crazy.

I hope your daughter is able to have a wonderful, successful career without having to deal w/ the "crap" that comes with "celebrity."

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Why is this thread (with 17 recommends) off of the list when there are those that have 1 recommend and no comments at all?

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It's a vast left-wing conspiracy against me ha ha.

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Deanie Mills

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