Tweedle Suicide in Wake ‘N’ Bake
- INTO: Oil paints, sex, kitty cats, sharing food with friends, cuddles, fresh ground coffee and fresh fruit smoothies, Disney, geeking out, unbearably hot summer days where your clothes stick to your skin, obsessing, tweezing my eyebrows, spicy food, learning, girls who love John Wayne, daydreaming, passion, snuggly warm blankets, giving, hugging trees, feeling everything to its fullest degree, living and loving life and those that are in it with me, and cuts, holes and ink in my skin.
- NOT INTO: Littering, factory farms and fast food chains, corporate America as a whole, fruit flies, ragweed and allergies, growing up, country music, big crowds, materialism, plastic shopping bags, when jelly gets in my peanut butter, bad drivers, meat, animal cruelty, being underestimated, being coddled and/or belittled, (most) television, modern civilization, pharmaceuticals, being told to “chill,” “calm down,” or “relax”, doing the dishes, snow, pregnancy, trying to walk in high heels, Shrek, big crowds, running out of toilet paper, celery, Denzel Washington, fainting, forgetting things, mornings.
- MAKES ME HAPPY: Art, Smokey, loving, giving, pursuing my dreams.
- MAKES ME SAD: Animal cruelty of any sort.
- HOBBIES: Painting, drawing, cooking/uncooking, running, playing with animals!
- 5 THINGS I CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT: Food, water, a dwelling, my health (both mental and physical), self-love.
- VICES: Having my skin stabbed, cut, bitten, burned, etc.
- I SPEND MOST OF MY FREE TIME: Lost in my own head.
Get to know Tweedle better over at SuicideGirls.com!
by Blogbot
Agonizing Love is a beautifully put together compendium of strips culled from the lost genre of romance comics. According to the volume’s curator and author, Michael Barson, an avid fan of retro-pop culture and a collector of all manner of flotsam and jetsam from days past, the first examples of the form were published in 1947. At the genre’s height, there were close to 150 different romance comics in print, with titles such as Lovelorn, Romantic Marriage, Lovers’ Lane, Bride’s Secrets, Boy Meets Girl, Heart Throbs, and Love Confessions. However, as the romance of the 1950s gave way to the pervasive climate of free love in the ’60s and ’70s, their popularity waned. The end of an era came with the final 126th edition of Young Love in 1977.
Last week we posted a typical strip from Young Love, entitled “How To Increase Your Dateability,” which offered female readers – who were ever fearful of being left on the shelf – tips on how to up their popularity quotient in order to increase their chances of finding a mate. This week, we have a simple 12 question personality test from issue #2 of Boy Meets Girl (originally published in April 1950), which will tell you if you’re likely to be a bride or – horror of horrors – an old maid.
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by Jay Hathaway
“People love heroes. Nerd heroes.”
– MC Frontalot
MC Frontalot first coined the phrase nerdcore hip-hop in the late ’90s to describe tracks laid down over homemade beats, featuring lyrics about everything from Star Wars to Nigerian e-mail scams. This year, hes been on tour with a full band in support of his second full-length album, Secrets from the Future. While on the road, he was the subject of a documentary film, also entitled Nerdcore Rising.
SG had the chance to talk with MC Frontalot about the life of a professional rapper and the growing buzz around nerdcore hip-hop.
Read our exclusive interview with MC Frontalot on SuicideGirls.com.
Rainbow Suicide in Sunspots
- INTO: Green tea, chai tea, any other type of tea you could throw my way, music, hugs, Wicca, pain, cuddling, bright colors, boys, looking at girls, System of a Down, rainbows, getting bitten and biting, the gorgon Medusa, Mohawks, men with tattoos and piercings, Chuck Taylor’s, five hour daily talks with Adam, the uncanny valley, Crispy’s recaps and translations, the taste of envelope glue, back rubs, wearing jeans with no undies, lollypops, bluntness, sleeping naked, AIM, exclamation marks!!!, bubblegum and claw machines, going to see live shows, Johnny’s restaurant, surprises, my Viagra pens, getting things in the mail, musicals, toast with peanut butter and marshmallow fluff, candles and incense, fan artsies, children, Pee-wee Herman, video games, snakes and other scaly things, nudity, photographs/photography, Tourette’s syndrome, hair pulling, math and programming, wrestling in high school, correct grammar and punctuation, playing tennis, being obnoxious, and tacky jewelry.
- NOT INTO: Tommy the green Power Ranger, ignorant people, diets, fat people who wear clothes that are too small, complainers, women’s attitudes today, makeup, girly girls, being bladder shy, the sound of sex, bad Chinese food, feet, jealousy, waking up before noon, apple sauce, people who play the sympathy card, kids having kids, headaches, rap and country music, bright lights, soda, impatient IMers, people who can’t sing but think they can, crazy stalker people, mustard, paper cuts, poorly done tattoos, and your mom.
- MAKES ME HAPPY: Rainbows, Columbus, Vinton County, Rusty reading to me, musicals, my itty bitty group of friends, watching people break bones, homo milk, Tsutar’s art, sleeping naked, my Xbox LIVE friends, the sound of scissors cutting construction paper, sitting at home and cuddling up with someone, watching local shows, my bed, sunshine, sunshine on my bed, Artemidoris being in Columbus with me, Rubik’s Cubes, my Chuck collection, my Rebel, my life!!!
- MAKES ME SAD: Chillicothe, bad music, bright lights, annoying sounds, trees being marked for cutting, assholes on Xbox LIVE, losing my puppy dog, snow and ice, winter, septum ring infections, my big bed being so big and empty.
- HOBBIES: Downloading DOS games, wasting time, singing obnoxiously, buying things off the internet, drawing, solving Rubik’s Cubes, wasting more time.
- 5 THINGS I CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT: Music, love, tea, ganja and video games. :]
- VICES: Junk food and the monthly soda beverage I consume. Oh and possibly venti, iced, skinny, caramel Macchiatos from Starbucks.
- I SPEND MOST OF MY FREE TIME: Playing ’round on the web, doin’ art, dancing around in my undies, pwnin’ newbies on CoD, making various arts and crafts, playing around with my canine and feline pals, watching TV, and various other things.
Get to know Rainbow better over at SuicideGirls.com!
by SG’s Team Agony feat. Friskey and Setsuka
Let us answer life’s questions – because great advice is even better when it comes from SuicideGirls.
[Friskey in Dragon Lady]
Q: I dated this guy a little for over a year. We broke up about two months ago because we fought a lot. Well, actually, he broke up with me and turned sort of bitter towards me. Then he all of a sudden said he missed me and loved me and wanted me back, but about a week later he said he didn’t love me anymore. I really have no idea what his problem was. It’s been about two months since then and we’ve started talking, and even went on a couple of dates. I have no idea what’s going to happen, but I’m kind of scared. I don’t want to be hurt again, but I want to be with him. What do I tell him? What should I do? I’m so confused. I need advice please?!
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by Bob Suicide
It’s official: NBC told Wonder Woman to grab her redesigned hooker boots and take the walk of shame off their network. But what does that mean for comic-based television programming as a whole, as well as the more niche super heroine-led titles?
The realistic answer: not much.
With the level of backlash this show has received at every turn, from both die-hard fans as well as general network audiences, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that the Wonder Woman re-boot didn’t last long. The real surprise is how many people don’t seem to remember how poorly the original show did. It was only on for three seasons, and the first performed so badly that they had to completely re-vamp the entire premise, moving it from the ’40s to the ’70s. So from the outset, a big-budget reboot of a mediocre show from the ’70s didn’t seem like the best idea. And yet, everyone seemed to take the news that Wonder Woman was cut before she even had a chance to take flight with great confusion: “Woaaaa? Where are we to find our strong female heroine now?” they bemoaned.
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