To: hellinahandcart
I, too, feel sorry for Rosie O'Donnell. I think she is a tragic figure: desperately unhappy, incapable of keeping any thought or experience private. I pity her for the heartache she'll experience when her adopted children realize they could have been adopted by semi-normal people. I know she brings most of the criticism on herself, yet I feel sorry for her because she is too dopey to just keep her mouth shut. I predict her "girlfriend" will leave her eventually, perhaps for a man. Rosie's future isn't rosy.
16 posted on
11/14/2003 4:43:54 AM PST by
utahagen
To: utahagen
I've seen those eyes before. Once was on a co-worker who was two days into a migraine, the other was a friend who had just checked herself into a psychiatric facility for depression.
I don't wish that kind of pain onto even people I heartily dislike.
To: utahagen
I predict her "girlfriend" will leave her eventually, perhaps for a man
She is Degenerizing before our eyes. It's the same scenario. THey both got so big they thought people would be forced to approve of them and their nasty little habits. Big surprise to find out that the general public has the final decision. I DO have to thank Ellen for driving the delightful Anne Heche back into our camp.
'Rosie" was always something of a freak show. I mean, come on, who didn't know she was a lesbian? Not only was she obviously a dyke, she also looked very much like a big fat bully, so the "queen of nice" label was a joke as well.
There is a certain interest in watching something be something that it's not. Like a dancing bear or a trained tiger... there is drama in watching and wondering if or when it will return to form.
23 posted on
11/14/2003 5:17:30 AM PST by
johnb838
(Majority Rule, Minority Rights. Not the other way around.)
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