Profil de CAkEz~*CuTiE_PiE's LoOkIn' Cu...PhotosBlogListes Outils Aide

Blog


3 novembre

Come check me out on MySpace at http://www.myspace.com/cutiepiesallyours

GO FUCKEN CHECK OUR MY MUTHA FUCKEN MYSPACE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! PLEASE!!!!!!!!!!
 
Come check me out on MySpace at http://www.myspace.com/cutiepiesallyours
Come check me out on MySpace at http://www.myspace.com/cutiepiesallyours
Come check me out on MySpace at http://www.myspace.com/cutiepiesallyours
Come check me out on MySpace at http://www.myspace.com/cutiepiesallyours
Come check me out on MySpace at http://www.myspace.com/cutiepiesallyours
Come check me out on MySpace at http://www.myspace.com/cutiepiesallyours
Come check me out on MySpace at http://www.myspace.com/cutiepiesallyours
Come check me out on MySpace at http://www.myspace.com/cutiepiesallyours
Come check me out on MySpace at http://www.myspace.com/cutiepiesallyours
Come check me out on MySpace at http://www.myspace.com/cutiepiesallyours
Come check me out on MySpace at http://www.myspace.com/cutiepiesallyours
 
YEAH! C'MON DONT BE FUCKED UP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
6 octobre

visit my space!!!!!!!!

 GO CHECK IT OUT AT MYSPACE.COM
 
I HAVE A WEBSITE THERE TO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
25 août

hotti gottis

well i think that the gottis are hot!!! i love frankie!!! john hes cute, but carmine is ugly to me. well nothin' else to say!!!!!!!!!!!!
19 août

PLEASE! ANY GUY OR GIRL THAT WANNA TALK!!!!!! HIT ME UP!!!

OOOOOOOOHHHHHHHHH!!!!!! PLEASE SOME BODY HIT BE UP. IF YOU WANNA CHAT JUSY POST ME A COMMENT AND ASK ME FOR MY EMAIL. OKAY BECAUSE I AM BORED AND I WANNA MEET NEW PEOPLE.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! BYEzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
 
18 août

~SOMETIMES IM ASHAMED!~

DAMN! SOMETIMES IM ASHAMED OF BEING MEXICAN. WELL IM HALF MEXICAN AND FROM PUERTO RICO. ANYWAYS YEAH! LIKE AFTER WHAT HAPPEN. 3 MEXICANS KILLING MY FRIEND. I WAS ASHAMED. ALL BLACK PEOPLE WERE JUST STARING AT ME AND OTHER MEXICANS ALL WEIRD, BUT NOT SOME OF THEM BECAUSE THEY ARE MY FIRENDS. WELL YEAH. THEN THIS BLACK GIRL COMES UP TO ME AND STARTS TALKING SHIT AND STARTS TELLING ME "ALL YOU MEXICANS SHOULD GO BACK TO MEXICO WERE YOU BELONG." THEN I WAS LIKE YOU KNOW JUST BECAUSE WERE CALLED MEXICANS DOESNT MEAN THAT ALL OF US  ARE MEXICANS. AND THATS TRUE. IM MEXICAN BECAUSE MY DAD WAS BORN IN MEXICO. AND WELL MY MOM IS MEXICAN TOO BUT SHES ALSO PUERTORICAN. I WAS BORN HERE!!!!!!!!!!!!!! WELL ANYWAYS. THEN MORE PEOPLE WERE TALKING SHIT. I WAS LIKE YOU KNOW ALL OF YOU ARE JUST TALKING SHIT BECAUSE YOUR MAD AND SAD ALL BECAUSE SOME MEXICANS KILLED DOMINIC. I WAS MAD AND SAD TOO. I FELT SO ASHAMED. BUT WHAT CAN I DO. THIS IS HOW GOD MADE ME AND IM GONNA LIVE LIKE THIS TILL I DIE. WELL WHAT MORE CAN I SAY.
JJUST POST A COMMENT IF YOU WANT.
17 août

WWWHHHHHHAAAAAATTTTTTT!***I WAS SHOCKED!!!***

Slaying shakes Inland school

11:09 PM PDT on Thursday, May 12, 2005

By PAIGE AUSTIN, JERRY SOIFER and DOUGLAS E. BEEMAN / The Press-Enterprise

The stabbing death of a promising Corona Centennial High School football player stunned classmates and school officials Thursday and raised concerns about the potential for racial conflict at a school with a recent history of problems.

Dominic Redd was a fun-loving 15-year-old student who was quick with a hug and "friendly with everyone," classmates said.

But about 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, the teenager was chased down and fatally stabbed by three Hispanic youths at an apartment complex in Corona, according to the Corona Police Department. He died two hours later at Riverside Community Hospital.

 

Corona police said they don't know what prompted the attack and have no evidence to indicate whether the killing was racially motivated or had any connection to Centennial High School.

Still, a dozen or more uniformed Corona officers and campus security attendants arrived Thursday to walk hallways and to patrol the Rimpau Avenue campus. School officials said the added security will remain today.

"It assures parents the campus is safe. This is a preventive effort," said Thomas Pike, the Corona-Norco Unified School District's assistant superintendent of student services.

Shock, Disbelief and Tears

Word of Dominic's death spread quickly.

"Half of the students knew about it (the stabbing) last night, and half of the students learned about it this morning. Some are in shock, some are in disbelief, some are in tears," said Matt Logan, Centennial High's varsity football coach.

On campus, nurses, psychologists and counselors were deployed to talk to tearful students, who gathered in the school's gym and later in small counseling groups.

"They're sad," said Robert Garcia, a Corona-Norco school psychologist. "He was a good kid with friends of all different backgrounds. They're asking why this happened and trying to make sense of it."

Counselors are expected to remain on campus today and Monday, school officials said.

Dominic played on the freshman football team for the regular season, but he was elevated to the varsity team for the playoffs. Centennial won the CIF Division 5 title in December.

 

An only child, Dominic loved to talk and joke around, had tons of friends and wanted to become a pro football player despite being 5 feet 3 inches tall, his close friends on the varsity football team said Thursday.

"That's the last person you'd think this would happen to," said teammate Jerry Hardeman, 15. "He had no problems with anyone. He was friendly with everyone."

Attack in Condo Complex

Investigators have no idea who killed Dominic Redd or why and are seeking the public's help, said Corona police Sgt. Jerry Rodriguez.

According to police, Dominic tried to elude his pursuers by ducking into a unit in the Contadora condominium complex in the 1000 block of Margarita Drive. When he couldn't get in, Dominic ran further into the complex, where he was overtaken by his attackers, police said.

They stabbed him several times and then ran away, Rodriguez said.

A witness described the attackers as three short-haired 15- or 16-year-old Hispanic males who weighed about 150 pounds and ranged in height from 5 feet 7 inches to 6 feet 1 inch, Rodriguez said.

Police Presence at School

Police officers and private security officers patrolled the streets around Centennial High School and guarded every exit and corner of the campus Thursday.

The intense police presence at the school served two purposes, Rodriguez said. It allowed investigators to interview students who might have information about the killing, and it served to allay fears fueled by rumors that the killing stemmed from racial tension at the school.

 

"There are so many rumors, and we were there to make sure anything didn't get out of hand," he said.

"A 15-year-old kid was stabbed, and we want to be able to solve this," Rodriguez added. "Someone out there knows what happened, and we're encouraging them to call with information."

Centennial High School has had a recent history of racial strife. Last year, the school was locked down in March and a dozen students were arrested after a lunchtime brawl between black and Hispanic students.

On Thursday, several parents and students said racial tensions at the school have been heating up again in recent weeks with a fight between some black and Hispanic students in the campus quad. Rumors about racial violence have circulated, prompting some black students to stay home on Cinco de Mayo out of fear that they would be targeted by Hispanic gangs, said Mary Foster, whose 15-year-old nephews stayed home that day.

Sam Buenrostro, Centennial's principal, said some parents called the school to ask about rumors of a Cinco de Mayo fight, which he said did not materialize.

"We assured them we had heard no threats and understood they were nervous," Buenrostro said.

Marilyn Payne picked up her-14-year-old son, Jerrell Andrew, from school early Thursday. Like many classmates, he was upset over the killing of his friend.

"He just called me and said, 'Mom come and get me.' " Payne said.

"These kids are too young for this," she said. "It's hard enough for them just trying to deal with peer pressure without having to worry about who is waiting for them around the corner."

Jerrell said there had been rumors for several weeks that racial tensions were building.

 

"We've known for a couple weeks that someone was going to get jumped," he said. "I just didn't think that they would kill somebody."

Pike, the assistant superintendent, said he is aware that racial and gang problems are present in the community, but the Corona-Norco district works hard to keep those issues off campus.

"We haven't been perfect," Pike said. "We continue to work on campus safety, kids getting along."

Concerned parents will be able to express their views at an upcoming parents forum, Buenrostro said. The date of the meeting has yet to be set, he said.

Freshmen football coach Danny Shevitski said Dominic was a running back on the freshmen football team for most of the fall, rushing for more than 1,100 yards and gaining 300 yards as a receiver.

"He affected a lot of people's lives," Shevitski said. "He was a little guy, but he always kept other smaller guys positive. He was a great influence to his peers. He never talked down. If you told him to run because of discipline, he ran. He didn't question you."

Shawn Brennan, 15, recalled the deal he made with Dominic when they played together on the freshmen team. Brennan, the quarterback, gave Dominic the option of earning $1 or a Honey Bun for every touchdown he scored.

"He chose Honey Buns because he loved them," said Brennan. "He scored his first touchdown on a play called the Arizona so we changed the name to Honey Bun, and whenever we used that play, we would go, 'Honey Bun, Honey Bun on two.' "

'A Lot of Tension'

Dominic lived with his mother in an older central-Corona neighborhood of apartments, condominiums and single-story homes. Police said Thursday that they have no record of racial violence in the predominantly Hispanic neighborhood.

Centennial student Rachel Porties, 18, who joined a cluster of students grieving outside Dominic's home Thursday, said there is a sense of danger in the neighborhood where Dominic lived "probably because he's black. This neighborhood is all Mexican people. There's a lot of tension between black and Mexican people."

But race didn't matter to Dominic, said Deandre Garcia, 17, a Centennial senior. Garcia, grieving with four black classmates on the curb outside Dominic's home Thursday, recalled laughing with him during dodge-ball games and how, at a gathering of his friends in the school gym Thursday, there were students of every race and color.

"He didn't see anybody by their color, he saw them by their character," Garcia said. "That's how everybody should be and how you present yourself -- not by whatever color you are or what people put in your head, because in the end, we've got to take our character to heaven."

*DOMINIC'S VIGIL*

Vigil held for slain teen

REACTION: School and district officials are urged to address tensions at Centennial High.

11:41 PM PDT on Wednesday, May 18, 2005

By SONJA BJELLAND and LINDA LOU / The Press-Enterprise

CORONA - The sea of T-shirts made it clear: "In loving memory of Dominic Redd."

With flowers and candles in hand, more than 1,500 people walked in unity at sunset to pay their respects to the 15-year-old boy stabbed to death last week.

Officers have arrested two Hispanic youths in the killing of the black teenager. Police have continued searching for a third suspect and requested the district attorney's office to add gang affiliation and hate crime to the murder charge because of racially derogatory comments they say were made toward Dominic.

Dominic's death enraged members of the community, sending parents and students to address the Corona-Norco school board Tuesday night.

At Wednesday evening's vigil, a group walked about a mile beginning at the high school and ending in the condominium complex on Circle City Drive where Dominic was stabbed and had lived with his mother. Neighborhood residents stood outside their homes and watched the crowd pass.

"It's just important to know it's not going to be tolerated in the community, this violence," said Jackie Hamilton, who has homeschooled her son since a racially motivated fight last year at Centennial High School, where Dominic was a freshman.

In front of the family's home, pastors led the group in prayer and then to chanting "Peace." Waving the candles the group sang, "We shall overcome."

"My son has been a sacrifice," said Dominic's father, Jerome Redd. "Now it's time we move forward so he will not be forgotten."

Parents and students passionately urged the Corona-Norco school board Tuesday night to acknowledge racial tension at Centennial High and other schools in the district.

About 30 people spoke during about two hours of the public-speaking portion of the standing-room only meeting. Some parents and students accused Centennial school officials of turning a blind eye or downplaying racial tensions. A few students said they frequently hear racial slurs on campus without punishment for those who say them.

Sam Buenrostro, principal of Centennial, declined to comment. Assistant Superintendent Thomas Pike said the district is taking the concerns seriously and will follow-up. District officials and Corona-Norco high school principals will meet Friday to discuss ideas to fight prejudice, Pike said.

"The truth is that the job is never done when we're talking about racism and bias," he said. "We will do our part, but we need other players, too."

Centennial parent Trayci Nelson told the board members not to put their heads in the sand. The temporary extra security at Centennial last week was just a Band-Aid, she said.

Some parents also said they are scared to send their children to school and want to consider homeschooling. Speakers also suggested solutions including hiring more black employees in the district, working with faith-based organizations and holding ongoing community forums to discuss racial diversity.

Some parents also said racial tolerance and understanding begins at home and encouraged each other to be active in their children's lives.

The speakers' voices carried a clear message, said Bill Hedrick, school board president. He told them board members are extremely concerned by what they heard.

Later in the meeting, Hedrick said he was surprised by the amount of fear expressed at the meeting. Hedrick asked Superintendent Lee Pollard to find out what's really going on at Centennial.

D. REDD 4 LIFE!

Thousands mourn slain teenager

FUNERAL: An estimated 2,500 people gather in Corona to rememberthe life of Dominic Redd.

11:40 PM PDT on Thursday, May 19, 2005

By SONJA BJELLAND / The Press-Enterprise

CORONA - With his Centennial High teammates dressed in their black football jerseys and many of his friends wearing T-shirts with his football photo on the front, the community said goodbye to Dominic Redd.

More than 2,500 people gathered at Crossroads Christian Church in Corona Thursday morning to mourn 15-year-old Dominic, who was stabbed to death May 11.

While several hundred students exchanged hugs, friends, family and teachers signed a 50-foot-long strip of white paper.

 

"I will miss you," stated one note. "It will never be the same old fifth period without you."

Hours before the service, police arrested the last of three suspects in the homicide that outraged the community and Centennial High students because of its racial undertones.

A photo collection of his life showed Dominic from a grinning toddler in a Santa hat to a running back for the Huskies. As the first bars of Boyz II Men's "It's So Hard To Say Goodbye To Yesterday" began playing, many in the crowd began sobbing.

Faith Fellowship Bible Church Pastor Mark Williams began the procession of family and close friends through the auditorium while reading from the Bible.

"When the wicked, even mine enemies and my foes, came upon me to eat up my flesh, they stumbled and fell," he read from Psalms 27.

In front of what is believed to be the largest public funeral crowd in Corona's history, fellow Centennial High football players wept as they read Bible verses and remembered their friend.

Darian Webster played on the freshman team with Dominic. He recalled their conversations about what their first cars would be, where they would go to college and how many children they wanted to have.

"I look back and Dominic won't be able to experience these things," he said through tears. "And it hurts because it was over something that wasn't even called for."

Dominic's jersey, wrapped in satin, rested on floral arrangements near the casket. After the local group Higher Praise sang, football coach Danny Shevitski recalled the past season.

Dominic encouraged teammates when they struggled and would bring the team up after a tough loss, he said.

"I can guarantee you one thing, he's in heaven starting his own football team," Shevitski said. "He'll say, 'If I score a touchdown, you'd better bring me my cinnamon bun.' "

***BACK IN MAY!!!!!!***********

 

CORONA - The aftershocks from the stabbing death of Dominic Redd are still rippling through the schools and community.

The slaying of the 15-year-old Centennial High School student has become a talking point about race relations on campus, students at all four Corona-Norco high schools say. Other schools and students in the area have also used it as a springboard to discuss race relations.

Three Hispanic teenagers were arrested in connection with Dominic's killing. Corona police continue to investigate why the boy who had played football for Centennial High was killed, but racial undertones in the crime have spurred the community to seek answers and solutions.

 

"It's opened your eyes to look at what's going on," said Michelle Tipton, 17, of Norco High School. "It's sparked more talk about racism and tolerance."

A community forum is scheduled Wednesday at the Corona Evangelical Free Church. Representatives of various groups in the community, including churches, the school district, the police and city government, will attend.

Santiago High will hold a peace rally in Dominic's name to remind students about getting along, said Zandra Glover, a safety and violence counselor. Five students will sing "One Voice," by Barry Manilow, and others from the school's UNITY Task Force, a group that promotes diversity, will speak during lunch.

Students will be encouraged to hold hands and form a human chain at the rally, Glover said.

"Our No. 1 goal is to promote unity and remind them why we're here and color doesn't matter at Santiago," she said.

Other local high schools don't have formal events planned, but they may use Dominic's story later to promote respecting differences.

"We definitely view it as a springboard to open up discussion," said Santos Campos, principal of Norte Vista High School in the Alvord Unified School District in Riverside.

Dominic's death -- if it was racially motivated -- shows that schools and the community need to do more to talk about diversity, Campos said. Next year, he plans to organize more frequent unity forums for a cross-section of the school's population instead of one per semester, he said.

Ron Shecklen, principal of Jurupa Valley High School, said his campus has not used Dominic's death to talk to students about the need for racial tolerance, although it does discuss the issue in other ways. He said Jurupa Valley continually assesses the dynamics among students to determine whether racial tensions are present.

"We're always vigilant," he said. "We all look at what we've got here and hope we're not fooling ourselves."

Reactions to Dominic's death have been mostly impromptu in the Corona-Norco schools, chatter in the hallways and mentions of him in class, students say.

Dominic's name came up at Norco High's UNITY forum last week, said Danielle Quinn, 16.

"Someone mentioned his death and how it personified racism," Danielle said.

It led to a general discussion about stopping racial violence, she said. Students agreed it's important to be exposed to various people and to find out that we are more alike than different, Danielle said.

"It shouldn't have taken a death for this to occur," she said about the current focus on race relations.

At Corona High School, students are talking about Dominic's death and saying that people need to get along because life is too short to have hate in your heart, said Rebecca Spiegel, 17, a senior.

For her recent current-events assignment, she shared an article about Dominic's death. It turned into a discussion about respecting everyone despite differences, she said.

Students are being nicer to one another, and more are praying on campus, Rebecca said.

"It's been an eye-opening experience," Rebecca said. "It's affecting everybody."

dominic redd was a good friend!!!

 

CORONA - About 350 parents, students and residents gathered at a Corona church Wednesday evening to discuss problems and possible solutions to racial tensions in the area, sparked by the killing of a popular Centennial High student.

The May 11 killing of Dominic Redd, a stabbing that had racial undertones, sparked the public debate. Joey Alfredo Diaz, 15, Johnny Ray Aguirre and Edward Juan Cuellar, both 16, have been charged with murder and gang participation. Police said the three Hispanic youths chased Dominic, who was black, and made racially derogatory comments before stabbing him nine times.

Elected school and city officials as well as various community leaders and clergy gave statements and listened to comments and suggestions.

 

"We need to, as a community, do what we can to stop this," said John Zickefoose, UNITY president. "We will, absolutely will, make a difference."

Assistant Superintendent Thomas Pike said employees will punish students who use racial and ethnic epithets.

The district will also review the social studies curriculum to ensure teachers are showing what hate has historically done to society, Pike said. This will be coupled with studying each high school's security plan and the possibility of security cameras.

"A community issue like this is not something we can resolve by ourselves," Pike said.

Another workshop-style meeting will be held in about two weeks, Pike said.

Dominic's father, Jerome Redd, was one of many to address the community leaders. He recommended documenting and reporting concerns of racial tensions at the schools and also having the police work closely with schools to track gang members.

Police escorted Steven Espinosa out of the church after he refused to leave the microphone and requested that black parents ask their children if they have been harassing Hispanic students.

                 

***sexy & hot***

im sexy & hot!!... and im bored too!!!!!!! i am so bored like a bitch!!! i dont know what to do. i started working with my mom! yeah how fucked up is that! i get paid $50 everyday. thats okay. i guess! well anyways. yeah like i said post a comment. if you want.
                                                                alwayz,
                                                                  cutie pie xoxo
15 août

*~If YoU SeEn My SpAcE, PoSt A CoMmEnT~*

please add a comment!!!!!!!!!!!! even if you dont like my space!!!!!!
aaaaaaaaaaaddddddddddddddddddddddd aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
ccccccccccooooooooooommmmmmmmeeeeeennnnnnnttttttttt!!!

~PeOpLe PlEaSe! JuSt HiT Me Up!!!~

~please please please!!! hit me up i am so bored! talk to me! tell me whats up! just tell me anything! ill add you to my buddies if you want! please! whatever you tell me ill listen or ill talk to you or something, but dont be fucked uuuuuuuupppppppp!!!!!!!!!!~
12 août

WoW!!! it been a while!

well it been a while! yeah i really dont have time to be in my space. but here i am. it really been a sad year for me. my friend past away and this month ... well i did the stupidest thing ever. well ill tell you... but maybe its not a good idea. changin' subject. i gonna go to san diego 2morrow with my cuz. well anyways hit me up. love lots!!! <3
 
16 mai

R.I.P. DOMINIC REDD 1989-2005

TO MY HOMEBOY DOMINIC REDD. REST IN PEACE HONEYBUN! WEDNESDAY AT 4:30 PM MY HOMEBOY DOMINIC WAS CHASED DOWN BY 3 HISPANICS. HE WAS STABBED 9 TIMES. 2 HOURS LATER HE DIED AT THE HOSPITAL. HE WAS A LOVING AND CARING GUY. HE HAD NO PROBLEMS. HE DIDNT DISERVE THIS. HE WAS TO YOUNG TO DIE LIKE THIS. I LOVE YOU! YOU WILL BE MISSED DOMINIC!!!

 

R.I.P DOMINIC REDD                             REDD #4

 

 

 

30 mars

***GuEsS WhAt?***

WHAT UP EVERYBOBY! WELL GUESS WHAT? GUESS, GUESS!!!!!!!!! I'LL TELL YOU. WELL MY BIRTHDAY IS COMING UP. ON APRIL 13. (HELL YEAH) ANYWAYS, WELL LAST WEEK ON WEDNESDAY I WAS FEELING SICK. IT WAS LIKE 7 O'CLOCK AT NIGHT. AND MY SISTER COMES AND TELLS ME THAT THERE WAS SOMEBODY AT THE DOOR THAT WANTED TO SEE ME. SO I WENT TO SEE WHO IT WAS. WHEN I OPENED THE DOOR THERE WAS NO 1, BUT THERE WAS A FOLDER IN THE FLOOR THAT SAID, " IMPORTANT, TO MISS CINDY H." THATS ME. WELL I WAS FREAKED OUT!!! SO I OPENED IT AND THERE WAS LIKE 5 PIECES OF PAPER. I STARTED TO READ ONE. AND WHEN I FINISHED READING THEM I SCREAMED!!! HTERE WERE 5 TICKETS TO GO TO TEXAS TO SEE "SELENA VIVE." YEAH!! WELL LET ME GUESS MANY OF YOU DON'T KNOW WHO THE FUCK IM TALKING ABOUT! OFCOURSE FOR ALL YA' MEXICAN YOU P'PLE KNOW EXACLY WHAT IM TALKING ABOUT. AND GUESS WHO IS GOING TO BE THERE! THE "KUMBIA KINGS" AND A WHOLE A LOT OF FUCKEN FAMOUS P'PLE. WELL ANYWAYS YEAH. MAYBE SOME OF YOU P'PLE THAT ARE READING THIS ARE LIKE THINKING OR SAYING "WHAT THE FUCK IS THIS BITCH TALKING ABOUT?" WELL JUST IGNORE ME. IM TALKING TO MY MEXICAN HOMIEBOYS AND HOMEGIRLS. AIGHT. OH! AND MAYBE SOME AMERICANS. SELELNA WAS THE BOMB! SHE STILL LIVES IN OUR HEARTS. SHE WAS MY IDOL. WELL LET ME TELL YOU. SELENA WAS A MEXICAN SINGER. SHE PAST AWAY LIKE 10 YEARS AGO. THIS BITCH ASS UGLY LADY THAT WORK WITH HER AND WAS HER BEST FRIEND SHOT HER. SELENA WAS LIKE MAYBE IN HER EARLY 20'S. HE WAS LIKE 3 OR 4 MONTH PREGNANT. THAT'S WHAT P'PLE SAY. SO YEAH. AND IF YOU WHAT TO KNOW MORE ASK ME IF YOU DARE!!! ANYWAYS BACK TO MY STORY. SO IM GOING TO TEXAS THIS SPRING BREAK!!! IS THAT FUCKEN COOL OR WHAT? WELL THATS ALL.

21 mars

*I PaRtY TiL I DrOp!!!*

WWWWWWWWWWOOOOOOOOOOOOWWWWWWWWWWW!!! I WENT TO THE MOVIES THIS WEEKEND!!! DAMN!!!................ I DONT EVEN KNOW WERE TO START FROM!!! ALLL I GOT TO SAY IS THAT THIS WEEKEND WAS THE FFFFFUUUUUUUUNNNNNNNNNEEEEEEEESSSSSSSSTTTTTTTTTTTT AND CCCCCCCRRRRRRAAAAAAAZZZZZZZIIIIIIIEEEEEESSSSSSTTTTTTTTTTT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! MY COUZ AND ME WERE KICKIN' BACK WITH OUR HOMEBOYS!!!!!!

DDDDDDDDAAAAAAAAAAAAMMMMMMMMMNNNNNNNNNNN IIIIIIIITTTTTTTTTTTT WWWWWWWWWAAAAAAAASSSSSSSSSSS TTTTTTTTTHHHHHHHHEEEEEEEEEE BBBBBBBBOOOOOOOOOOMMMMMMMMMBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

uumm!!! aight!!!

uumm!!! aight!!! i am so bored!!! today was the stupidest day ever!!! i was so fucken hiper!!! you dont even know how fucken hiper i was. i was all over the place. yeah!!! anyways well all ya homeboys think i am pretty hit me up! and if you think i am ugly who gives a fuck i wont trip. at least ya telling the true. people have different taste. am i right? or what? well yeah just hit me up!!! and we will see wazz up!!!

17 mars

*St. PaTrIcKs DaY*

WHAT UP GANGSTAS!!! IT IS ST. PATRICKS DAY!!! SO WHAT DID YOU PEEPS DO TODAY! WELL ME. I KICKED BACK AT MY SCHOOL AND JUST HANG WITH MY MAN. AND OFCOURSE MY HOMEGIRLS AND HOMEBOYS. I CANT FORGET ABOUT MY HOMIES!!!

16 mars

Talking about I'M SEXY, I'M CUTE...!!!

 

Quote

I'M SEXY, I'M CUTE...!!!

I'M SEXY, I'M CUTE AND I LIKE TO HAVE FUN

2,4,6,8 LOOK AT ME AND MASTERBATE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!