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Whenever Jessica has her initial interview with the 'beauty ambassador,' she always sounds like she's in a really awkward job interview. Maybe it is just me - but that is all I can ever think about when watching that section of the re-caps.

@paperispatient: I'm actually not quite sure how I like my MA in particular. As for cultural studies, it is so diverse that it is difficult to make a single judgement on the discourse. It is asking questions which generally make sense to me, but at times it can be frustrating for a variety of reasons (if you want to

Can I just take the time here to tell the Jezebel writers how much I love you for your extremely logical views? I was talking to a professor the other day about the advent of domestic science (end of nineteenth) and its relation to the Fifities housewife - about how it wasn't a clean narrative because of the wars but

@suzanne77 is cuckoo chanel: That's awesome! I want her autograph - but she'd probably dislike me because I am one of those people that watched My Girl every.single.time. it was on TBS.

@Scoldy Lox: I haven't but I will now. I would be interested to see how her acting differs from when she was a child to an adult, when she had such a diverse gap in between. Obviously it would have been a change anyway, but she seems so much more versatile now.

I clicked on the Anna Chulmsky link (which reminds me, I haven't seen My Girl in like months now - how have I been living like this?!) and it links to this really sweet interview they did with her. She talks about what she has been doing, and all these various fields/jobs she has had.

@dripdrop: Yeah, the "I wanna be Kurt Cobain" was a little shocking. You want to be six feet underground Taylor? I guess she is more hardcore than we thought.

@PrisonBreakShaker: Yeah, I never meant to insinuate that the artists of the time were anti-market, I was simply saying that Dylan was not an anti-capitalist and yet was profiting off of being associated with the movement (amongst other movements as well). It wasn't selling his songs that made him a capitalist, and to

@Stagtasticfantastic: Are you selling an album at that picket line? Then yes, it is wrong. Dylan said numerous times that he wasn't "political," while he was singing for countless African Americans who were being denied their rights as workers and citizens of a nation. And through that image and through building off

@Moira Price: The Last Time I Saw Richard is my absolute favourite Joni Mitchell song (and has been since I was a kid). There hasn't been a month in my life that I have gone without it!!

The last time I saw Dylan was Detroit in 68 and he told me,

@Stagtasticfantastic: Besides all of this, if we are talking about "authenticity" then you have to consider the context of the time. Authenticity is relative to socio-historical context and values - what made him "inauthentic" was by going against the very views held by those who followed him, by presenting himself

@Stagtasticfantastic: That's the point - he believed in capitalism and yet joined forces with those who were against it yet without taking any stance, in an effort to grab hold of a subculture to further his career. I'm not saying he's the only one who did it, but he was a phony who used a cause for his own gain. At

Bob Dylan was a capitalist when everyone else was fighting against capitalism. He was a bit of a douche. I love Joni Mitchell though...

@sequined: That was so great. I was going to write something so similar to this on a post the other day, but you said it far better than I ever could have.

@cocobanal: Woah - I am down to one pair of jeans that don't even fit properly (they are those stupid Urban Outfitter pants that stretch out into genie like shape after one day of wear). Want to get rid of any of your pants?!

@Twizzgirl: Well because they are filming a reality show, and without doing that we wouldn't have had that awesome scene.

Alright - that was entirely worth it just for that little girl going into the pantry and grabbing one of everything she can find. Adorable.

As for number 7.

@Aesop's Foibles.: I really did love that Osbourne show when I was a kid - like looked forward to it every single week. They are a nice family.