Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Three in one: Stupidity, Spoiler and This is how you irritate people

Note: this post has a lot of information concerning a series that some of you may be fans of, to maintain your degree of surprise this following post has been censured by the author.

In last (spoiler)day's episode of (spoiler); (spoiler), (spoiler), (spoiler) and (spoiler) are going out to the (spoiler) to (spoiler). Has they're living (spoiler) they meet (spoiler), who's (spoiler) to have some (spoiler) over and (spoiler) the (spoiler).

(Spoiler) feels (spoiler) for (spoiler) not (spoiler) him and that (spoiler) doesn't want (spoiler) to be (spoiler) (spoiler)'s friends. (Spoiler) then goes and (spoiler) with (spoiler) to sort things out, end up arranging for (spoiler) to join (spoiler) and (spoiler)'s friends for next (spoiler)'s (spoiler).

Then (spoiler) engages in a (spoiler) to (spoiler) about (spoiler) and then be able to (spoiler) with (spoiler) and (spoiler)'s friends.

Then there are tens minutes of pointless second story remarks.

But when (spoiler) is in (spoiler)'s house with (spoiler)'s friends, (spoiler) the (spoiler) (spoiler),
(spoiler) talked too much instead of (spoiler) like (spoiler) and used long (spoiler) to describe simple (spoiler) of the (spoiler).

In the end (spoiler) ended up looking like stupid instead the (spoiler) the (spoiler) series portrait him to be.

So this goes to show what I've been saying that being (spoiler) or (spoiler) doesn't depend of what you do, think or say, but how they judge you.

John Scar Kramer of Lioncourt

Proving that being a (spoiler) isn't only up to you.

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