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I have a job interview Thursday with Blockbuster Video

"Wow what a difference" ha ha when was the last time they ever used that?
Anyway its for part-time hours and most likely weekends but as I tell all my friends that get shit jobs. A job's a job.
So we'll see how it goes. Wish me luck if you give a shit
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Happy birthday to

Taken from wikipedia...
Andrew Eldritch (born Andrew William Harvey Taylor, May 15, 1959) is the frontman, singer, songwriter and the only remaining original member of The Sisters of Mercy, a band that emerged from the British post punk scene, reoriented gothic rock and, in later years, also flirted with pop and hard rock.
The devices in Andrew Eldritch's lyrics include literary allusions (most prominently to the works of T. S. Eliot, Leonard Cohen and Shakespeare), erotic imagery, metaphors of drug culture, and an acrimonious criticism of the Republican Party of the United States, with which Eldritch flippantly claims to have a "hate-hate" relationship, in view of the Bush dynasty, Christian fundamentalists, and the military-industrial complex. Politically, he has claimed to be "traditionally a Labour supporter" despite his "anarcho-syndicalist tendencies".
_______________________________________________________________________
I have a job interview Thursday with Blockbuster Video

"Wow what a difference" ha ha when was the last time they ever used that?
Anyway its for part-time hours and most likely weekends but as I tell all my friends that get shit jobs. A job's a job.
So we'll see how it goes. Wish me luck if you give a shit
_______________________________________________________________________
Happy birthday to
Taken from wikipedia...
Andrew Eldritch (born Andrew William Harvey Taylor, May 15, 1959) is the frontman, singer, songwriter and the only remaining original member of The Sisters of Mercy, a band that emerged from the British post punk scene, reoriented gothic rock and, in later years, also flirted with pop and hard rock.
The devices in Andrew Eldritch's lyrics include literary allusions (most prominently to the works of T. S. Eliot, Leonard Cohen and Shakespeare), erotic imagery, metaphors of drug culture, and an acrimonious criticism of the Republican Party of the United States, with which Eldritch flippantly claims to have a "hate-hate" relationship, in view of the Bush dynasty, Christian fundamentalists, and the military-industrial complex. Politically, he has claimed to be "traditionally a Labour supporter" despite his "anarcho-syndicalist tendencies".
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