Friday, May 22, 2009


the most mermoible thing in high school fgor me was prom night .Things that made it one of the most memoable days was little things like getting prepared , you know like my tux. and like renting my car n stuff like dat. Then other things like gettin ready , after all of that i stared to think that it wasnt gonna be a night to remember cuz i didnt have a prom date. but at the end of the night i realizr that i had the time of my life cuz i hug out wit my friends, took a lot of pictures . got alot of dances , AND DA AFTER PARTY WAS GREAT!!! I WAS DOUGGIE !!

Thursday, May 21, 2009



a plce i would like to visit is paris


MAKE UP POST#8
Me and my mom cought this slug im my room and i bit her on the way out the room
MAKE UP POST#4
I was smoking and the house cought on fire in the bass mint

Monday, May 18, 2009


See when i was in elementry school i played with glue and i ate the glue and i had to go to the hospital that was my first day of elementry school for me

Friday, May 15, 2009


Defending champs face Magic in yet another Game 7
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ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -- The Boston Celtics are headed home for a do-or-die game after failing to wrap up a series in Game 6.
They're getting used to that pattern.
Dwight Howard had 23 points and 22 rebounds, and the Orlando Magic overcame a poor shooting night to beat the Celtics 83-75 on Thursday and force a decisive game in the Eastern Conference semifinals.
The Celtics also failed to close out Chicago in Game 6 of their first-round series, a triple-overtime epic, but they never were in trouble in Game 7. Boston will now go the distance in each of its first two series for the second straight year.
"We're comfortable with Game 7s," forward Paul Pierce said. "A lot of players in this league have never played a Game 7 in this league, knowing that you if you lose, you go home. We're a confident group. But we're not an overconfident group, because you have to go out there and play the game."
The Celtics are 32-0 in seven-game series when they have held a 3-2 lead, and they are 17-3 in Game 7s on their home floor heading into Sunday.
"You can't lean on a Game 7 being at home," Boston coach Doc Rivers said. "You have to go play. Just because you're in Boston doesn't mean you're going to win the game."
Magic coach Stan Van Gundy doesn't believe in most records. He even threw out something familiar to Boston fans: The Red Sox's historic comeback from a 3-0 deficit to win the AL championship series over the Yankees in 2004.
"I don't think it means anything," he said. "In other words, I know it was a different sport, but when it was Yankees-Red Sox, nobody had ever come back from 3-0 before."
Rajon Rondo finished with 19 points, 16 rebounds and six assists, and Pierce scored 17 for the Celtics, who led by 10 points in the second half before falling apart.
The two days off before Game 7 should give an older, worn out Boston team a chance to rest its tired legs. It's still not enough for Rivers.
"I would take a week off and do it like the Super Bowl," Rivers joked. "That would be terrific. But that's not going to happen."
Boston had its chances.
The Celtics held the Magic scoreless for more than five minutes to start the third quarter, building a 10-point lead on a jumper by Glen "Big Baby" Davis. The Magic shot just 37 percent to the Celtics' 42 percent for the game.
But Howard led the Magic back, with a backspin alley-oop from Turkoglu that highlighted a spurt to end the third quarter. Orlando took its first lead with 8:38 remaining in the fourth.
Pierce hit three straight jumpers to give Boston a 73-72 lead with about four minutes to play, but the Celtics were done in by their 3-for-18 shooting from 3-point range and 19 turnovers. Ray Allen missed all seven attempts from behind the arc.
"The offense definitely struggled," Pierce said. "But we still played enough defense to win the game. We turned the ball over too much."
Howard blamed Van Gundy for not getting the ball more after the Magic's Game 5 collapse, when they blew a 14-point lead in the fourth quarter.
"You've got a dominant player, let him be dominant," Howard said.
He came out trying to back up his strong words, scoring the first eight points of the game for the Magic, including a pair of dunks that pumped some life into the home crowd. He finished 9-for-16 shooting.
Orlando's do-it-all center said he thought little of his comments before Game 6.
"Coach said, 'Give all you got tonight, because we're going to have tomorrow off,"' Howard said, laughing. "I was thinking about that."
Van Gundy said he didn't change his strategy at all, and compared Howard's comments to an argument between himself and his wife.
"When she gets on me for something, my first reaction is to blame someone else," Van Gundy said. "To make an excuse. To do something else, because I don't like being criticized. And I think when Dwight gets into a game, his first thing is, 'I don't want the blame.' This is just my guess.
"But when you step back and look at it, I usually realize the person who's been on me has a point. And then it's time to step up and do the job."
(Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

Tuesday, May 12, 2009



Its a freedom of speech in the united states

Monday, May 11, 2009



make up post

Two young men decided to take the red light and wam they hit each other and the young man in this certin car hit and ran. He realy got out the car and ran



Soon to be my new yellow car in a few years

Thursday, May 7, 2009


something i regret is taking this pic lol lol

John and sally whent to the same middle school and split up wen they got to high school so finally when they got to college they met again and got to to gether and when they got out of college they got married and had kidz

something RED!!!!

One thing im scared of is lizards. when i was little my sister put a lizard in my shoe

Tuesday, May 5, 2009


young jeezy on the xxl mag next fall

Friday, May 1, 2009


It's win-or-else for Heat in Game 6

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MIAMI (AP) -- Facing a win-or-else scenario, Dwyane Wade and the Miami Heat already would figure to have plenty of motivation.
Just in case, the Atlanta Hawks provided oodles more.
Between Mario West's wild celebration as the first half of Game 5 expired, Josh Smith's showboating dunk attempt in the final minutes and Hawks radio announcer Steve Holman mocking the NBA's scoring champion throughout, Wade and Miami are down 3-2 in the series but clearly leading in bulletin-board material.
Whether it will matter when the Hawks try to wrap up this increasingly volatile first-round Eastern Conference matchup in Miami on Friday night, well, that's anyone's guess.
"I'll go back to something my high school coach always told me: Act like you've done something before," Wade said. "He used to hate when I used to dunk and pound my chest all the time. He told me act like I've been there, act like I've done it, be classy. Win, lose or draw, you're supposed to be classy."
The Hawks have controlled the last two games, running out to huge leads in Games 4 and 5. Tempers flared in both contests, with a combined 100 fouls called, and there was plenty of shoving and staredowns Wednesday in the Hawks' win.
Heat center Jermaine O'Neal was whacked in the face by Atlanta's Zaza Pachulia. Wade got knocked to the floor, bumping his head in the opening minutes. Four players got technical fouls after one relatively tame scrum, with Wade in the middle of that one as well.
Playoff intensity, indeed.
And it's not going to be any different Friday.
"I don't want our guys backing down by any means," Hawks coach Mike Woodson said. "I don't think we've been out there trying to hurt anyone."
The Heat say they haven't either, and Wade took offense to Holman's suggestion otherwise.
When Wade leaped behind Mo Evans and tried to block a dunk attempt in Game 5, both players tumbled to the floor. Wade was called for a flagrant foul, which NBA officials rescinded after reviewing the play Thursday.
"Dwyane Wade tried to hurt Mo Evans," Holman said.
Wade insisted Holman was wrong.
"Hey, that's why he doesn't work in Miami," Wade said.
And when Atlanta center Al Horford hit the floor with a sprained ankle, Holman suggested the Heat were resorting to "thuggery," an assessment even Horford disagreed with.
"I just came down very awkward, that's all," Horford said.
Horford made the trip to Miami and said he's a game-time decision for Friday, but Woodson said he'll consider starting Solomon Jones instead and continue to bring Pachulia -- a force in the last two games -- off the bench.
Whether Horford plays or not, the Heat expect more heated battles down low.
"I think it's going to be an extremely physical game one way or another," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. "We have to be ready for the physicality of it and just make sure we play our best game."
Wade got more treatment Thursday and said he's feeling much better, no longer so pained by the back spasms that slowed him earlier this week and dealing with no aftereffects of conking his head on the Hawks' floor.
No short-term memory loss, meaning he recalls West stopping him from scoring on the last play of the first half and reacting jubilantly afterward ("Celebration after one stop, that's funny," Wade said) and Smith's exclamation-point dunk try.
Smith tried to swoop the ball between his legs and, in the same motion, go in for a dunk that ended up clanging off the rim.
In Miami's eyes, the play was an insult.
"I'm not worried about that," Smith said. "My loyalty is with this team, not the Miami Heat."
It's not as if these teams were the best of friends before this series started, either.
Last season, the final minute of a Heat-Hawks game had to be replayed by decree of the NBA because Atlanta's stat crew charged former Miami center Shaquille O'Neal with a foul he didn't commit. Tempers started getting hot in Game 4 of this series, and it only escalated in Game 5.
"I don't mind," Heat forward Udonis Haslem said. "Let's turn it up a notch. Part of the game."