DWF said:She was hot for a while, she looks hideous now with her latest haircut, maybe a 4-5?
Tuthmosis said:Prison fucks you up. This girl went from this:
To this:
At the beginning, she was a reasonably cute, smiling, study-abroad-type of white girl I would probably day-game at the local Starbucks. Now I'm not sure I would go for it: even for the much-coveted murderer notch.
“He came across very entitled, like he had saved her [during the first trial] in Italy by not turning on her,” Kay claims, “and that maybe she was obligated to do the same for him.”
“I’ve read text messages … between the two of them,” Kay says. “The text messages were [often] him texting her and her not responding. And he portrayed that to me as she was insensitive, and didn’t care.”
But in the few messages that Knox did send Sollecito, Kay says, she seemed like an entirely different woman than her ex-lover claimed.
“There were some [texts] about them not being able to marry, and [Amanda] explained herself in a very elegant way,” Kay reveals.
Sollecito’s responses, however, were “more desperate, needy,” Kay says.
Indeed, Kay previously told Radar about Sollecito’s desperate bid to secure a green card through marriage to a woman outside of Italy. His plain failed, however, and now he is facing a new verdict in the Meredith Kercher murder retrial.
DWF said:She was hot for a while, she looks hideous now with her latest haircut, maybe a 4-5?
Teedub said:She's been found guilty again and sentenced to 28 years. Will the U.S extradite her back to Italy?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2548823/Amanda-Knox-retrial-verdict-GUILTY.html
Damn Rza fell off bad. Are the other Wu Tang members supporting him?Samseau said:
A terrifying but compelling possibility comes into view: normal people, people like her and people like you and me, are capable of doing very bad things indeed and we do them a little by accident, without quite meaning to, not out of deep seated abstract 'evil' but out of the common variety of frailties that we all know in their less dramatic forms from occasions when we get furious with someone, or get carried away with desire. And then, because a sorry wouldn't fix things, the killer (who is, for our unconscious, also us) tells a big lie and hopes that they won't have to be shouted at by an angry spouse or packed away to a cold prison for 25 years.
Previously, we wanted Amanda to be innocent to reassure ourselves of the impossibility that we could ever kill. But now that she has been found guilty, we want something even odder: we want her to get away with it because we too would like to get away with certain (much less, but still significant) bad things we have done.