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I love everyone but mainly my saxophones. Marriage is a contract that binds a woman to a stereotype. Harry Potter rules my world. Why have guys when chocolate can satisfy all your needs.
Jazzle Dunne The human Pheonix



Last Updated: 12/4/2008

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Gender: Female
Status: Single
Age: 19
Sign: Aquarius

City: london
State: London and South East
Country: UK
Signup Date: 12/18/2006

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Monday, December 17, 2007 
Well I performed at process, the last one this year. It was really good and my poems will be up soon with the photos I stole off Tyrones myspace lol. Pity no one I new was there to support me but oh well they missed it.lol XXXX
Monday, December 10, 2007 

Current mood:  ecstatic
Well..

It was wicked!!!
Photos up on Tyrones page, mine will be up soon I promise!


In addition I have been asked to be the Roundhouse Jazz poet sax player in residence, so I acepted and will take that up in the new year !!!!  It is the best offer I've had so far lool
Next I gotta just get published
All i have to say is SHAME Ms Morrison    I CAN DO BETTER THAN COMEDY AT THE SCHOOL TALENT SHOW !!!!!!!!!!!

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Merry xmas and have a great new year XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Wednesday, September 19, 2007 

Current mood:  angry
I WANT A PAIR OF BLACK AND WHITE HIGH HEELED BROGUES. FROM CAMDEN! I WILL KILL ANYONE WHO GETS THEM BEFORE ME !!!!!!!!!! I SWEAR I WILL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!HIGH HELLED VERSION OF THIS!!!!!!!!!!!
Currently reading:
Spies
By Michael Frayn
Release date: 20 January, 2003
Sunday, September 16, 2007 

Current mood:  enraged

Now police are told they can use Taser guns on children

By JASON LEWIS - More by this author » Last updated at 15:27pm on 2nd September 2007

Comments Comments (26)

Police have been given the go-ahead to use Taser stun guns against children.

The relaxing of restrictions on the use of the weapons comes despite warnings that they could trigger a heart attack in youngsters.

Until now, Tasers - which emit a 50,000-volt electric shock - have been used only by specialist officers as a "non lethal" alternative to firearms.

Scroll down for more ...

Stun gun: Tasers give off a 50,000 volt blast

However, they can now be used against all potentially violent offenders even if they are unarmed.

It is the decision not to ban their use against minors that is likely to raise serious concerns.

Home Office Police Minister Tony McNulty said medical assessments had confirmed the risk of death or serious injury from Tasers was "low".

But he failed to mention Government advisers had also warned of a potential risk to children.

The Defence Scientific Advisory Council medical committee told the Home Office that not enough was known about the health risks of using the weapons against children.

Tasers work by firing metal barbs into the skin which then discharge an electrical charge which is designed to disable someone long enough to allow police to detain them safely.   click here for article

Also a video  Video

Currently reading:
Much Ado About Nothing
By William Shakespeare
Release date: 01 January, 2004
Thursday, August 23, 2007 

Current mood:  accomplished

WOWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW  1 A for eng. Lit., 1 D for D.t so that doesnt count and the rest was B's and C's. Lolly beat me in Drama She got an A and I recieved a B!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Saw Hairspray It was REALLY GOOD much better than Harry Potter 5. Even I wouldn't wipe my arse with that crap excuse of a movie. Gonna be in the Ham and High with  Leanne next week!

See everyone soon XXXX please comment with your results and movie reviews XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX I FINISHED "The Shinning" it was wicked!!!

Currently reading:
The Shinning
By stephen king
Release date: 1978
Saturday, August 18, 2007 

Current mood:  groggy
Finished my Jazz course with a FANTASTIC gig. no one I knew turned up. Damn you people who call yourself my friends! 
Poetry slam was good, WELL DONE to the finalists and winners! I had a pounding migrane and nearly projectile vomited on the person in front of me, but instead I caught it in my hands. ERGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
I missed the band night due to ILLNESS (Didn't want a repeat of the previous night did I?) I heard it was really good (and that Oneke talks about the male attonamy too much to be classified as normal).

So that was my week people! Have a great holiday in Corfu Tyrone! Hope you get better soon Wardi and HAHA about your sister. LOL!
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Currently reading:
Wise Children
By Angela Carter
Release date: 01 January, 1993
Tuesday, August 14, 2007 

Current mood:  amused
Been at roundhouse doing Jazz and it is wicked. I'm going to the poetry slam final to give my support to my "MUJI" loving poets. Then I'm going to the band night at roundhouse to give my support and love to my guys who are playing (Femi in Fleetstreet and Jarron in MOYO).

Back soon Jazzle xxxxxx Don't miss me too much!!
Saturday, August 11, 2007 

Current mood:  bitchy
OUR POSTING TO OUR FAV ACTOR

Ok look well i musta been right u r a coward u didn't even hav the balls2 reply back 2 me!!!! i was jus being honest y is that bad! u say in interviews u like honest girls wot a load of BS!!! ur an actor right??? can't u take constructive critisism!!! i was tryin 2 tell u how hard it is 4 sum of us nd well i thought u wud care but u obviously don't! nd ur a coward 4 not bein able 2 reply 2 me! sorry im being harsh but that's just me, probably won't eva see u in London then!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! reply back as harsh as u want but i can take constructive critisism unlike sum people, come on then i DARE U!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

AREN'T WE NICE LOL
Saturday, August 04, 2007 

Current mood:  jubilant
OMG I have just discovered that watching crappy TV is actually fun. I was channel surfing and stumbled across MTV ONE. I watched Parental control which was a program about parents not liking thier daughters boyfriend and choosing one for her. The boyfriend has to watch the dates the parents choice is taking her out on. At the end of the show she has to choose what boy she wants to date. It made me glad that my mum likesthe guys I have gone out with. Then I watched Fist Of Zen which was about some students becoming Zen masters. The problem is they have to take part in 10 rituals in a public libary and it has to be done in silence. Contians pain, hysterics from the viewer and Bravery to see them endure the pain/ tasks.

It was well funny and I was shrieking with laughter causing my nabours to think me and my sister were fighting.
Saturday, August 04, 2007 

Current mood:  calm
51 people viewed my blog this week, that makes me very happy. However how many of them are reoccuring visitors? I hate the summer holidays as I lose contact with some great people who may be away or just blanking me(hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm). On the upside I have met some great people this holiday so far. Everything is all underway schoolwise just need photocopying done then I am rolling on CCTV. LUCKY ME

Monday, July 30, 2007 

Current mood:  angry
OMG I finished Harry Potter and the deathly hallows. It was such an anticlimax at the end. He's pretty wierd naming his kids after his dead parents and headmasters. I am going to write a letter to the director of Harry Potter and the order of the pheonix as I was bored within the first 5 mins and they messed up the sequence of events and missed out vital scenes. Does Harry and Cho not know how to kiss! Most people embrace whilst kissing and not clasp their hands behind their backs. The books I have had to read for A Level have taken up most of my time, and are far more interesting than Harry Potter.

I also took part in the roundhouse poetry slam, that was really enjoyable and I pretty much wiped the floor with the boys in the room. Girl Power!
Tuesday, July 24, 2007 

Current mood:  ecstatic
WOOOOOOOOOOOWW
I went to see Winton Marselis do a sound check at the Barbican before his concert. Yes I did get an autograph! He is soo cool and relaxed. And called several people and I Cool Cats!
And when I was at the roundhouse I saw Amy Winehouse!

See ya soon XXXXX
Tuesday, July 24, 2007 

Current mood:  crazy
Wow I couldn't drive myself to open the Harry Potter book and when I did I was quickly absorbed.
However I had already worked out half of what I was reading.
J.K Rowling has finaly managed to inject some humor into this book.
Alas the fate of Hegwid left my crying and then Dobby left me weeping for a better story line. 
When I have finished I will tell you more but bye for now       XXXXXX
Friday, July 20, 2007 

Current mood:  mischievous

So, here it is at last: the final confrontation between Harry Potter, the Boy Who Lived, the Chosen One, the "symbol of hope" for both the Wizard and Muggle worlds, and Lord Voldemort, He Who Must Not Be Named, the nefarious leader of the Death Eaters and would-be ruler of all. Good versus Evil. Love versus Hate. The Seeker versus the Dark Lord.

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Lars Klove for The New York Times

Related

Times Topics: Harry Potter

HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS. By J.K. Rowling. Illustrations by Mary Grandpr'e. 759 pages. Arthur A. Levine Books/Scholastic. $34.99.

J.K. Rowling's monumental, spell-binding epic, 10 years in the making, is deeply rooted in traditional literature and Hollywood sagas — from the Greek myths to Dickens and Tolkien to Star Wars — and true to its roots, it ends not with modernist, Soprano-esque equivocation, but with good old-fashioned closure: a big screen, heart-racing, bone-chilling confrontation and an epilogue that clearly lays out people's fates. Getting to the finish line is not seamless — the last portion of the final book has some lumpy passages of exposition and a couple of clunky detours — but the overall conclusion of the series and its determination of the main characters' storylines possess a convincing inevitability that make some of the pre-publication speculation seem curiously blinkered in retrospect.

With each installment, the Potter series has grown increasingly dark, and this volume — a copy of which was purchased at a New York City retail outlet today, although the book is embargoed for release until 12:01 a.m. this Saturday — is no exception. While Ms. Rowling's astonishingly limber voice still moves effortlessly between Ron's adolescent sarcasm and Harry's growing solemnity, from youthful exuberance to more philosophical gravity, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows" is, for the most part, a somber book that marks Harry's final initiation into the complexities and sadnesses of adulthood.

From his first days at Hogwarts, the young, green-eyed boy bore the burden of his destiny as a leader, coping with the expectations and duties of his role, and in this volume he is clearly more Henry V than Prince Hal, more King Arthur than young Wart: high-spirited war games of Quidditch have given way to real war, and Harry often wishes he were not the de facto leader of the Resistance movement, shouldering terrifying responsibilities, but an ordinary teenage boy — free to romance Ginny Weasley and hang out with his friends.

Harry has already lost his parents, his godfather Sirius and his teacher Professor Dumbledore (all mentors he might have once received instruction from), and in this volume the losses mount with unnerving speed: at least half a dozen characters we have come to know die in these pages, and many others are wounded or tortured. Voldemort and his followers have infiltrated Hogwarts and the Ministry of Magic, creating havoc and terror in both the Wizard and Muggle worlds alike, and the members of various populations — including elves, goblins and centaurs — are choosing up sides.

No wonder then that Harry often seems overwhelmed with disillusionment and doubt in the final installment of this seven-volume bildungsroman. Harry continues to struggle to control his temper, and as he and Ron and Hermione search for the missing Horcruxes (secret magical objects in which Voldemort has stashed parts of his soul, objects that Harry must destroy if he hopes to kill the evil lord), he literally enters a dark wood, in which he must do battle not only with the Death Eaters, but also with the temptations of hubris and despair.

Harry's weird psychic connection with Voldemort (symbolized by the lightning-bolt forehead scar he bears, as a result of the Dark Lord's attack on him when he was a baby) seems to have grown stronger too, giving him clues to Voldemort's actions and whereabouts, even as it lures him ever closer to the dark side. One of the plot's key turning points concerns Harry's decision whether to continue looking for the Horcruxes — the mission assigned to him by the late Dumbledore — or whether to pursue, instead, three magical objects known as the Hallows, which are said to make their possessor the master of Death.

Harry's journey will propel him forwards to a final showdown with his archenemy, and also send him backwards into the past, back to the house in Godric's Hollow where his parents died, to learn about his own family history and the equally mysterious history of Dumbledore's family. At the same time, he will be forced to ponder the equation between fraternity and independence, free will and fate, and to come to terms with his own frailties and those of others. Indeed, ambiguities proliferate throughout "The Deathly Hallows": we are made to see that kindly Dumbledore, sinister Severus Snape and perhaps even awful Muggle cousin Dudley Dursley may be more complicated than they initially seem, that all of them, like Harry himself, have hidden aspects to their personalities, and that choice — more than talent or predisposition — matters most of all.

Skip to next paragraph

Related

Times Topics: Harry Potter

HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS. By J.K. Rowling. Illustrations by Mary Grandpr'e. 759 pages. Arthur A. Levine Books/Scholastic. $34.99.

It is Ms. Rowling's achievement in this series that she manages to make Harry both a familiar adolescent — coping with the banal frustrations of school and dating — and an epic hero, kin to everyone from the young King Arthur to Spiderman and Luke Skywalker. This same magpie talent has enabled her to create a narrative that effortlessly mixes up allusions to Homer, Milton, Shakespeare and Kafka, with silly kid jokes about vomit-flavored candies, a narrative that fuses a plethora of genres (from the boarding school novel to the detective story to the epic quest) into a story that could be Exhibit A in a Joseph Campbell survey of mythic archetypes.

In doing so, J.K. Rowling has created a world as fully detailed as L. Frank Baum's "Oz" or J.R.R. Tolkien's "Middle Earth," a world so minutely imagined in terms of its history and rituals and rules that it qualifies as an alternate universe — which may be one of the reasons the Potter books have spawned such a passionate following and such fervent exegesis.

With this final volume, the reader realizes that small incidents and asides in earlier installments (hidden among a huge number of red herrings) create a breadcrumb trail of clues to the plot, that Ms. Rowling has fitted together the jigsaw puzzle pieces of this long undertaking with Dickensian ingenuity and ardor. Objects and spells from earlier books — like the invisibility cloak, Polyjuice Potion, Dumbledore's Pensieve and Sirius' flying motorcycle — will play important roles in this volume, and characters encountered before like the house elf Dobby and Mr. Ollivander the wandmaker will resurface, too.

The world of Harry Potter is a place where the mundane and the marvelous, the ordinary and the surreal co-exist. It's a place where cars can fly and owls can deliver the mail, a place where paintings talk and a mirror reflects people's innermost desires. It's also a place utterly recognizable to readers, a place where death and the catastrophes of daily life are inevitable, and people's lives are defined by love and loss and hope — the same way they are in our own mortal world.

Sunday, July 08, 2007 

Current mood:  touched
Well went to a psychology course and met some fantastic people (You know who you are you are wicked I love you). Went award ceremoney and that was fun (Best attendance £50 wohoh)  BOAT PARTY WAS WICKED My dress was beautiful and everyone looked fab. Hmmmmmmmmmmmmm that was a night to remember and I won't forget what happened afterwards. (man it was nice until everyone came running to see)

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX to my psychology buddies and to my party people XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX