<p>I hope the bracelet they gave to her makes her ankle green.
I hope when she’s in bed, she feels crap-py.
I don’t wish bad things, but I don’t wish her well.</p>
<p>It’s somewhat unfair since according to the news reports, most people do not serve the full time since the jails are overcrowded. Now she has to serve her whole sentence in jail. I doubt it will help her publicity especially since she was reported as screaming and crying when she had to go back.</p>
<p>Didnt you guys see? The judge ordered to go back to finish her sentence. She apparently was sobbing throughout it and left the courtroom crying and screaming and yelling “Mom!!”</p>
<p>ugh… what ever happened to all people are treated equally… didnt she get a better cell like the one for ■■■■■■■■ people… so its nicer… and her sentence got cut short! ugh now… house arrest… *** is this crap!</p>
<p>This thread brings up something that have perturbed for like the past five years. Why are Americans so obsessed with celebrities? When Paris first went to jail, of course it was on E! News, E.T., and other entertainment shows, but what surprised me the most was that CNN did a Larry King special on her arrest ad its consequences. When Brad and Angelina had/adopted their her tenth kid (sarcasm), the media pumps it so much that you know their names, likes/dislikes, and other useless information. American Idol also shows this phenomenon. More people voted for the next pop star than the amount of people who voted for the most influential person in the world in 2004. Why the obsession? Any conjectures?</p>
<p>^That’s it. No one knows. If you go somewhere like Australia, everyone’s chill abput celebrities, but in America, if you see someone like Snoop Dogg, he gets mobbed.</p>