8 March 2013

ACT Policing's new underage drinking campaign is comedy gold

| Barcham
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Have you watched the video yet? Do it. I’ll wait. I don’t want to ruin it for you.

My original title for this article was going to be ‘Magical fortune telling iPhone app helps Sarah from Belconnen not sleep with a hipster’ but that would be giving it all away.

Everything about this clip is amazing. From the attempts at humor that backfire completely to the desperate attempt to be relevant to kids by using iPhones, Facebook and making the guy you don’t want to sleep with a hipster. Kids hate hipsters right?

Sarah comes from Belconnen, she’s just like me! I use the internet and don’t like hooking up with with… whoever that guy is! I’ve gone though the embarrassment of having photos of me clawing the eyeballs out of my best friends skull appear on Facebook. These guys really get me, so I’ll never drink again! The only reason I ever drank was due to frustration that the police didn’t understand what I thought was cool.

Thank you ACT Policing. Losing Face due to hooking up with a guy who isn’t a supermodel could have ruined my reputation FOR LIFE.

I love how each time one of these campaigns targets boys the terrible risk they show is getting beaten up or ending up in an accident, for girls the big danger is getting laid. Oh no, you had sex? Girls must hate sex as much as guys hate having their skulls fractured. Public Service Announcements told me so! Also what is wrong with Sarah’s hookup? He wears glasses? So what? Ok so his facial hair is a bit stupid but so what he’s a teenager! The fact he can grow a moustache that impressive at his age means I’ve got to give him at least a little respect. Hell, I wore eyeliner and black lipstick when I was his age so I really can’t throw stones at anyone. I think he looks like a nice young man, who the hell are you to judge him Sarah from Belconnen? You think you’re better than him? I bet he has never scratched his friends eyeballs out!

I’m going to watch it again.
Thank you ACT Policing!

UPDATE by Johnboy: We now have the police media release:

ACT Policing has today (Friday, March 8 ) launched a new social media campaign to deter young people from underage drinking as part of its Skyfire partnership efforts.

The ‘Don’t take your chances’ campaign demonstrates the potential social and legal consequences that can affect teenagers if they choose to drink alcohol before the legal age of 18.

Sergeant Harry Hains from ACT Policing’s Crime Prevention said targeting underage drinking continued to be a key priority for ACT Policing with the new campaign urging teenagers not to take their chances with their peers, their relationships and the law.

“We found that young people measure their social worth based on a perception they form from peers, and respond to communication that is personally relevant to their lives,” Sergeant Hains said.

“This campaign aims to challenge the perception that teenagers need to drink alcohol to be accepted, instead highlighting potential social, and legal, consequences they can relate to.”

badhookup

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first_time_caller7:54 pm 18 Mar 13

The lesson for that young boy is that girls will vomit a little bit in their mouths when they think of him.

I would love the ad exec who made this ad with Sarah to (cough) 16 year old.
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nail to a cross that is

For a boy who is the same age to Sarah this is a huge ad to start drinking, take your chances and you might get laid. All the girls are doing it anyway.

This whole clip shows the average girl drink, then another girl not drink though an unrealistic commercial.

People are more likely to drink watching this.

It also gives people ideas how to drink, how uncommon are hip flasks these days…

obamabinladen said :

I wonder how much this pile of crap cost tax payers??? Tooks finally made a good point about alcohol education should start at home congrats mate first thing we’ve ever agreed on lol. The problem is too many kids don’t have good homes and these days kids are having kids.

I too am amazed 🙂

I’m glad you don’t take my banter and piss-taking too seriously.

There are so many negative stereotypes reinforced in this ad I don’t know where to begin. My favorite though is having the fight between the girls referred to as a catfight. Good lord…this ad follows up the ever so successful galah ad the AFP released. Pure gold. Who is their ad agency?

poetix said :

[…]
I’m just not sure what you mean by telling that story.

It is just a gross story about drinking. More shock value than anything else, no need to go mining for deeper meaning 😛

Just to put your mind at rest, the “and worse” bit was about the plan to smear fresh poo on her face. The drunk guys planning the defiling were kicked out as soon as word got around about what they planned, but that kinda removes the shock value so I left that bit out 🙂

How about this story instead:

One of my close friends was having a few drinks after playing footy, he felt a bit drunk so he had a coke and sat around for another hour before he drove home. By that stage he didn’t feel drunk, but still questioned whether he should drive. His girlfriend had told a few of her friends earlier that he would give them a lift, so not wanting to let them down, he drove them all home. Unfortunately, none of them made it home because he missed a corner on the highway and hit a tree.

So analysing that story, we have my friend who realised he was too drunk to drive, but did it anyway so he didn’t let people down. Other people who agreed to get in a car driven by someone who admitted they were hesitant to drive because they had been drinking. Other people who let both the driver and the passengers get in the car, instead of offering to drive them all home themselves.

Whilst the story is more about the consequences of making bad decisions, it still proves that the message of don’t drink and drive and don’t get in cars with drunk people gets overlooked in the heat of the moment.

Done much better in NZ:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dIYvD9DI1ZA

Puzzle Time!

harley said :

I Remember the target audience people. These are girls that will “literally die of shame” if they hook up with a guy with glasses and a weird eyebrow.

Spot on. I’m not surprised that ACT Policing are expecting a fairly sophisticated audience for this clip. Sixteen year olds are right up on comedy (schoolkids pretty much all do some film and performance studies in Belconnen, doncha know). Many of them will even have picked up on the cute Barry Humphries/Les Patterson homage. Using farce & melodrama to cut through resistance to the message is a well considered strategy. The production values are very very good – there’s nothing poor about this, it’s quite polished in its hamming up. And using a hipster type rather than a stereotype “stranger danger” character will have been deliberate and well researched – creative, intellectual, hipster types are no less prone to taking advantage of a drunk girl than your bogan stereotype.

ACT Policing have really lifted their game. Indeed, Thumper, it is actually “spectacularly terrible” as you say and a very good skit! I haven’t seen any other elements of the campaign but it looks promising.

obamabinladen7:46 pm 09 Mar 13

I wonder how much this pile of crap cost tax payers??? Tooks finally made a good point about alcohol education should start at home congrats mate first thing we’ve ever agreed on lol. The problem is too many kids don’t have good homes and these days kids are having kids.

I’d like to see the return of ‘The Little Red Schoolbook’ informing readers what it IS legal. Knowledge empowers and is the best driver for change. A majority of parents, let alone their children, actually know the law so its constraints remain vague.
I think it improper that we allow our enforcers of the law to further mystify it by telling half-truths.
Eg. “Keep your kids safe – Ensure your children do not have access to alcohol in your home”.
I am happy for this wisdom in almost any place but the place where I found this: an ACT Policing website, ‘Information for Parents’.
Let’s support informed debate before the police start changing the law on our behalf.

DrKoresh said :

Are the 9 boxes all horrible nightmarish outcomes?

I’m not sure the ad would be as effective if a large number of the boxes were “had a really good night” 😉

Anyway, creepy guy doesn’t look that creepy. I’m sure if he had a shave and took off those fake glasses he would be quite attractive to Sarah from Belconnen.

HiddenDragon10:57 am 09 Mar 13

Judging by the facial hair, the baby-faced hipster is probably more interested in hooking up with the other Musketeers (or maybe Mouseketeers). Is the resemblance to a (somewhat) younger Hamish Blake part of a subtle subtext?

I suppose this effort is all of a piece with Volvo pursuit cars (or was that just a rumour?). A more effective option would be footage of tragic middle-aged/seniors living sad lives of welfare/booze/pokies, interspersed with pics of them when they were bright, hot kids – “this could happen to you”. Don’t suppose Clubs ACT would permit the filming, though.

poetix said :

Mmmm…I hope the message to boys is ‘peeing on women is never acceptable’,

You’ve never been to Germany then Poetix? It’s all the rage in certain circles.

gentoopenguin said :

Ben_Dover said :

I’d nail the hostess though.

You’d have to get her drunk first. It’s the hipster way, apparently.

I’m game if she is…

“Bacardi shots for you love?

Instant Mash10:11 am 09 Mar 13

Nice to know that the fuzz are still ‘hip’.

I wish I was underage so I could drink to that and laugh even harder at it’s somewhat skewed message!

Pork Hunt said :

Tooks said :

HardBallGets said :

So underage drinking is a crime that Police arrest young people for, ensuring they have a criminal record forever?

Really?

Odd message from the fun-stoppers really, because I thought they’ve just sunk a whole heap of cash in to diversion initiatives (EIPP & Youth Sobering Up Shelter) to ensure that young people who have consumed alcohol don’t end up in the justice system.

Oh well if there’s a police advert that says they arrest young drinkers and give them criminal records, then that is what they must be doing.

Maybe you should watch it again. WIth your eyes open this time. They never said you’d get a criminal record. It said a permanent record. If you think your interactions with police aren’t permanently recorded, you’re very naiive.

Drunk teens don’t go through the justice system unless they’ve committed an offence. They usually get punted home to their embarrassed parents or failing that, the drunk tank.

As for the ad itself, I think it’s lame, but it’s very hard to make such an ad that will actually have any effect on a teenager. I’d give them points for trying something different, and it was obviously meant to be humorous, but teens will think that is very very lame and I doubt it will have any effect whatsoever. This is the kind of education that should begin at home.

So drunk teens go into a drunk tank presumably because they are a danger to themselves, why then, don’t drunk drivers go into a drunk tank for the opposite reason?

Dunno. Most drink drivers aren’t drunk and aren’t a danger to themselves once taken off the road. You cam be well over the legal limit and not be drunk.

poetix said :

Doc Dogg said :

Of course we still got drunk and tried to score drunk chicks, but I do remember thinking about how much I was drinking and whether I could actually preform if I actually did get a chick in bed. It wasn’t until I moved towns that I went to parties that people would drink until they were unconscious. I even went to one where a girl drank so much she passed out behind a shed and some guys thought it would be funny to wee on her…and worse. That’s a story I’ll be telling my kids when they are old enough to start going out to parties.

Mmmm…I hope the message to boys is ‘peeing on women is never acceptable’, and if the ‘worse’ was sexual assault, that they should attempt to intervene if such a crime is taking place? And that only really weak men would think otherwise?

And if it’s a girl, that she is never to blame if some horrible item rapes her, even if she’s paralytic drunk in a public place? Or will the message be you must be eternally vigilant, or the consequences are all of your own making?

I’m just not sure what you mean by telling that story.

Reminds me of the time back in the early ’80s when a staff member of a nightclub described how he and two others peed on a paralytic female after closing hours ie. after 6am.Needless to say i lost any respect i had for that egomaniac who currently is spending some R&R at the AMC awaiting trial for further indiscretions.

It really disgusts me when humans cannot control their desires to take advantage of someone who is in no position,even if self-inflicted,to defend themselves.

wildturkeycanoe6:32 am 09 Mar 13

I think a 3 in 8 chance of something bad happening is pretty good odds. After 2 shots of whatever they intended drinking they wouldn’t care anyway. Being taken home to mum and dad isn’t terrible if mum or dad were the ones who got ’em the alcohol in the first place, where else would they get it? Eventually someone of legal age had to have purchased it. Also, being underage they wouldn’t be able to get into a club to find mister douchebag, so if anything it’d be a stranger in the park after dark, or out the back alley of the local shops.
I wonder when this gets aired on TV, as I’m guessing teens don’t watch free-to-air anymore, what with the brilliance of internet. Unless it gets played at the start of every Youtube video [God forbid], the message will fall on nobody’s ears.
Aww, okay, I’ll stop picking on it now. I guess they’re trying something at least, even if it is a pitiful effort.

Doc Dogg said :

Of course we still got drunk and tried to score drunk chicks, but I do remember thinking about how much I was drinking and whether I could actually preform if I actually did get a chick in bed. It wasn’t until I moved towns that I went to parties that people would drink until they were unconscious. I even went to one where a girl drank so much she passed out behind a shed and some guys thought it would be funny to wee on her…and worse. That’s a story I’ll be telling my kids when they are old enough to start going out to parties.

Mmmm…I hope the message to boys is ‘peeing on women is never acceptable’, and if the ‘worse’ was sexual assault, that they should attempt to intervene if such a crime is taking place? And that only really weak men would think otherwise?

And if it’s a girl, that she is never to blame if some horrible item rapes her, even if she’s paralytic drunk in a public place? Or will the message be you must be eternally vigilant, or the consequences are all of your own making?

I’m just not sure what you mean by telling that story.

Holden Caulfield said :

I know when I was a boy I was fortunate enough to enjoy plenty of harmless underage drinking fun. No violence, no regretful sex, just a few chunders here and there.

Is there such a thing as regretful sex when you are a teenage boy?

I always thought the approach that the local police took when I was a young lad worked well. If they saw you out on the weekend, hanging out in a park or whatever. They would sit down with you and tell you stories about the accidents they had seen involving young drunk kids. Stuff like how horrible it was comforting a 15yo girl who had just been hit by a car because she tripped running across the road drunk. Just having them sit there talking WITH you and not AT you made you feel like they were giving you some respect, so you listened to what they had to say.

Of course we still got drunk and tried to score drunk chicks, but I do remember thinking about how much I was drinking and whether I could actually preform if I actually did get a chick in bed. It wasn’t until I moved towns that I went to parties that people would drink until they were unconscious. I even went to one where a girl drank so much she passed out behind a shed and some guys thought it would be funny to wee on her…and worse. That’s a story I’ll be telling my kids when they are old enough to start going out to parties.

Tooks said :

HardBallGets said :

So underage drinking is a crime that Police arrest young people for, ensuring they have a criminal record forever?

Really?

Odd message from the fun-stoppers really, because I thought they’ve just sunk a whole heap of cash in to diversion initiatives (EIPP & Youth Sobering Up Shelter) to ensure that young people who have consumed alcohol don’t end up in the justice system.

Oh well if there’s a police advert that says they arrest young drinkers and give them criminal records, then that is what they must be doing.

Maybe you should watch it again. WIth your eyes open this time. They never said you’d get a criminal record. It said a permanent record. If you think your interactions with police aren’t permanently recorded, you’re very naiive.

Drunk teens don’t go through the justice system unless they’ve committed an offence. They usually get punted home to their embarrassed parents or failing that, the drunk tank.

As for the ad itself, I think it’s lame, but it’s very hard to make such an ad that will actually have any effect on a teenager. I’d give them points for trying something different, and it was obviously meant to be humorous, but teens will think that is very very lame and I doubt it will have any effect whatsoever. This is the kind of education that should begin at home.

So drunk teens go into a drunk tank presumably because they are a danger to themselves, why then, don’t drunk drivers go into a drunk tank for the opposite reason?

HardBallGets said :

So underage drinking is a crime that Police arrest young people for, ensuring they have a criminal record forever?

Really?

Odd message from the fun-stoppers really, because I thought they’ve just sunk a whole heap of cash in to diversion initiatives (EIPP & Youth Sobering Up Shelter) to ensure that young people who have consumed alcohol don’t end up in the justice system.

Oh well if there’s a police advert that says they arrest young drinkers and give them criminal records, then that is what they must be doing.

Maybe you should watch it again. WIth your eyes open this time. They never said you’d get a criminal record. It said a permanent record. If you think your interactions with police aren’t permanently recorded, you’re very naiive.

Drunk teens don’t go through the justice system unless they’ve committed an offence. They usually get punted home to their embarrassed parents or failing that, the drunk tank.

As for the ad itself, I think it’s lame, but it’s very hard to make such an ad that will actually have any effect on a teenager. I’d give them points for trying something different, and it was obviously meant to be humorous, but teens will think that is very very lame and I doubt it will have any effect whatsoever. This is the kind of education that should begin at home.

gentoopenguin4:45 pm 08 Mar 13

Ben_Dover said :

A new low in lame.

I’d nail the hostess though.

You’d have to get her drunk first. It’s the hipster way, apparently.

HardBallGets said :

So underage drinking is a crime that Police arrest young people for, ensuring they have a criminal record forever? Really?

To be fair, they only say permanent record. But if a juvenile kills someone, we can’t identify them.
So to avoid being shamed, ensure you klll someone if you’re an underage drinker ?

Holden Caulfield4:21 pm 08 Mar 13

harley said :

harley said :

you old fogeys have to remember for a girl of 16, “for life” is the next 2 weeks. Remember the target audience people. These are girls that will “literally die of shame” if they hook up with a guy with glasses and a weird eyebrow.

Literally?

See those quotey marks? They mean I’m quoting. You ask any 14 – 18 year old girl that question, that’s what they will answer.

Yep. Blame the Yanks.

A new low in lame.

I’d nail the hostess though.

harley said :

you old fogeys have to remember for a girl of 16, “for life” is the next 2 weeks. Remember the target audience people. These are girls that will “literally die of shame” if they hook up with a guy with glasses and a weird eyebrow.

Literally?

See those quotey marks? They mean I’m quoting. You ask any 14 – 18 year old girl that question, that’s what they will answer.

I’m sure I could find a teenager who actually does know what “literally” means.

But I’ll grant the reverse would be easier.

The slimeball with the mic has to be a worse hook up than the Bad Hook Up, who looks a bit like Booger from Revenge of the Nerds.

Sort of reminds me of the ads country television used to make back in the day. Lame, underfunded, not troubled by research, demographics, a script or even thematic relevance.

It’s kind of sweet in a naive 1960s sort of a way

Holden Caulfield3:25 pm 08 Mar 13

Barcham said :

…Anyways as for your question about what they could have done to reach a young me?

Very little. Health warnings tend to bounce off the immortal young, shaking your fingers at me would have only increased the appeal of rebelling, and clumsy attempts to appeal to me (like the above video) would have felt equal parts patronising and hilarious. I don’t envy the people whose jobs are to make videos like this, and I may not have the answers to this problem, but I can tell you that obvious videos like this would have felt like they were insulting my intelligence, and I would not have liked that one bit…

Still, now that I’m old enough for everyone to approve of my bad drinking habits, I can safely laugh at this.

Yeah, that probably applies to most kids in the target age group, whatever the decade. Teenage rebellion and all that.

Damned if they do, damned if they don’t I guess.

I know when I was a boy I was fortunate enough to enjoy plenty of harmless underage drinking fun. No violence, no regretful sex, just a few chunders here and there.

As JB said, more often than not underage drinking is not the worst thing a kiddie can do.

I hope someone gets fired for this. Regardless of the difficulties involved in attracting serious attention from young people, this effort is utter crap. Are the 9 boxes all horrible nightmarish outcomes? Because for every bad experience I’ve had with alcohol I can count two good ones. Where’s the “You came home and ended up watching American Idol on the couch and even though you hate the show you had a great time swearing at the idiots on the telly”

I suspect they might have been hoping for a “So bad it’s good” viral reaction, but it’s too long and takes itself too seriously for that. I’m particularly disgusted at the bullshit about getting a permanent record, I can’t believe it’s true in a city where juvenile burglars and violent offenders routinely have their records suppressed that a charge like underage drinking would follow someone for the rest of their life.

They really flatter the AFP, too, with that gimp in the cop uniform menacing the camera (by extension young drunk girls), which is sad because I thought our local cops had more tact than the thugs up in Sydney.

Poetix already highlighted the patronising approach the video has towards young ladies, I think all that’s left to say is that the concept of this video and the campaign behind it is a huge, stinking load.

bundah said :

It’s this type of absolute genius that makes me so proud to be a Canberran!

How canberran…

I sure as hell set myself up for that one,not that i’ve got anything against How Canberran 🙂

I thought it was good. Not necessarily productive, but good.

as for “ruining your reputation for life”

you old fogeys have to remember for a girl of 16, “for life” is the next 2 weeks. Remember the target audience people. These are girls that will “literally die of shame” if they hook up with a guy with glasses and a weird eyebrow.

gentoopenguin said :

“You hook up with this guy and ruin your reputation for life”

Happy International Womens Day, everyone!

And if you acquire a stalker it’s your own fault from being drunk! And ladies, while we are on the topic, you really should try harder not to get sexually assaulted, because you know, that is something which is your responsibility too!

How on earth did they ever think that this video was ok?

johnboy said :

I think I prefer the hipster to the game show hosts.

indeed, with his wandering hands… Don’t put your arm around the 16yo girl, sleazy gameshow host, and she isn’t even drunk. (Surely there’s a message there too?)

You have to hope that this ad is deliberately tongue in cheek, intended to make young people (men and women) discuss the issue, while rejecting many of the stereotypes in it.

The alternative is really quite worrying.

IP

It’s this type of absolute genius that makes me so proud to be a Canberran!

Judging by the amount of absolutely stunning girls I see walk down these halls, and then walk back again holding a box of valtrex or azithromycin makes me think that Sarah would be better off with old mate there. That said, why isn’t “drank some alcohol with your girlfriends, have a bit of a giggle and return home safely” an option? That’s what usually happens.

Holden Caulfield said :

johnboy said :

I think I prefer the hipster to the game show hosts.

Yes, the host is very sleazy looking.

Barcham, a serious question for you, what could ACT Policing have done to make you take notice while you were in your black eyeliner phase?

I get that it’s very easy to laugh at the honest attempt of ACT Policing to be relevant or appeal to kids, but, really, what’s the best way for adults with adult concerns to try and educate/warn kids who think they want to be like adults?

/old fart

IB4poetix: “I think he loos like a nice young man” tee hee, I missed the vision of the hipster’s toilet habits.

Dammit, I thought I’d edited out that loos!

Anyways as for your question about what they could have done to reach a young me?

Very little. Health warnings tend to bounce off the immortal young, shaking your fingers at me would have only increased the appeal of rebelling, and clumsy attempts to appeal to me (like the above video) would have felt equal parts patronising and hilarious. I don’t envy the people whose jobs are to make videos like this, and I may not have the answers to this problem, but I can tell you that obvious videos like this would have felt like they were insulting my intelligence, and I would not have liked that one bit…

Still, now that I’m old enough for everyone to approve of my bad drinking habits, I can safely laugh at this.

gentoopenguin2:26 pm 08 Mar 13

“You hook up with this guy and ruin your reputation for life”

Happy International Womens Day, everyone!

So what night spot are they off to at 16? Do they have blue light discos these days?

poetix said :

The suspected hipster looks harmless enough. I think it’s implied that he might be an intellectual or something. Just imagine if Sarah from Belconnen slept with someone who read books! Her precious reputation would take a pounding, and remember girls, your reputation is the Most Important Thing You Have. You must try and be normal at all times, and be overly sensitive about what judgmental morons might say about you.

Teaching girls self-respect through recycling 1950s values. Great thing to watch on International Women’s Day too.

Wow, I think you might be reading a wee bit much into that. If they were going for intellectual they missed it by a country mile.
The whole point as I saw it was that he was meant to be ugly, weird and likely to be a future stalker.

ps. Can’t we all just agree that hipsters deserve to be laughed at?

Now with the police media release on the findings of their research into teenagers.

Holden Caulfield said :

Damn, I wasn’t IB4poetix, haha.

But I didn’t mention loos, so you are first!

I was actually angry about this thing, and now realise I repeated much of what Bracken said. He said it quite well, too.

HardBallGets1:36 pm 08 Mar 13

So underage drinking is a crime that Police arrest young people for, ensuring they have a criminal record forever?

Really?

Odd message from the fun-stoppers really, because I thought they’ve just sunk a whole heap of cash in to diversion initiatives (EIPP & Youth Sobering Up Shelter) to ensure that young people who have consumed alcohol don’t end up in the justice system.

Oh well if there’s a police advert that says they arrest young drinkers and give them criminal records, then that is what they must be doing.

Holden Caulfield1:30 pm 08 Mar 13

Damn, I wasn’t IB4poetix, haha.

Holden Caulfield1:29 pm 08 Mar 13

johnboy said :

I think I prefer the hipster to the game show hosts.

Yes, the host is very sleazy looking.

Barcham, a serious question for you, what could ACT Policing have done to make you take notice while you were in your black eyeliner phase?

I get that it’s very easy to laugh at the honest attempt of ACT Policing to be relevant or appeal to kids, but, really, what’s the best way for adults with adult concerns to try and educate/warn kids who think they want to be like adults?

/old fart

IB4poetix: “I think he loos like a nice young man” tee hee, I missed the vision of the hipster’s toilet habits.

The problem is that drinking with friends when a teenager is not the end of the world.

You might have sex, you might get a blue light taxi, you might get in a fight with a friend but you don’t need booze for that.

The kids are already watching their parents enjoy a drink without the sky falling in.

Spending the money on actual enforcement strikes me as a better approach.

means less lunches with ad execs though.

The suspected hipster looks harmless enough. I think it’s implied that he might be an intellectual or something. Just imagine if Sarah from Belconnen slept with someone who read books! Her precious reputation would take a pounding, and remember girls, your reputation is the Most Important Thing You Have. You must try and be normal at all times, and be overly sensitive about what judgmental morons might say about you.

Teaching girls self-respect through recycling 1950s values. Great thing to watch on International Women’s Day too.

That’s enough to drive you to drink.

I think I prefer the hipster to the game show hosts.

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