Donny and Marie bring hit show to The Venue
http://www.nwitimes.com/entertainment/m ... af3ba.htmlWhile the Jackson family was getting second billing Donnie & Marie was singing the Jackson 5 music all the way to the bank and now they come to the region to cash in again will they sing any of the Jacksons music which made them so famous in the 70s .
Grifters!
Do you think they will come to Gary and pay any homage to the fallen Pop Star and their family?
I doubt it. They owe their success to the Jackson family who they often imitated.
The culture shock still goes on James Brown should have song songs of Elvis Presley ha ha ha ha ha ha ha h ah ha ha ha !!!!!!!!!
Then Michael Jackson marries Elvis's daughter ha ha ha ha ha ha !!!!!!!
Don't forget he purchased the Beatles collection!
Then the Muslims build a Mosque at ground zero!
Man what is America coming to when Indian's can have gambling casino's and we can't have our own bigoted separate and sacred places and music?
Ha ha ha ha ah ha ha ha ha !
Now misconstrue this all you want!
Sarcastic sar·casti·cal·ly adv.
Synonyms: sarcastic, ironic, caustic, satirical, sardonic
These adjectives mean having or marked by a feeling of bitterness and a biting or cutting quality. Sarcastic suggests sharp taunting and ridicule that wounds: "a deserved reputation for sarcastic, acerbic and uninhibited polemics" (Burke Marshall).
Ironic implies a subtler form of mockery in which an intended meaning is conveyed obliquely: "a man of eccentric charm, ironic humor, andabove allprofound literary genius" (Jonathan Kirsch).
Caustic means corrosive and bitingly trenchant: "The caustic jokes ... deal with such diverse matters as political assassination, talk-show hosts, medical ethics" (Frank Rich).
Satirical implies exposure, especially of vice or folly, to ridicule: "on the surface a satirical look at commercial radio, but also a study of the misuse of telecommunications" (Richard Harrington).
Sardonic is associated with scorn, derision, mockery, and often cynicism: "He was proud, sardonic, harsh to inferiority of every description" (Charlotte Brontë).