But there’re a lot of emotionally unstable angry teenagers out there that would love to buy lots of useless ugly things from their rolemodel, so it might be a success .floozyfloo wrote:Also what the fuck does Gleam think they're doing, supporting the creation of a brand based off teenaged-emotional-drama ??? Like I'm no businesswoman, but that's an unstable and cheap business concept.dissolved wrote:I think it is extremely embarrassing that Suzie is almost in her 30s and is acting like a spoilt 15 year old STILL going through her break up?
Does she not realise that all these "bad bi*tch" quotes make her look pathetic, unprofessional and most of all, the exact opposite of what she is trying to prove she is? All the sad attempts and digs at her ex boyfriend are a sad indication that she has not moved on, she is still hurting and it is not okay.
And that would have been fine! It's okay to be hurt, Sue. It's really unhealthy to pretend things are swell when in reality they're not.
Also annoyed at the Ariana projecting thing- two totally different situations, not sure why Sue thinks she's the British version of her?
Maybe it's the hair? Cause it definitely isn't the pettiness, nor emotional age, nor her past relationships.
I saw such a girl on the train yesterday and she clearly thought she was all that with her aggressive f*uck you-attitute and I sure a “girl boss”-T-shirt from Susie would perfectly match with that.