Russian fans
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I forgot to tell you all: HAPPY HALLOWEEN!!!!!!!
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Paul, Heather and Bea at Disneyland Unconfirm reports say that Paul and Heather took Beatrice to Disneyland for her second birthday on October 28th. The threesome were spotted at the Winnie The Pooh ride.
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Rocío Record:
I forgot to tell you all: HAPPY HALLOWEEN!!!!!!!
Thank you Rocio. You'got a lovely new avatar
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feact:
Paul, Heather and Bea at Disneyland Unconfirm reports say that Paul and Heather took Beatrice to Disneyland for her second birthday on October 28th. The threesome were spotted at the Winnie The Pooh ride.
Hey feact! Do you have photos?
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ValeRigby:
feact:
Paul, Heather and Bea at Disneyland Unconfirm reports say that Paul and Heather took Beatrice to Disneyland for her second birthday on October 28th. The threesome were spotted at the Winnie The Pooh ride.
Hey feact! Do you have photos?
No... I don't have pics of them
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feact:
ValeRigby:
feact:
Paul, Heather and Bea at Disneyland Unconfirm reports say that Paul and Heather took Beatrice to Disneyland for her second birthday on October 28th. The threesome were spotted at the Winnie The Pooh ride.
Hey feact! Do you have photos?
No... I don't have pics of them
Shit!
Hey feact! I couldn't download those pics of Paul, Heather and Bea in the swimming pool
If you have some pics, Do you can send me them? This is my email: valerigby@yahoo.com.ar Thank a lot!
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This is mine anagram, made by Podgie the monkey
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WOW! I want one too!
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ValeRigby:
WOW! I want one too!
Great, isn't it .
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ValeRigby:
WOW! I want one too!
You can ask him to make one for you, he is a wizzard in all this stuff. Here is his thread. http://macca.devstars.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=19949&start=1575
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Wednesday, November 02, 2005 McCartney ascends on wings of "Wren" An hour into his set Tuesday night at the Pepsi Center, Paul McCartney stepped forward, alone, with an acoustic guitar and a song that will faithfully and steadily take him into the next phase of his career. "Jenny Wren" takes the "Eleanor Rigby" route of songwriting, and while the narrative isn't as driving, the pop sensibility is the same. And the song is more fitting of the McCartney of 2005 and his inimitable, aging English baritone than anything else in his live catalog, which fans already know by heart. McCartney's two-hour set, preceded by a awkward DJ set and superfluous 10-minute mini-documentary, was as sprawling as you would imagine. Beatles favorites were firmly planted in there - including a spectacular late-set combo of "Blackbird" and "Eleanor Rigby" - and his solo songwriting also played a strong, though less important, role in the hit-packed evening. His new material, from the stellar "Jenny Wren" to the less impressive "Fine Line" and "English Tea," played its role without being too invasive. And so did the essential McCartney/George Harrison composition of "In Spite of All the Danger," a song that predates The Beatles and was an obvious building block for the band that would become the greatest of all time. "Jenny Wren" is essential because without it, McCartney is floating in a curious space in pop culture - part anachronism, part ageless genius. So much of his writing from the '60s and '70s lives on as the best and most memorable of its kind, regardless of the era. But much of his material from the '80s - power ballads and synth/piano anthems alike - fails to resonate with the same relevance. (See "Band on the Run," which came 90 minutes into the set, and "Back in the USSR," which - with the help of a beautifully modernized "Hey Jude" - helped bring him into the encore.) But while the McCartney mullet is still there - as is the strange, heavyweight boxer-like parading after every couple songs, his guitar or bass held over his head like a glittering championship belt - this was a man who is coming into himself, again. He turned 63 in June, and a few months later he proved he still has it with the oftentimes brilliant record "Chaos and Creation in the Backyard." Aside from "Jenny Wren," McCartney was at his best playing acoustic versions of the songs that made him famous. "For No One" took on a newfound sincerity, and "I Will" was a hauntingly sweet meditation on young love. The acoustic work continued with a lovely "I'll Follow the Sun," the chorus of which he playfully - and methodically - brought back repeatedly. He followed it with the new "Follow Me," which isn't a standout track but is the one he dedicated to his wife, Heather Mills, and their baby, Beatrice Milly McCartney, who turned 2 last week. music critic Ricardo Baca
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http://images.ibsys.com/2005/1031/5212793_400X300.jpg Paul in cocert at Omaha
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http://www.thenewstribune.com/ae/story/5309726p-4812951c.html Link JOHN FROSCHAUER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pearl Jam?s Eddie Vedder, left, and his wife, Jill McCormick, wait in line for Paul McCartney to autograph his new children?s book, ?High in the Clouds,? Friday at a Lake Forest Park bookstore. McCartney displays sensitivity for children at book event DEBBIE CAFAZZO; The News Tribune Published: November 5th, 2005 03:00 AM JOHN FROSCHAUER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pearl Jam?s Eddie Vedder, left, and his wife, Jill McCormick, wait in line for Paul McCartney to autograph his new children?s book, ?High in the Clouds,? Friday at a Lake Forest Park bookstore. He can rock ?n? roll. And read and write. And of course, former Beatle Paul McCartney can lay on the charm like few others on the planet. On Friday, McCartney charmed an estimated crowd of 1,500 mostly middle-age fans, a class of second- and third-grade students and an admiring Eddie Vedder from Pearl Jam (with his toddling daughter) who all gathered at a bookstore north of Seattle. The occasion: Rock-star-turned-author McCartney was signing and reading from his new children?s book, ?High in the Clouds? (Penguin, $19.99). It?s a tale of Wirral the Squirrel, whose woodland home is destroyed by development and whose mother is tragically killed. Even Eddie got a signed book ? and yes, he had to wait in line, briefly, for the autograph. Third Place Books in Lake Forest Park handed out 750 tickets (two fans per ticket) for the event. And the lucky kids who got the private reading were from Briarcrest Elementary in Shoreline. Most of the children seemed pretty Beatles-savvy. One curly-haired boy listed ?Love Me Do? ? an early Beatles hit ? and ?Let It Be? ? among their last ? among his favorites. McCartney, sensing that the children were a little nervous due to the constant flashing and clicking of cameras from the press pen, immediately worked to put the kids at ease. ?Turn around and wave to them,? he urged the kids. And they did. So did McCartney. When he got to the saddest part of his story ? where Wirral the Squirrel?s mum is dying ? McCartney?s face registered a frown of concern and he looked out to make sure the children were OK. As he read her dying words, ?You must find Animalia, You?ll be safe there,? his voice lowered to a dramatic whisper. It?s the kind of heart-melting move that?s been his trademark for years. After reading a bit, McCartney took questions from the children. Why a story about a squirrel? one girl wanted to know. Well, McCartney explained, the mouse has been done with Mickey. And so have lots of other animals. Besides, he liked the idea that squirrel rhymes with Wirral ? the name of a place near Liverpool ?where I come from in England.? The kids might have needed McCartney to fill in the bio-details. But not the adoring fans who lined up in the rain outside. Many of them have followed his career since the 1960s. Kim Killen, 51, of University Place was there with her 21-year-old son, Tyler. She?d been to McCartney?s Thursday concert in Seattle, and the thought of meeting him in person would, she said, allow her to ?die happy.? Debbie Cafazzo: 253-597-8635 debbie.cafazzo@thenewstribune.com
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I'now wonder where Diana D is. She hasn't been online for a while, and now I'm worrying about her. Di, please let us know that evething is fine with you. And also the other Russians on this thread, where are you now ???