alexandra_096's Blog Last Post: 736 days, 7 hours ago   
Ur Fave game in Grab!!!
Nov 17, 2007 | 10:22AM

This is a very simple game

Just VOTE U CAN WIn PriCEST from Grab Mart If u vote more  that 15 times

you vote

Rules: 

if u want 2 vote ; comment my blog your vote

u can REQUEST A GAME 2 vote on too

then i will post yours up

only can vote many times as u can and u can win stuff from grab mart

lastly tell a friend about this game

DEADLINE DECEMBER 30 or DECEMBER 25

Simple right

Spider Solitaire = 1

spades = 0

hansel mining co. = 0

night before christmass = 0

pool = 5

belle's beauty boutique = 0

gold miner : Vegas = 0

bake sale = 0

cake mania = 0

diner dash = 0

zuma = 0

digby doughnuts = 0

easter eggin' = 1

fairy treasures = 0

feeding frenzy = 0

hangsta trivia = 0

gold miner classic = 0

gold miner SE = 0

paulo the penguin = 0

zizzo chalenge = 0

valentiner = 0

tiki tumble = 0

trade wind = 0

tumble bugs = 0

text twist = 1

bookworm = 0

flip words = 0

fridge words = 0

serf's up = 3

scrambles

uhh thats all i can think of right now

SO PLEASE VOTE!!!!!!!!

I GIVIN" AWAY MY GRABBUCKS!!!!

YOU CAN WIN STUFF BY VOTING IN GRAB.COM!!!!!!!!!!!

 

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MY PeEpZ
Oct 21, 2007 | 6:26PM

Cool peepz that i now the most!!!

Britt169nickj = She is super nice and sweet to talk to

Ash4444 = trust me i can't explain her LOL

laser3000 = he is so cute and funny !!! (luv him)

gabbybaby (don't remember) = she is tremendously nice to talk 2!!

troy_aikman = funny and very goofy (drew)

Andrea_a = believe me you will never stop talking to her

Babyv1988 = fun 2 talk to really fun

hotline4( i guess) = i can't explain her LOL

jrlds= super nice and truthful

nique138? = really real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real real (100x) hottie

elezabeth101 = can't explain she amazin

nhluver = besties 4ever

thats all i can remember

comment me if u want your name to be in my peepz k!!

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Abercrombie and Fitch
Aug 22, 2007 | 10:39AM

Abercrombie & fitch was founded in 1892 by David Abercrombie and Ezra Fitch. Abercrombie & Fitch is an American lifestyle brand specializing in "Casual Luxury" apparel for college students ages 18 through 22. The company encompasses four brands: Abercrombie & Fitch, abercrombie, Hollister Co., and RUEHL No.925.

The merchandise is sold in the brands' retail stores, catalogs and online. As of June 2007, the company operates 984 stores in all U.S. states except New Mexico and Wyoming, six stores in Canada (3 of which are Hollister Co. stores), and one store in Savile Row, London, the first European flagship store. The company plans to continue expanding to Japan and adding more stores in Canada. The first international flagship store was opened in London, England on March 22, 2007. Another brand, known as "Gilly Hicks", an Australian-themed Lingere concept, is set to open its first store on January 2008 in Natick, Massachusetts.[3] A&F company is currently headed by Mike Jeffries.[4] [5]

Founded in 1892, the company was for many decades mainly an elite excursion goods retailer. The company struggled financially from the late 1960s until it was purchased by The Limited in 1988 and repositioned as a lifestyle brand in present day.

Image:Abercrombie Logo.PNG
Type Public (NYSEANF)
Founded June 4, 1892 (115 years active)
Headquarters 6301 Fitch Path
New Albany, Ohio 43054
Key People David Abercrombie, Founder
Ezra Fitch, Co-Founder
Mike Jeffries, Chairman & CEO
Industry Lifestyle apparel Stores
Apparel Type "Casual Luxury" Apparel
Initials A&F
Logo Moose
Theme East Coast Ivy League Heritage
Color Scheme Grayscale
Consumer Age 18 through 22
Areas Served Domestic:
Flag of the United States United States
Flag of Canada Canada
International:
Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Store Locations Flagships: 3
Fifth Avenue
The Grove at Farmers Market
7 Burlington Gardens in Savile Row
Westfield Century City
A&F Stores: 362.[1]
Entire Company Stores: 984.[2]
Other Brands Ages 7 - 14
abercrombie
Ages 14 - 18
Hollister Co.
Ages 18 - 22
Abercrombie & Fitch
Ages 22 - 35
RUEHL No.925
Revenue $2.021 Billion USD (2005)
Net Income $216.38 Million USD (2005)
Employees 80,100 (2006)
Website

www.abercrombie.com

 

During the beginning of the 20th century, Abercrombie & Fitch Co. was a retail store for New York's elite sporting expeditions. Prominent American figures who have worn clothing from the company include Charles Lindbergh, Amelia Earhart, John Sloan, Greta Garbo, Katharine Hepburn, Clark Gable, Harpo Marx, John Steinbeck, Tole Liberman, and author Ernest Hemingway (who is said to have bought the gun he used to commit suicide at Abercrombie & Fitch).[6]

 

[edit] Abercrombie & Fitch Co.

Catalog from 1909
Catalog from 1909
Cover of catalogue from 1909
Cover of catalogue from 1909

Partnership between the founders did not end well. David Abercrombie was more conservative and was content to continue the store as it was, selling professional gear to professional outdoorsmen. Ezra Fitch, on the other hand, was more eager to expand the brand by targeting the general public. The two quarreled frequently, even as the company grew increasingly successful. In 1907, Abercrombie sold his share in the company to Fitch and returned to manufacturing outdoor goods. Fitch continued the business with other partners and was, for the first time, able to direct the company in a manner to his pleasing.

Fitch determined that the store ought to have an outdoor feeling. Stock was not hidden behind glass cabinets. Instead, it was displayed as if in use. He set up a tent and equipped it as if it were out in the middle of the wilds of the Adirondacks. A campfire blazed in one corner, where an experienced guide was always in attendance, imparting valuable information to interested customers. Part of Fitch's strategy to expand the company was the creation of a mail-order catalog. In 1909, Abercrombie & Fitch mailed out over 50,000 copies of its 456 page catalog, which included outdoor clothing, camping gear, articles, and advice columns. The cost of the catalog nearly bankrupted the company, but it proved to be a profitable marketing device. By 1913, the store moved to a more fashionable and easily accessible midtown address just off Fifth Avenue, expanding its inventory to include sport clothing. A&F became the first store in New York to supply such clothing to women as well as men. In 1917, Abercrombie & Fitch Co. moved yet again to a twelve-story building at the corner of Madison Avenue & 45th Street. The store occupied the entire available space, making it the world's largest sporting goods store. Outside, a sign proclaimed, "Where the Blazed Trail Crosses the Boulevard."

The flagship store included many different amenities. In the basement there was a shooting range, on the mezzanine there was paraphernalia for skiing, archery, skin-diving, and lawn games. The second through the fifth floors were reserved for clothing that was suitable for any climate or terrain. On the sixth floor, there was a picture gallery and a bookstore that focused on sporting themes, a watch repair facility and a golf school, fully equipped with a resident professional. The seventh floor included a gun room, stuffed game heads, and about seven hundred shot guns and rifles. The eighth floor was dedicated solely to fishing, camping, and boating. It also included a desk that belonged to a fly- and bait-casting instructor who gave lessons at the pool, which was located on the roof. The fishing section of the store alone was stocked with over 48,000 flies and over 18,000 fishing lures. The clerks hired at Abercrombie & Fitch were not professional salesmen, but rugged outdoorsmen. Talking was their pleasure and selling was performed only at the customers' insistence.

 

[edit] Post-Ezra Fitch

In 1928, Ezra Fitch retired from the company. Despite the change in ownership, Abercrombie & Fitch continued to expand. The company rarely sold product with a name brand during this period, preferring to label nearly everything with their own logo. A notable example is a line of watches made by Heuer, but that prestigious maker's mark was only visible on the internal movement with "Abercrombie and Fitch" on the dial. Similar situations occurred across the product line. In 1939, it adopted the slogan, "The Greatest Sporting Goods Store in the World." By 1962, the company operated stores in Chicago (formerly Von Lengerke & Antoine, an associated sporting goods retailer since 1928), San Francisco, California, San malls in Short Hills, New Jersey (1963), Bal Harbour, Florida (1966), Troy, Michigan (1969) and Oak Brook, Illinois (1972). Despite the chain's apparent success, the company began to falter financially in the late 1960s and went bankrupt in 1977. Oshman's, a sporting goods retailer, acquired Abercrombie soon thereafter, but the company continued to struggle.

 

[edit] 1990-2000 - Revival of Abercrombie & Fitch

During 1988, The Limited Inc. (now called Limited Brands) acquired Abercrombie & Fitch,[7] determined to reinvigorate the ailing brand. The Limited had been successful in rolling out new concept stores, such as Express (women's clothing), and Victoria's Secret (lingerie and beauty products). Over the next decade, Abercrombie & Fitch was carefully rebuilt as a teen apparel merchandiser by CEO Mike Jeffries.[8]

The company began opening stores in upscale malls across America in the early 1990s, targeting teenagers and college students aged 18-22.[9] The clothing consists of: woven shirts, denim, miniskirts, cargo shorts, wool sweaters, polo shirts, and t-shirts. The clothing produced in the 1990s was fairly consistent with the brand's "preppy" image and tended to be less trend-driven than today's offerings, which bear significantly less resemblance to traditional preppy apparel. The store quickly became successful, and by the mid-1990s, there were dozens of Abercrombie & Fitch stores in the United States.[10] Careful marketing made the brand synonymous with understated, sexy, classic casual wear.[11] In 1996, The Limited took Abercrombie & Fitch public on the New York Stock Exchange and gradually phased out its ownership of the company.

In 1999, Abercrombie and Fitch was part of a law suit on the behalf of Saipan garment workers.15Many popular brands were charged with responsibility for sweatshop conditions, including Abercrombie and Fitch. As can be seen by the current popularity of Abercrombie and Fitch products, the affiliation with sweatshops had done little to deter consumers from continuing to purchase their products.

 

[edit] 2000-today

The company has opted to build only stores averaging 8,000 to 20,000 square feet (700 to 2,000 m²) in high-volume retail centers around the country. Throughout the 1990s, Abercrombie & Fitch enjoyed sales of over $400/ft² ($4300/m²) —high by retail standards—but that number has dropped significantly in recent years. As of 2003, sales were $345/ft² ($3700/m²).

In 2003, the company expanded its New Albany, Ohio, headquarters (a suburb of Columbus, Ohio)[1]. Set amid acres of forest, the compound features rustic, farm-styled structures with elements of modern architecture, a reflection of the company's outdoorsy roots. The campus includes a mess hall, fire pits, trails, a recreational center, and an Abercrombie & Fitch store, where marketing and design elements are developed. The interior design bears a likeness to the stores, furnished with dark wood and concrete floors, leather couches, and comfortably worn rugs.

In November 2005, the company completed construction of its flagship Fifth Avenue location in New York City. The store features five-levels of selling space with dark lighting, forms (mannequins) grouped together inside glass cases (as well as vintage rifles on another level) and wood shutters that hang inside every window. Fifth Avenue is the largest store in the chain and is located on 56th Street and 5th Avenue, alongside boutiques by luxury retailers such as Fendi, Prada, and Chanel. As of August 2006, the company completed the renovation of its store in The Grove at Farmers Market in Los Angeles into their second flagship.[12]

ABERCROMBIE AND FITCH TODAY

Marketing and management

Front view of the chain store design.
Front view of the chain store design.
Side view of the previous chain store design.
Side view of the previous chain store design.

The original store concept (referred to as the "chain store" concept) hearkened back to the outdoorsy image of company's early years. The store resembled a hunting lodge, with plaid carpeting, dark wood fixtures, and antler chandeliers. However, the company introduced a new store concept (referred to as the "canoe store" concept) in the late 1990s to accommodate its rapid growth. The first canoe store opened in June 1996 in Chesterfield Mall (Store #0634) in Chesterfield (St. Louis), MO. This original canoe store, however, does not have a white wooden front like most of today's A&F stores, but rather a tan stucco front with navy awnings. Common design elements of the canoe store prototype include a moose head mounted above the cash wrap and a canoe is mounted in the main room of each canoe store. Unlike the chain store, which typically has a wider storefront and two entrances, the canoe store has one main entrance and is walled off into at least five rooms.

Most of A&F's stores are (or have been remodeled to be) canoe stores. A few chain stores still exist, though in some cases with alterations. An example of a chain store location is at South Hills Village mall south of Pittsburgh which is still a classic chain store complete with plaid carpeting and preppy wallpaper. Chain store examples also exist at Atrium Mall in Chestnut Hill, as well at Lynnhaven Mall in Virginia Beach, although all of the antler chandeliers have been taken down from the ceiling. Also in 2006, the canoe stores' windows were remodeled to have wooden blinds installed into either side walls of the windows; the blinds swing open, creating a more enclosed interior atmosphere in the stores. Some chain stores have recently been remodeled, such as locations at Washington Square Mall in Tigard, Oregon (a suburb of Portland), and also at The Woodlands Mall in the The Woodlands, Texas (a suburb of Houston). In an unusual move, another suburban Houston mall, First Colony Mall in Sugar Land, Texas, saw its "chain store" close during its 2006 expansion, only to see A&F open a new "canoe store" in 2007.

The company manages merchandising, distribution, and sales by assigning each store a tier level (1, 2, 3, or 4) and a volume level (A, B, C, D, E, or F). Tier level determines what selection of the current clothing line is sent to a store. Tier 1 stores receive all of the current items in all styles and colors, for example, while lower tier stores are sent less merchandise in a smaller range of sizes and colors. A store's tier level is independent of its volume, since allocation is often dependent on available area of selling space. Some small stores are relatively high volume, but lack the floor space needed to support the entire line. A store can have different tier designations for its men's and women's sides. (Women's retail normally outperforms men's by a ratio of about 2:1, though in certain markets the difference is greater or less.) The company designates Volume A stores, usually in major cities and tourist destinations, as "elite" or "super-elite." There are three super elite (AA) stores (Ala Moana in Honolulu, Aventura in Miami, and South Street Seaport in New York City) and fewer than thirty elite (A) stores in the chain including the new international store in West Edmonton Mall, the largest indoor mall in North America in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.[13]

 

[edit] abercrombie.com

The website features the seasonal "A&F: New Faces" video. Previous videos featured all the A&F season models, but this one mainly focuses on the main marketing campaign model, Kris Lewin. Shortly after its opening of it newest flagship store in Savile Row London, England on March 22, 2007, abercrombie.com was blocked to United Kingdom users and introduced a dedicated UK site. Users can now no longer compare prices between the US and UK markets. This is because UK prices are up to twice the price of the same product in the US. This is similar in Canada, as they have a dedicated Canadian site, and like in the UK, users are blocked from accessing the US site. Prices in Canada are up to 5%-10% more expensive for the same product in the US.

 

[edit] International expansion

The company marked its expansion into Canada in January 2006, opening two Abercrombie & Fitch stores and three Hollister Co. stores in that country. In Fall 2006, a third Abercrombie & Fitch store opened in the Toronto Eaton Centre. The company will add additional stores in Canada during the next several years and plan to open stores in Europe and Asia.

The Company opened its first European location in London, on March 22, 2007. The store did a volume of $380,000 on its first day.[citation needed] Upon the opening of the store the UK market gained a dedicated website that showed the range available in the UK store priced in Pound Sterling. All UK users are now unable to access the US Abercrombie.com site to compare pricing between the two markets (some items have been priced with a direct $/£ swap as well as a hefty mark-up making them much more expensive in the UK than the US.) Dublin is currently thought to be the next European location in which Abercrombie & Fitch will open a store.[14]

The company is also considering opening a flagship store in Ginza in Tokyo, Japan around 2009. Currently Abercrombie & Fitch has a large advertisement in the popular and classy Ginza District of Tokyo. The opening of the Tokyo store should lower counterfeits and importing to the country. Currently Abercrombie & Fitch clothing can be purchased at small Japanese shops for three to four times the actual cost (The American price tag is usually still on them). As the Abercrombie & Fitch brand reaches its full growth potential in the U.S., the company is depending on Hollister Co. and RUEHL No.925 to act as its primary growth vehicles in the U.S.

Abercrombie & Fitch has another advertising in Quito, Ecuador, South America. A&F and Hollister clothing can also be purchased at very few shops in Ecuador for three to four times the price. Another important fact is that Ecuador has a high level of "A&F piracy".

Abercrombie & Ftich is now sold throughout New Zealand in General Issue Supply Co. stores, who also stock Hollister and the stores own brand, General Issue.

 

[edit] Flagship stores

Abercrombie & Fitch currently operates three full flagship stores in New York, Los Angeles, and London, England. The following is a complete list of flagships:

Abercrombie & Fitch recently leased back the Faneuil Hall location in Boston, MA that they moved out more than three years ago. It will be three floors instead of the eight it previously occupied. Some suggest that this location will be a flagship.


 

[edit] abercrombie Kids

Main article: abercrombie Kids

abercrombie is a version of the A&F brand with youth sizes, targeted at ages 7-14. The store uses the same moose logo as the adult store but the name is spelled with a lowercase "a". The merchandise is styled similar to that from the adult A&F stores, but prices are 30-40% lower. There are about 180 stores in the U.S. The store setup resembles that of the parent brand; dark brown hardwood floors, white and grey painted walls and loud, techno/dance/pop music that the company believes creates a "classic cool" (as opposed to casual luxury) atmosphere. So, they are almost the same with the same styles.

 

[edit] Hollister Co.

Main article: Hollister Co.

Hollister Co. is a California-inspired apparel brand targeted towards patrons ages 14-18 with a lower price range than Abercrombie and Fitch. Hollister stores have a worn and washed out impoverished beach side boardwalk theme, the facade resembles a dump-front shack made from driftwood, and dimly lit interior with surfboards mounted on the storefront wall and a wood floor that looks like aged western red cedar shingles. When the brand began to absorb A&F's customer base, Abercrombie & Fitch clothing began utilizing higher-grade materials and construction (and raising prices as a result), to provide more differentiation between the two stores.

 

[edit] RUEHL 925

Main article: RUEHL 925

RUEHL is a Greenwich Village inspired brand that caters to the post-collegiate customers. The prices at Ruehl are about 30% higher than at Abercrombie & Fitch and the brand is the first in the company to produce a leather goods line. Goods at RUEHL are said to have a close resemblance to the Ezra Fitch line of clothes sold at Abercrombie & Fitch stores. RUEHL is currently using their name on most of their products, rather than a symbol; although their collection of solid polos have solely their mascot, a French bulldog by the name of "Trubble", on them.

 

[edit] Inferno Elite Racing Team

Abercrombie & Fitch is a sponsor of the Inferno Elite Racing Team, a non-profit cycling team. The team uniforms have the "A&F" logo across the chest of their uniform which is accented with camouflage patterns. [15]

 

[edit] A&F TV

In 1999, the company rolled out "A&F TV", a feature that spotlights young people engaged in sports and leisure activities. A&F TV was originally developed to run on cable television and on monitors in Abercrombie & Fitch stores, but was offered only on the company's website until recently.

 

[edit] Controversy and criticism

 

[edit] A&F Quarterly

Main article: A&F Quarterly

The most conspicuous of the company's lifestyle branding efforts was its now-defunct magazine, A&F Quarterly, which the company published from 1997-2003. The publication was a hybrid magazine and catalog (company officials referred to it as a "magalog"), and featured advice columns, articles about college life, and—most famously—the highly sexual work of the photographer Bruce Weber.

The A&F Quarterly became a lightning rod for controversy shortly after it was published. The Quarterly contained mostly nude models, while the clothes would often be displayed by themselves, laid on a flat surface. It featured photographs of male and female models posing in pairs or groups. The racy publication made a splash with young customers and had one of the highest circulation rates among young adults of any magazine in the late 1990s.

The magazine also gained a certain iconic, coffee-table status among gay men because of its heavy doses of shirtless young men and homo erotic imagery. Print advertisements for the A&F Quarterly appeared in Interview and Out magazines in addition to Rolling Stone and Vanity Fair.

Despite a company policy restricting sale of the publication to adults, critics charged that the publication was readily sold to minors. Several states threatened to pursue legal action, though the company was never charged with violating any related statutes.

The publication was also criticized on moral grounds, for featuring sexually explicit interviews with porn stars, and articles that, according to critics, glamorized alcohol consumption, sex, and homosexuality.

In 2003, an array of religious organizations, women's rights activists, and Asian-American groups organized boycotts and protests over the publication, and the "Christmas Edition" of the catalog was removed from stores.[16]

In 2004, "A&F Magazine", a comparatively tame collection of photos and essays about rising celebrities, replaced the publication altogether.

 

[edit] Products

The company's clothing has also been the subject of criticism. In 2002, controversy erupted over shirts featuring caricatures of Asians and other ethnic groups. One shirt featured the slogan "Wong Brothers Laundry Service—Two Wongs Can Make It White" with smiling figures in conical hats, a 1900s popular-culture depiction of Chinese immigrants. The company discontinued the designs and apologized after a boycott by Asian-American student groups at universities such as Stanford.[17] That same year, the children's clothing division removed a line of thong underwear sold for girls in pre-teen children's sizes after parents mounted nationwide storefront protests. The underwear included phrases like "Eye Candy" and "Wink Wink" printed on the front.

More T-shirt controversy occurred twice in 2004. The first incident involved a shirt featuring the phrase, "It's All Relative in West Virginia," an apparent jab at incest relations in rural America. West Virginia governor Bob Wise spoke out against the company for depicting "an unfounded, negative stereotype of West Virginia," but the shirts were not removed.[18]

The second incident involved another t-shirt with the phrase "L is for Loser" written next to a picture of a male gymnast on the rings (the same shirt was worn by Tyson Ritter of The All-American Rejects in the music video for "Move Along"). The company stopped selling the shirt in October 2004 after USA Gymnastics president Bob Colarossi announced a boycott of Abercrombie & Fitch for mocking the sport.

In November 2005, the Women & Girls Foundation of Southwest Pennsylvania launched a "girl-cott" of the store for selling T-shirts bearing phrases like "Who needs brains when you have these?" in reference to large breasts and dumb blondes. The campaign went national on NBC's The Today Show, and the company pulled the shirts from stores on November 5, 2005.[19]

Bob Jones University and its affiliated pre-collegiate schools along with other Christian schools have forbidden Abercrombie & Fitch clothing from being "worn, carried, or displayed" on its campuses because of "an unusual degree of antagonism to the name of Christ and an unusual display of wickedness" in the company's advertising. [20]

 

[edit] Employment practices

For four years, Abercrombie & Fitch has faced accusations of discrimination against minority employees. A 2004 lawsuit — Gonzalez v. Abercrombie & Fitch — accused the company of discriminating against minority employees by offering desirable positions to White American employees. The company agreed to an out-of-court settlement of the class action suit. As part of the settlement terms, A&F agreed to pay US$45 million to rejected applicants and affected employees, institute policies and programs that promote diversity in its workforce and advertising campaigns, appoint a Vice President of Diversity, hire 25 recruiters to seek minority employees, and discontinue the practice of recruiting employees at primarily white fraternities and sororities.[21]

Dwight A. McBride has written a book titled Why I Hate Abercrombie and Fitch: Essays on Race and Sexuality, which explores greater American intergroup relations while criticizing Abercrombie and Fitch.[2]. "In. ..10...provocative essays, McBride explores. ..points. ..[including] the way the hair and clothing guidelines for Abercrombie & Fitch employees ensure an almost all-white staff)."

Abercrombie & Fitch became involved in another lawsuit regarding their employee hour distribution. This came as a result of the practice of giving preferential treatment to those they "ranked" as most beautiful.[dubious ]

Abercrombie & Fitch brands offer three main part-time positions: Impact Team, Model (formerly "Brand Rep"), and Overnight. Impact are responsible for the back stock rooms, Models primarily interact with customers on the store floors, and Overnight associates are in charge of floor sets and store recovery (maintenance and presentation of merchandise for the following day).All abercrombie employments who are guys are hot.

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ASL means...............
Aug 18, 2007 | 11:07AM

I'm writing this blog for people don't know whats ASL means.Smiley

ASL means

A- your age

S- your sex or gender

L- your location

please read this!!!!!!!

thx

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proof thats Ashley .T. is fake!!!!!!!!!!!!
Jul 13, 2007 | 8:49AM

Okay Ya'll Ashley_tisdale10 is fake if ya'll don'y believe me heres the 100% percent proof.

 

                                                                 

               

okay now you see it

this is the second one

 

                 okay u see that the "W" is cut off

and 10 and PROOFin tint '

 

 

OKAY SO NOW YA'LL UNDERSTAND WAT I'M SAYING....

SOME PEOPLE IS BELIEVER U BETTER GET YOUR GUTS OUT  MY BLOG.........

AND ANTI BELIVER I APPRECIATE THAT ..

BUT I  STILL ASHLEY .T. IDOL.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

 

A'

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HSM 2 lyrics
Jun 23, 2007 | 8:17AM

 

High School Musical - What Time Is It? Lyrics



[chorus]
What time is it?
Summertime!
It’s our vacation.
What time is it?
Party time!
That’s right, say it loud.
What time is it?
Time of our lives. Anticipation.
What time is it?
Summertime!
School’s out. Scream and shout.

[Troy]
Finally summer’s here.
Good to be chillin’ out.
I’m off the clock. The pressure’s off.
Now my girl’s what it’s all about.

[Gabriella]
Ready for some sunshine.
For my heart to take a chance.
I’m here to stay, and I’m moving away.
Ready for a summer romance.

[Troy & Gabriella]
Everybody ready, going crazy, yeah we’re out.
Come on and let me hear you say it now. Right now.

[chorus]
What time is it?
Summertime!
It’s our vacation.
What time is it?
Party time!
That’s right, say it loud.
What time is it?
Time of our lives. Anticipation.
What time is it?
Summertime!
School’s out. Scream and shout.

[Sharpay]
Play by the rules.
No summer school.
I’m free to shop til I drop.

[Ryan]
It’s an education vacation.

[Ryan & Sharpay]
And the party never has to stop.

[Sharpay]
We’ve got things to do.
We’ll see you soon.

[Ryan]
And we’re really gonna miss ya all.

[Sharpay]
Goodbye to you and you.

[Ryan]
And you and you.

[Ryan & Sharpay]
Bye bye til next fall!

[Ryan & Sharpay]
[ What Time Is It lyrics found on http://www.completealbumlyrics.com ]
Everybody ready, going crazy, yeah we’re out.
Come on and let me here it now. Right now.

[chorus]
What time is it?
Summertime!
It’s our vacation.
What time is it?
Party time!
That’s right, say it loud.
What time is it?
Time of our lives. Anticipation.
What time is it?
Summertime!
School’s out. Scream and shout.

[Troy & Gabriella]
No more waking up at 6 AM.
Cuz now our time is all our own.

[Ryan & Sharpay]
Enough already. We’re waiting.
Come on, let’s go.

Go out of control!

Alright.
Everybody.
Yeah.

School pride. Let’s show it.
We’re champions, and we know it.
Wildcats! We are the best! Red, white, and gold.

When it’s time to win, we do it.
We’re number one. We proved it.

Let’s live it up. Get the party down.
That’s what the summer’s all about.

What time is it?

[Gabriella]
Summertime is finally here.

Let’s celebrate.

[Troy & Gabriella]
Wanna hear you loud and clear now.

School’s out.

[Chad & Taylor]
We can sleep as late as we want to...

It’s our time!

[Ryan & Sharpay]
Now we can do whatever we wanna do.

What time is it?
It’s summertime.

We’re lovin' it.
Come on and sing it loud now!

What time is it?
It’s party time.

Let’s go have the time of our lives.

I hope you guys enjoy!

Remember to watch HSM 2 AUGUST  17 IN Disney Channel.......................................

Smiley

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HSM 2 lyrics
Jun 23, 2007 | 8:17AM

 

High School Musical - What Time Is It? Lyrics



[chorus]
What time is it?
Summertime!
It’s our vacation.
What time is it?
Party time!
That’s right, say it loud.
What time is it?
Time of our lives. Anticipation.
What time is it?
Summertime!
School’s out. Scream and shout.

[Troy]
Finally summer’s here.
Good to be chillin’ out.
I’m off the clock. The pressure’s off.
Now my girl’s what it’s all about.

[Gabriella]
Ready for some sunshine.
For my heart to take a chance.
I’m here to stay, and I’m moving away.
Ready for a summer romance.

[Troy & Gabriella]
Everybody ready, going crazy, yeah we’re out.
Come on and let me hear you say it now. Right now.

[chorus]
What time is it?
Summertime!
It’s our vacation.
What time is it?
Party time!
That’s right, say it loud.
What time is it?
Time of our lives. Anticipation.
What time is it?
Summertime!
School’s out. Scream and shout.

[Sharpay]
Play by the rules.
No summer school.
I’m free to shop til I drop.

[Ryan]
It’s an education vacation.

[Ryan & Sharpay]
And the party never has to stop.

[Sharpay]
We’ve got things to do.
We’ll see you soon.

[Ryan]
And we’re really gonna miss ya all.

[Sharpay]
Goodbye to you and you.

[Ryan]
And you and you.

[Ryan & Sharpay]
Bye bye til next fall!

[Ryan & Sharpay]
[ What Time Is It lyrics found on http://www.completealbumlyrics.com ]
Everybody ready, going crazy, yeah we’re out.
Come on and let me here it now. Right now.

[chorus]
What time is it?
Summertime!
It’s our vacation.
What time is it?
Party time!
That’s right, say it loud.
What time is it?
Time of our lives. Anticipation.
What time is it?
Summertime!
School’s out. Scream and shout.

[Troy & Gabriella]
No more waking up at 6 AM.
Cuz now our time is all our own.

[Ryan & Sharpay]
Enough already. We’re waiting.
Come on, let’s go.

Go out of control!

Alright.
Everybody.
Yeah.

School pride. Let’s show it.
We’re champions, and we know it.
Wildcats! We are the best! Red, white, and gold.

When it’s time to win, we do it.
We’re number one. We proved it.

Let’s live it up. Get the party down.
That’s what the summer’s all about.

What time is it?

[Gabriella]
Summertime is finally here.

Let’s celebrate.

[Troy & Gabriella]
Wanna hear you loud and clear now.

School’s out.

[Chad & Taylor]
We can sleep as late as we want to...

It’s our time!

[Ryan & Sharpay]
Now we can do whatever we wanna do.

What time is it?
It’s summertime.

We’re lovin' it.
Come on and sing it loud now!

What time is it?
It’s party time.

Let’s go have the time of our lives.

I hope you guys enjoy!

Remember to watch HSM 2 AUGUST  17 IN Disney Channel.......................................

Smiley

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alexandra_096  

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kinda emo but simple and
preppy girl