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May. 3rd, 2002 04:02 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
hey
oddment!
I think I have the solution to your problems!
It's a POCKET MUSE!

What Never Ending Story character are you?Yeah, Ceni did this.
this next one was even more silly than the usual, because there were too many possible results and... honestly, the first question? I could have answered yes on most of them. The question about "which you'd be more likely to say?" - most of the characters who the quotes were taken from were very similar. So I don't think it was the best-designed test, though I bet it still took a lot of work.

You are Cameron
Diaz!
You acted in cool movies like:
Charlie's Angels, Vanilla Sky, Being John Malkovich,
Very Bad Things, Life Less Ordinary
and There's Something About Mary.
Take the "Which Hollywood Princess are you?"
quiz @ planetag.de
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
I think I have the solution to your problems!
It's a POCKET MUSE!

What Never Ending Story character are you?Yeah, Ceni did this.
this next one was even more silly than the usual, because there were too many possible results and... honestly, the first question? I could have answered yes on most of them. The question about "which you'd be more likely to say?" - most of the characters who the quotes were taken from were very similar. So I don't think it was the best-designed test, though I bet it still took a lot of work.

You are Cameron
Diaz!
You acted in cool movies like:
Charlie's Angels, Vanilla Sky, Being John Malkovich,
Very Bad Things, Life Less Ordinary
and There's Something About Mary.
Take the "Which Hollywood Princess are you?"
quiz @ planetag.de
thanks :)
Date: 2002-05-03 11:53 pm (UTC)I thought it was going to be a tiny little mythical thing. :)
I almost got a writing book yesterday. It was written by an old woman in her late eighties. She'd been in publishing and journalism for something like 55 years, and I liked it just because it was so. . .pointed. Instead of being coddling, the first chapter was about how a professional athelete would *never* try his sport once, do badly, quit for a year because of his bad showing, and then still expect to make a career of it- but people often write a poem or short story and have it rejected and basically behave that way.
Most writing books seem to. . . almost encourage procrastination, in me at least. But that one was really neat.
But it lost out to "Beginner's Japanese."
(I'm doing all right without muses, though. It's probably better this way since I don't have to cook.)