Forums › Forums › General Discussion › about oingo boingo……
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- March 20, 2004 at 10:20 pm #36454
Anonymous
Guesti just have to say i’m so sick of people asking me who Oingo Boingo is!
only my gutiar teacher knows exactly who they are and is a fan himself (right now hes trying to learn one of Boingos songs and hes gonna teach me it)
anyway even some older people i know don’t know him
Im also a big fan of Bryan Adams and only a few people i know, know who he is too
god im so sick of my skool!
all the damn cliques are everywhere and they all wanna be black and “ghetto”
it pisses me off so bad
i want to go to the school where my boyfriend is going next year, its an institute for musicans.
okay now that i have that off my chest, about Oingo Boingo’s music
I seriously think they are one of the best bands of the 80s… even today!
there isnt one song i dont like from them
and i think its cool they dont just have percussion and gutiar in there either, they also have the saxaphone players and keyboard
i think their style is very different and awsome
(thats why i like them so much)
o and one question, I dont know if im saying the bands name right:
is it pronounced: O-ing-go Bo-ing-go or something else? someone told me its pronounced Wang-go Boang-go or something like that
thanks a bunchMarch 20, 2004 at 11:17 pm #49043Anonymous
GuestOyngo Boyngo
March 21, 2004 at 1:34 am #49047Anonymous
GuestKinda off topic, but I know how you feel about school, Angelica. I was homeschooled for most of my education, but I went to public school for one year when I was a freshman in high school. God, I wanted out so bad. It was one of the worst experiences I’ve ever had. Even orchestra “class”. I won’t say any more.
March 21, 2004 at 11:11 pm #49070Anonymous
GuestI’ve been “in school” at both ends of the spectrum – both as a teacher and as a student. I’d hazard a guess that the problem doesn’t rest entirely on your classmates’ shoulders, Angelica. Teachers impact a school’s atmosphere just as much, if not moreso, than the students. The only difference is that teacher drama goes on behind the scenes, whereas it’s the students’ gore-fest everyone sees and rushes in to analyze and blame when tragedy of any sort strikes, savvy? Challenge your teachers (respectfully, I’ll add) and your classmates; then you’ll be getting somewhere. Sitting around moping does nothing – and in all seriousness, that wasn’t meant as a personal affront. I simply stated it as my own personal belief – do with it what you will.
All the best,
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