Thursday, April 29, 2004

Hello,
There is a HOT* HOT* HOT new blowjob gallery featuring SUPER SEXY Nicole Sheridan in the Playhouse today for your enjoyment!!!!

In other news, Christine Dupree came across my post here from Tuesday. She issued a challenge for me to meet her at the gym this Sunday...............I guess she'll be keeping the cap on her energy drink on tight!

-- XXOO Tanya

Tuesday, April 27, 2004

Hello,

Christine Dupree is a phenomenal athlete. I'm not. Did that necessarily give me the right to slip a tranquilizer into her energy drink before our confrontation? Perhaps not, but who cares? I dominated her for the duration of our 20 minute match. 20 minutes of keeping Christine pinned to the mat, most of that time with my sweaty pussy in her face, has kept me smiling for the past week. Particularly since all the evidence is here inside my Playhouse in today's update!! Was it unsportsmanlike conduct? Of course it was. Just trust me that Christine had it coming after all the times she's kicked my ass and lorded it over me in the past few years. PAYBACK IS A BITCH!!!!!

-- XXOO Tanya

Friday, April 23, 2004

Ex-NFL star Tillman makes ‘ultimate sacrifice’
Safety, who gave up big salary to join Army, killed in Afghanistan

Pat Tillman turned down a $3.6 million contract in 2002 to join the Army in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.


NBC, MSNBC and news services
Updated: 7:33 p.m. ET April  23, 2004

WASHINGTON - Pat Tillman, who gave up the glamorous life of a professional football star to join the Army Rangers, was remembered as a role model of courage and patriotism Friday after military officials said he had been killed in action in Afghanistan.

“Pat Tillman was an inspiration on and off the football field, as with all who have made the ultimate sacrifice in the war on terror. His family is in the thoughts and prayers of President and Mrs. Bush,” Taylor Gross, a spokesman for the White House, said in a statement.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., the author of a recent book about courage, said he was “heartbroken” and raised the prospect that “the tragic loss of this extraordinary young man” could be a “heavy blow to our nation’s morale, as it is surely a grievous injury to his loved ones.”

Tillman, 27, was a member of the 2nd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, based at Fort Lewis, Wash. The battalion was involved in Operation Mountain Storm in southeastern Afghanistan, part of the U.S. campaign against fighters of the al-Qaida terror network and the former Taliban government along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, military officials told NBC News.


Tillman was killed Thursday night in a firefight with anti-coalition militia forces about 25 miles southwest of a U.S. military base at Khost, near the Afghan-Pakistan border, which has been the scene of frequent attacks, U.S. officials said.

Two other U.S. soldiers on the combat patrol were injured, and an Afghan soldier fighting alongside the Americans was killed. Overall, 110 U.S. soldiers have died, 39 of them in combat, during Operation Enduring Freedom, which began in Afghanistan in late 2001.

Spokesmen at the Defense Department and the Army would not comment Friday, in keeping with a policy that no U.S. casualties of war be identified for at least 24 hours. But Tillman’s death was confirmed by the House Armed Services Committee, whose members were notified by the Defense Department, The Arizona Republic reported on its Web site.

‘Pat knew his purpose in life’
Tillman turned down a three-year, $3.6 million contract with the Arizona Cardinals of the National Football League to enlist in the Army in May 2002 in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, which killed about 3,000 people in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania.

“My great grandfather was at Pearl Harbor, and a lot of my family has ... gone and fought in wars, and I really haven’t done a damn thing as far as laying myself on the line like that,” Tillman told NBC News in an interview the day after the attacks.

Tillman had played four seasons with the Cardinals, winning league-wide respect as a smart and hard-hitting, if somewhat small and slow, defensive safety before he enlisted with his younger brother Kevin.

Pat and Kevin Tillman — who also is a highly regarded athlete, having once been a minor league baseball prospect in the Cleveland Indians’ organization — denied requests for media coverage of their basic training and ultimate deployments. Army officials said at the time that they wanted no special treatment or attention but wanted to be considered soldiers doing their duty.

The brothers both successfully completed training for the Rangers, the Army’s elite infantry regiment. Pat Tillman was first deployed to Iraq in March 2003; it was not immediately clear when he was sent to Afghanistan, where he served in the same unit with his brother.

“Pat knew his purpose in life,” said Dave McGinnis, Tillman’s former coach with the Cardinals. “He proudly walked away from a career in football to a greater calling.”


McGinnis said he felt both overwhelming sorrow and tremendous pride in Tillman, who he said “represented all that was good in sports.”

Tillman’s agent, Frank Bauer, once called him a deep and clear thinker who never valued material things. In 2001, his client turned down a $9 million, five-year offer sheet from the Super Bowl champions, the St. Louis Rams, out of loyalty to the Cardinals, and by joining the Army, he passed on millions of dollars more from the team.

“He is a hero,” said Michael Bidwill, vice president of the Cardinals. “He was a brave man. There are very few people who have the courage to do what he did, the courage to walk away from a professional sports career and make the ultimate sacrifice.”

The Republic reported that prominent Arizonans were calling on the Cardinals to name the team’s new stadium, which is under construction in Glendale, near Phoenix, in Tillman’s honor.

Intelligence, toughness
Tillman, who at 5 feet 11 inches tall and 200 pounds was considered undersized for his position, nevertheless distinguished himself by his intelligence and appetite for rugged play.


As a linebacker at Arizona State University, he was the Pacific 10 Conference’s defensive player of the year in 1997. He graduated summa cum laude in 3½ academic years, earning a degree in marketing. Flags were being flown at half-staff at the college Friday.

Tillman set a Cardinals record with 224 tackles in 2000 and warmed up for last year’s training camp by competing in a 70.2-mile triathlon in June.

“You don’t find guys that have that combination of being as bright and as tough as him,” Phil Snow, who coached Tillman as Arizona State’s defensive coordinator, said in 2002. “This guy could go live in a foxhole for a year by himself with no food.”

The Tillman brothers last year shared the Arthur Ashe Courage award at the 11th annual ESPY Awards, a television program that aired on the ESPN cable sports network.
*******************************************

I remember writing here about Pat Tillman last year. Although anything I could say would be inadequate, my thoughts and prayers are with all of our fallen soldiers and their families. May the departed be at peace. They died as heroes.

-- XXOO Tanya

Wednesday, April 21, 2004

Hello,

I have a BRAND NEW AUCTION!!!

My black fishnet bodysuit is on the auction block! It will go to the winning bidder along with 3 glossy, signed, one-of-a-kind 4x6 photos of me wearing it. All 3 photos are former Photos of the Day from here at TanyaDanielle.com: "Sheer Bodysuit" from 9/7/03, "Stockings" from 10/13/03, and "Solo" from 3/20/04. All photos are archived here on my Photo of the Day page inside the Playhouse.

Oh yeah, that is me in the photos...don't let the short, black hair fool you!!!

-- XXOO Tanya

Monday, April 19, 2004

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Hello,
I look quite large and happy in today's Photo of the Day. My friend Al took that photo probably around 1997 or 1998. At the time I was about 10 pounds heavier than I am now. Around then I did a bunch of shoots for magazines with names like "Butt Lust," "Tail Ends," and "Cheeks."
That's the nice thing about the adult industry. Even when you get fat there's always another fetish realm you can dial into. I had never really intended to enter into big ass modelling, but sometimes my penchant for food and alcohol gets me in trouble.

Today in the Playhouse we have added a beautiful gallery of sexy 6'1 model Tall Goddess wearing an incredible deep blue rubber dress! Wow!! Last week's new additions to the Playhouse included a HOT gallery of petite, cherub-faced porn star Gauge entertaining 2 well-endowed gentlemen, Vanessa Blue in sex combat, and me fulfilling a Playhouse member fantasy request!

I'd like to remind you to also check out my current auctions, the links for which are provided under the "Merchandise" heading in the toolbar above. Currently I am offering a sexy pair of my black lace panties accompanied by 2 photos of me wearing them. Both photos are former Photos of the Day from here at TanyaDanielle.com. They are the actual glossy one-of-a-kind 4x6 prints which are archived on my Photo of the Day page in the Playhouse.
My other current auction is my airline pilot's outfit, a former costume I wore when I performed in strip clubs all over the US. Why was I an airline pilot? I don't know. Maybe that's why my feature dance career never went anywhere. Included with my pilot's outfit are 5 glossy 4x6 photos shot by reknowned photographer Ken Marcus of KenMarcus.com. They are all one-of-a-kind.

Please also check out my OFFICIAL STORE at Toyzz.com if you have a moment.
To visit, you just need to go to http://www.Toyzz.com
and click on the Playboy/Mature link in the "Browse
Toyzz.com" area to the left to see/order all of my OFFICIAL MERCHANDISE! There is also a link to Toyzz.com on my site here if you go to the toolbar above, click on "Merchandise," then click on "Tanya's Worn Clothes."
When you visit Toyzz.com you will receive an exclusive
TanyaDanielle.com coupon good for 10% off your entire
purchase if you reference coupon code TANYAROCKS
when you are checking out!!! 10% will be deducted from
their entire order. If your order is over $59.99,
you cannot apply the coupon, but you will receive
free shipping anywhere in the U.S.

Have a great day!

-- XXOO Tanya

Thursday, April 15, 2004

Heavy Social Drinkers Show Brain Damage, Study Finds

Wed Apr 14, 3:12 PM ET


By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Heavy social drinkers show a pattern of brain damage similar to that seen in hospitalized alcoholics -- enough to impair day-to-day functioning, U.S. researchers said on Wednesday.
 

Brain scans show clear evidence of damage, and tests of reading, balance and other functions show people who drink more than 100 drinks a month have problems, the researchers said.


"Oftentimes alcoholics are the last ones to know they have a problem," said Dr. Peter Martin of Vanderbilt University in Tennessee, who wrote a commentary on the report.


"I think this is the first study of its kind that has looked at brain functioning in individuals who are heavy social drinkers who have not gone to get treatment for their alcoholism," added Martin, a professor of psychiatry who specializes in addiction.


Dieter Meyerhoff of the University of California San Francisco and colleagues examined 46 chronic, heavy drinkers and 52 light drinkers recruited using newspaper ads and flyers.


They used magnetic resonance imaging to look at physical brain structures and measured various brain chemicals associated with healthy brain function.


"The enrollment criterion for heavy drinkers was the consumption of more than an average of 100 alcoholic drinks per month for men over 3 years before the study (80 drinks for women)," the researchers wrote in their report, published in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research.


One drink is usually defined as a serving of spirits, a glass of wine or a can or bottle of beer.


Standard tests of verbal intelligence, processing speed, balance, working memory, spatial function, executive function, and learning and memory were given to the volunteers.


"Our heavy drinkers sample was significantly impaired on measures of working memory, processing speed, attention, executive function, and balance," the researchers wrote.


Measures of brain chemicals and structures showed some of the same damage seen in alcoholics who were in the hospital or treatment centers, although with a slightly different pattern in the brain, they said.


The study is unusual in that most studies of brain damage from alcohol are done in people who have undergone treatment.


"What our findings indicate is that brain damage is detectable in heavy drinkers who are not in treatment and function relatively well in the community," Meyerhoff said in a statement.


Martin noted the volunteers in the study had gone without a drink for 12 hours and could thus be showing evidence of alcohol withdrawal rather than actual permanent brain damage.


"The problem of studying people who are out there drinking is you are never sure whether these are enduring effects or acute effects," Martin said in a telephone interview.


"Would these people, if they dried for a period of three or four weeks, would they have these abnormalities?"


Martin said it was most likely the damage was real and long lasting. "My personal experience is that there is an awful lot of evidence ... showing that the more people drink and the longer they drink, the more likely they are to have cognitive impairments."

 


Meyerhoff said moderate alcohol use for most adults translated to up to two drinks a day for younger men and one drink a day for women and older people.

"Our message is: Drink in moderation. Heavy drinking damages your brain ever so slightly, reducing your cognitive functioning in ways that may not be readily noticeable. To be safe, don't overdo it," Meyerhoff said.
******************************************

Uh oh, what's 80 divided by 30? At least I still function relatively well in the community. What's "spatial function?" Is that when you bump into stuff when you're staggering around?

-- XXOO Tanya



Tuesday, April 13, 2004

GRUDGE MATCH!!!

OK, I don't like admitting that I was fighting over a man. Or that I've done it before. That aside, Vanessa Blue and I had a score to settle that went far beyond the piece of cock that had sparked our hostility towards each other. Did she really think she could OUTFUCK me? Did she really consider herself to be the stronger woman? Well, we got down to business at a hotel by the airport. J.M. Rolen recorded our sweaty, lust-filled sexfight for posterity. Photos and the full video of our aggressive sex combat are available at wwwjmrolen.com. 97 photos of our angry passion have also been added to my Playhouse today for your lascivious pleasure....

-- XXOO Tanya

Monday, April 12, 2004

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Friday, April 09, 2004

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Hello,
Has this guy been hopped up on methamphetamine for the past week? Or, more likely, is he angling to be admitted to a mental hospital instead of federal prison after he is convicted? I personally have been hoping that he will be subjected to grave indignities inside the Big House at some date in the near future.

-- XXOO Tanya


Enron Ex-CEO Skilling Taken to Hospital
27 minutes ago


By DONNA DE LA CRUZ, Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK - Former Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling was taken to a hospital early Friday after several people called police saying he was pulling on their clothes and accusing them of being FBI agents, a police source told The Associated Press.


Police found Skilling at 4 a.m. at the corner of Park Avenue and East 73rd Street and determined he might be an "emotionally disturbed person," said the source, speaking to the AP on condition of anonymity.


Police did not charge Skilling with a crime. They took him to New York Presbyterian Hospital for observation. Hospital officials did not immediately return calls for comment.


Messages left for Skilling's lawyers, Bruce Hiler and Dan Petrocelli, were not immediately returned.


Skilling was at two bars in Manhattan — American Trash and The Voodoo Lounge — where he allegedly ran up to patrons and pulled open their clothes, the source said.


"He was shouting at them 'You're an FBI agent and you're following me,'" the source said.


Skilling allegedly did the same thing to people on the street, the source added. He was with his wife at the time.


Skilling was described as being intoxicated and highly uncooperative when he was approached by police, the source said.


Skilling has been charged with fraud, insider trading and other crimes in the energy trader's colossal collapse.


Skilling is accused of participating in widespread schemes to mislead government regulators and investors about the company's earnings. He has pleaded innocent to all 35 federal counts against him, and posted his $5 million bond with a cashier's check.

Wednesday, April 07, 2004

Good evening,
Please say a prayer for our brave troops fighting in Iraq. All my heartfelt thank yous go out to them for so valiantly serving our country.

-- XXOO Tanya

__________________________________

U.S. Marines Fight Insurgents in Fallujah
1 hour, 10 minutes ago


By BASSEM MROUE and ABDUL-QADER SAADI, Associated Press Writers

FALLUJAH, Iraq - U.S. Marines battled insurgents for control of this Sunni Muslim stronghold Wednesday, calling in airstrikes against a mosque compound where witnesses said dozens were killed in six hours of fighting. An anti-U.S. uprising led by a radical Shiite cleric raged for the fourth day in southern cities.

The Abdel-Aziz al-Samarrai mosque was hit by U.S. aircraft that launched a Hellfire missile at its minaret and dropped a 500-pound bomb on a wall surrounding the compound.


The U.S. military said insurgents were using the mosque for a military fire base. Iraqi witnesses estimated 40 people were killed as they gathered for afternoon prayers. U.S. officials said no civilians died and American commanders gave conflicting reports of insurgent casualties.


An Associated Press reporter who went to the mosque said the minaret was standing, but damaged, apparently by shrapnel. The bomb blew away part of a wall, opening an entry for the Marine assault. The reporter saw at least three cars leaving, each with a number of dead and wounded.


The heavy fighting against the Sunni insurgency coincided again Wednesday with attacks on coalition forces in southern Iraq led by militiamen loyal to anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. For the first time Wednesday, Shiite militiamen battled Americans in the central city of Baqouba.


Since Sunday, 35 Americans, two other coalition soldiers and more than 230 Iraqis have been killed in fighting. The Iraqi figure did not include those killed at the mosque. Since the war began, at least 630 U.S. service members have died.


Marine Corps spokesman 1st Lt. Eric Knapp said the American force besieging Fallujah has killed more than 30 suspected insurgents and captured 51 since Tuesday night. Fifteen Marines were reported killed in fighting in Fallujah and neighboring Ramadi since Monday.


The Army said a soldier died Wednesday in the capital. Another had died Tuesday in Balad, the Sunni Triangle city north of Baghdad, the U.S. Central Command in Tampa, Fla. said.


Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, at a Pentagon news conference with Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Richard Myers, discounted the strength of the al-Sadr force, which appears to have been bolstered by disgruntled, unemployed young men.


U.S. officials estimate the al-Sadr force at about 3,000 fighters.


"The number of people involved in those battles is relatively small," Rumsfeld said. "There's nothing like an army or large elements of people trying to change the situation. You have a small number of terrorists and militias coupled with some protests."


Myers said the fighting came in two broad categories. West of Baghdad in cities such as Ramadi and Fallujah, the main opposition is "former regime loyalists," including supporters of former president Saddam Hussein, and anti-American foreign fighters loyal to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian-born terrorist believed linked to al-Qaida.


The Marines said they waged a six-hour battle around the Abdel-Aziz al-Samarrai mosque before calling in a Cobra helicopter which fired the missile at the base of its minaret. An F-16 dropped the laser-guided bomb, Marine Lt. Col. Brennan Byrne said.


During fighting elsewhere in Fallujah, U.S. forces seized a second place of prayer, the al-Muadidi mosque. A Marine climbed the minaret and fired on guerrilla gunmen, witnesses said. Insurgents fired back, hitting the minaret with rocket-propelled grenades and causing it to partially collapse, the AP reporter said.


Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt, the chief military spokesman in Iraq, said the Marines did not attack the mosque until it became clear enemy fighters were inside and using it to cover their attacks.


He told CNN the mosque was protected under the Geneva Conventions but the insurgents nullified that by attacking from the holy place.


At Camp Fallujah, Byrne said the Marines now control 25 percent of Fallujah.

 
The military gave widely varying casualty counts.

Marine Capt. Bruce Frame, in a statement issued from Central Command, said: "One anti-coalition force member was killed in the attack. There is no report of civilian casualties."

Byrne said those in the mosque were rebels, and "We believe we killed a bunch."

Kimmitt said, "I understand there was a large casualty toll taken by the enemy."

Rumsfeld said the United States knew risks would increase with the approach of the June 30 date for the handover of power to an interim Iraqi government.

U.S. commanders also fear violence could escalate during the religious ceremonies this weekend for al-Arbaeen, when millions of pilgrims gather in Shiite cities to mark the end of the mourning period for a 7th-century martyred Shiite saint.

The number of U.S. troops in Iraq is up, Rumsfeld said, because of the planned rotation of forces. The United States has about 135,000 troops there now.

"The United states will stay the course. We will stay until the task is complete," he said, warning that some U.S. troops ready to leave the country might have to stay a while longer.

Al-Sadr, meanwhile, said Iraq would become "another Vietnam" for the United States.

"I call upon the American people to stand beside their brethren, the Iraqi people, who are suffering an injustice by your rulers and the occupying army...," he said in a statement issued from his office in the southern city of Najaf. "Otherwise, Iraq will be another Vietnam for America and the occupiers."

Al-Sadr's al-Mahdi Army launched heavy gunbattles with coalition forces in the streets of at least six cities Wednesday and, for the first time, in the north.

Iraqis protesting the Fallujah operation clashed with U.S. troops outside the northern city of Kirkuk. The battles left eight Iraqis dead and 10 wounded.

Al-Sadr fighters battled American troops in the town of Baqouba, northeast of Baghdad, hitting a U.S. helicopter with small arms fire. The OH-58 Kiowa chopper was damaged and forced to land, but the two crew members were unharmed.

And Shiite gunmen drove Ukrainian forces out of the southern city of Kut — raising concerns over the ability of U.S. allies to combat al-Sadr's uprising.

After overnight fighting in which 12 Iraqis died, the Ukrainians withdrew from Kut with about 20 coalition officials, and al-Sadr followers swept into their base, seized weapons stores and planted their flag on a nearby grain silo.

The black-garbed gunmen of the al-Mahdi Army also had virtual control of the Shiite religious centers of Kufa and Karbala, where Iraqi police were laying low, allowing militiamen to move freely.

Militiamen in Karbala clashed with Polish patrols, and a cleric who was a senior official in al-Sadr's office was killed.

South Korea on Wednesday confined it approximately 460 troops in Iraq to their compound in the southern city of Nasiriyah and suspended reconstruction and medical efforts because of violence.

But South Korea's acting president Goh Kun said Seoul would go ahead with its decision to send 3,600 troops to northern Iraq later this year. The move will make South Korea the biggest coalition partner after the United States and Britain.

Also Wednesday, three explosions were reported near the camp where Japanese troops are based in the southern city of Samawa, a defense official said in Tokyo. No injuries were reported.

Al-Sadr and his militia are unpopular among most of Iraq's Shiite majority, and there was no sign that the Shiite public in the south was rallying to their side to launch a wider uprising.

But the week's fighting showed a strength that few expected from the al-Mahdi Army.

The country's most respected Shiite leader was silent until Wednesday, when he called for all sides to stop fighting.

"Grand Ayatollah al-Sistani condemned the methods used by occupation forces in the current escalating situation in Iraq... . We also condemn assaults on public and private property, and any action that disturbs order and prevents officials from carrying out their duties," said a statement from Sistani's office.

But there were signs of sympathy for the Sadr revolt among Sunni insurgents, who have been fighting the U.S.-led occupation for months and have often chided their Shiite countrymen for not joining in.

Portraits of al-Sadr and graffiti praising his "valiant uprising" appeared on mosque and the walls of government buildings in the Sunni city of Ramadi. Peaceful protests in support of al-Sadr occurred in the northern cities of Mosul and Rashad.

Monday night in Baghdad, al-Sadr gunmen went to a mainly Sunni neighborhood to join with insurgents in firing on U.S. Humvees — the only known instance so far of Sunni and Shiite militants combining forces.

Also in Kut on Wednesday, an AP photographer and his driver were detained by armed al-Sadr militiamen who accused them of being "traitors." They were bound, blindfolded and taken to the al-Sadr office in Kut. There they were well-treated and given food.

The photographer knew a cleric in another city who vouched for the pair when called by their captors. The Sadrists then took the two, in the drivers' car, to a Shiite neighborhood in Baghdad, where they were freed.

An AP stringer in Karbala, meanwhile, was told to leave the city by al-Sadr's militiamen on Tuesday, and he has not been allowed to return.

Good evening,
My friend Jewell came over a few weeks ago to pick me up. We had been planning to go to a nightclub, but our plans changed very abruptly. When she arrived she was wearing the same dress as me!! Hers was blue and mine was black, but I had no intention of going out on the town looking like a pair of dipshits who wore matching clothes. She assured me it would be fine, and I told her she was a complete fucking imbecile. You would have thought I'd thrown excrement in her face by the way she went COMPLETELY NUTS. She forced me to the ground, ripped all my clothes off, stomped her heel into my bare crotch, choked me.....I don't even want to think about it anymore. The evidence is in the Playhouse if you have a strong stomach. Don't let the little-girl voice fool you, Jewell is one lady who does not take insults lightly.

-- XXOO Tanya

Monday, April 05, 2004

Good evening,

I have a VERY EXCITING ANNOUNCEMENT!!!

As you may have noticed before, I always have new auction links listed in the "What's New" box to your right>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
I have weekly auctions featuring my actual Photos of the Day which are archived on their own page here at TanyaDanielle.com, lingerie and outfits worn in various videos and magazines, and an assortment of other goodies. The logistics of all my auctions are handled by the fine folks at Toyzz.com. If I was handling them myself I would have already lost my merchant accounts with Estarbids.com and Ebay long, long ago. No, I never would intentionally defraud anyone, but I have a problem with getting things packaged and mailed in a timely fashion. Actually, it's more the mailing than the packaging. I've found myself driving around with packaged Christmas gifts in my car in April because I neglected to ever walk into the Post Office and mail them.
I digress, but my point is that the Toyzz.com folks have elevated the art of shipping to a military science. Even better,

THERE IS NOW AN O-F-F-I-C-I-A-L TANYA DANIELLE S-T-O-R-E at Toyzz.com!!!!!!!!!!!!!

To visit, you just need to go to http://www.Toyzz.com
and click on the Playboy/Mature link in the "Browse
Toyzz.com" area to the left to see/order all of my OFFICIAL MERCHANDISE! You will even receive an exclusive
TanyaDanielle.com coupon good for 10% off your entire
purchase if you reference coupon code TANYAROCKS
when you are checking out!!! 10% will be deducted from
their entire order. If your order is over $59.99,
you cannot apply the coupon, but you will receive
free shipping anywhere in the U.S.

Happy shopping!!!

-- XXOO Tanya

Friday, April 02, 2004

"Always bear in mind that your own resolution to succeed is more
important
than any other one thing."-Abraham Lincoln
"Always bear in mind that your own resolution to succeed is more
important
than any other one thing."-Abraham Lincoln

Thursday, April 01, 2004

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