I just spent 45 minutes on a post
and then deleted it.
By mistake.
and then deleted it.
By mistake.
Posted by
David Trent
at
9:04 pm
1 comments
Yay, someone else agrees with me that nuclears are bad.
So come on everybody. If you hate nuclears like me, leave a comment on this cool "No Nuclears" site.
Let's pull together and hate the nuclears.
Like fiddy says..."If we be playing like nuclear hata's, we'll kill the nuclears (non violently) and get things corrected."
Posted by
David Trent
at
6:32 am
0
comments
Check this out first...
Dear Greenpeace,
I am writing after watching your latest advert against nuclear power.
It was really scary. I nearly pooed in my pants.
The only thing is, I think it's a bit irresponsible. What if a terrorist saw that short and realistic film? It might give them the idea to hire a plane and fly it into a nuclear power station.
And I live in Cambridge, which is quite near to Sizewell.
Please, next time, think about what you are doing a bit more carefully.
Yours sincerely,
David Trent
(Thanks Jon for the link and Fenella for telling me to write a letter)
Posted by
David Trent
at
6:03 pm
3
comments
Dear Mr Howarth,
This evening, my wife and I were eating our dinner and we were discussing George Galloway.
We were wondering how he could possibly have any credibility left after making a fool of himself in the big brother house.
We came to the conclusion that no publicity is bad publicity these days, and it will probably work for him as an awareness raising exercise.
This led to us wondering who our local MP is. It was with some dismay that we realised we had no idea of our local MP’s identity.
My wife said “Our MP is a liberal democrat. I knew who it was when it was Anne Campbell, but I don’t have a clue who it is now.”
I am disgusted by our apathy, and wish to inquire what exactly you, Mr Howarth, in your capacity as my local MP intend to do about this.
Yours, in dismay,
David Trent
Posted by
David Trent
at
9:26 pm
1 comments
I have been walking around all day singing
"And yeah, I'd love to tell you all my problem"
and
"Just banging tunes and dj sets and"
but actually I've been walking around singing "Girl, you're not the answer to my problem" so I am v. street.
My finger got infected eczema. It really hurts and I am on antibiotics. They rock. My finger stopped hurting within 12 hours. If you have any pain in your life, I recommend getting on them as soon as poss. I think I might try to get them off the internet and take them for the rest of my life.
Nothing funny has happened at work for ages.
Nothing funny has happened at home, except Elly sat at the table saying "bugger, silly bugger" to me. I had to stick my head behind the fridge door to stop Elly seeing how delighted I was by my brilliant swearing daughter was.
I then told her not to say those words, because they would make her mother sad. Striking a blow for equality there.
And before you get all high and mighty Mum, that's your fault, not mine.
I never say bugger.
I say wanker, bastards, fuck, shit, toss, anus, poo, fart but very rarely do I say bugger.
You, on the other hand, do.
You and Polly both do.
Regularly.
To Mick, and to Elly.
Well done Nana.
Posted by
David Trent
at
8:54 pm
2
comments
Wow - this is some of the most incisive educational journalism I've ever seen...
Posted by
David Trent
at
6:49 pm
0
comments
This is a car.
I got this very car.
It stinks of dog.
This is a dog.
I did not get this dog.
If I had, it would stink of car.
Posted by
David Trent
at
7:32 am
1 comments
I woke up and didn’t go for a run and went back to sleep. I got out of bed at six o’ clock. I had a shower. I went downstairs to look at the washing, but it didn’t seem quite dry, so I went back upstairs and tried to put on my purple shirt. My purple shirt has been lying on the floor all weekend, so it was really crumpled. This would have necessitated ironing the shirt before going to work in it. I didn’t want to do any ironing so I put on my tracksuit bottoms.
Now all I had to do was find a t-shirt with an adidas logo. I have three t-shirts with adidas logos that I have purchased for wearing to school on p.e. days. I found all three at the bottom of the red washing basket in the kitchen.
I decided not to wear any of these dirty and stinky shirts. Instead I found a big green t-shirt and wore that. I put on my yellow adidas track suit top to wear with it and relaxed about what I would wear to school. There was no need to worry about what I was going to wear, because I was wearing it. All except my trainers, but I knew that I would be wearing them, so I wasn’t tense about that.
I then had to decide what to eat. I should have eaten a bowl of porridge with an apple. Instead I ate 5 pieces of toast with margarine and marmite and red Leicester cheese.
Then I put some lentil and tomato soup in a transparent blue plastic box and walked out of the door with my keys in my hand.
I got into the car, which smells of dog and magic tree and another really horrible air freshener which was hanging on the air vent when we purchased the car.
The new car no longer has loads of dog hair all over it, because I spent 3 hours vacuuming it at the weekend and then drove up and down with all the windows open on Sunday morning from 7 o’ clock until 9 o’ clock.
That was great fun because the usually locked up Cambridge roads were totally empty which meant I could drive around really fast until I set off a speed camera. I am already on 8 points. Maybe I can get an ASBO?
It still smells of dog despite the ASBO so this morning I drove to my local supermarket to buy some febreeze. I got the idea of buying febreeze off my friend Julie. I said to her “Julie, you’ve got dogs, how do I get rid of the smell of dogs?” and she instantly said “Febreeze” in the tone of somebody who knows all about getting rid of the smell of dogs.
I waited until the supermarket opened and ran in and got Febreeze and ran out and sprayed it all over my car and opened the windows and drove to school and froze gently.
I walked into my classroom, placed my lentil soup on my desk and spoke to my trim trail team teacher about what we would teach today. We decided that after play we would go into the hall to run through the Christmas play.
I then went to myself a cup of coffee. My cafetiere was on my desk so I had a cup of chamomile tea instead.
I was slightly excited that Ollie has got the loudhailer sorted. We now have a loudhailer that we can wear around our heads Madonna / Gym Class Leader style to shout at the kids with during P.E. lessons, and Ollie was using it to usher the children in like a goatherd.
He has only purchased value batteries for it though, so it’ll only work for 5 minutes and then it’ll get put into a cupboard along with the megaphone and only get dug out for sports day.
The children file in. I read out their names in the register and only mark one absent child in. Luckily there is a note in the register telling me that she is absent, so I turn a / into an O and then send the register back, neglecting to write a note to say that one of the children in my class is absent and that his house should be phoned in case he has been abducted.
Later on my Teaching Assistant asks me where that child is and I tell her to go to the office and tell them that he’s not at school and she comes back and tells me that he is not at school because he has had an asthma attack. Phew.
After the register I tell the class all about Samuel’s heart operation, and we discuss how he is great now, totally back to normal, but how we’ve got to all look out for him in the playground and tell an adult if his lips go blue or if he gets breathless. The I send him around the school with the aforementioned teaching assistant to spread the message re: blue lips and breathlessness.
We have an interesting assembly where the Head makes us all laugh by postulating the idea that chimpanzee’s might say “after you” in posh accents.
After assembly I discuss the nativity play with my class. We then split for Literacy where we try to learn the difference between fiction and non-fiction books by looking at lots of books and making piles of fiction and non-fiction books, then looking at all the non-fiction books and listing the common features in small groups, then coming together as a whole class and mind mapping the common features of a non-fiction book. I try to take photos of the children as they are doing their book analysis but I have left my compact flash card at home. These are seven year olds.
After playtime where take Mick out to look at my new car and smell the dog and discuss Febreeze and then squeeze in a cup of coffee we go into the hall and ask the children to run through the Christmas play for the first time. It is hair pullingly frustrating but my trim trail team teacher does a lot of caring and sharing and I do some crowd control.
I take one child out to the playground and make him really shout at me over and over again until I have proved that he can shout. I then get him to stand on the other side of the playground and shout at me. Once he has done this and I am happy with the volume of his shouting I ask him to accompany me back to the hall and tell him that this is what I expect of his performance.
We return to the classroom for 5 minutes of the most boring game in the world called heads down thumbs up – type it into google if you want to know more. I tell the children that they are last into lunch, they groan and then I send them out.
I eat my lentil soup. One person says “that smells like porridge.” One person says “that looks nice,” One person says “that one’s not home made,” – the same person says “looks nice, tastes disgusting,” another person says “that looks nice David, what is it?”
We then discuss fireworks and getting hurt and safety and battery reared children and playing out for the rest of lunchtime. The head teacher brings in a cup of my tea which has gone really mouldy and tries to make me look at it, but I refuse. It has been in the library for at least 2 months now, and I can imagine what it looks like. He is disgusted with me.
I go outside to show Ollie my new car but don’t show him the smell of dog. He then uses his new loudhailer Madonna mic to call the children in from lunch again, and tells us all how cool it is. I call him names and then take the children in.
In the afternoon we do some reading, then look at pictures of children putting forks into plug sockets and discuss whether this is a good thing or not. The children then write explanations of why this is unsafe in their books.
Finally I read George’s Marvellous Medicine for half an hour, staring at the clock every thirty seconds.
At three o’ clock the head teacher hands me today’s complaining email from a parent who is unhappy with me for telling her child off. I check it out, hand it back to the head, say something to him about it which I’m not going to share with you all here, then run off to my car.
I open up the car door and am disgusted. It now smells of Dog, Air Freshener and Febreeze. I drive home with the windows open until my ears get all cold.
Posted by
David Trent
at
7:19 pm
3
comments
We have some wooden hurdles at the school. You'll have seen them if you've ever been to a council run park which has an "adventure element" to it. They are low set and brown. Quite thick, and very dull looking. They are spaced around the field and hopefully referred to as the "trim trail".
Yesterday was unseasonably sunny and my team teacher said to me "It's such a lovely day, I don't want to do Gymnastics, I think I'll take the kids outside to use the trim trail"
I said "Not the flippin' trim trail, we're supposed to be doing football" but secretly I wanted in on the trim trail action.
I don't really like football. I don't really know how to teach it. I usually do a couple of complicated exercises with a hoop and some balls and stare off at the horizon, aching for three o' clock.
The trim trail seemed like a good alternative.
I gave the Trim Trail some more thought. I wasn't really too sure what the Trim Trail was. Maybe it was more than just a bunch of logs dotted miserably around the field. Perhaps the Trim Trail had a deep allure for the children. After all, wasn't Team Teacher excited about it?
Team Teacher is quite sporty, and certainly gets much more excited about teaching sport and p.e. than I ever do, so I got excited.
Maybe the Trim Trail was the future of P.E. lessons, one of those activities that I could keep up my sleeve for the hard times when failure closes it's deathlike claws around the brains of my class, when they become zombie eyed and lacklustre, when every request for a spelling summons a frustrated cry from my desk, maybe then I could slap down my hands and shout "right everybody, lets do the trim trail" and the children would throw their books in the air and shout "yay, trim trail, trim trail, trim trail, trim, jump it like a monkey, better than the gym"
As we collected our children after lunch, I sidled up to team teacher. "You know the trim trail?"
"Oh, now you want to do the "flippin' trim trail" do you? I thought you were supposed to be doing football,"
"Yes, I am a dick. Sorry. Now, about the trim trail, what do I do with it?"
"I'll send two children from my class last year to show you"
So now it's 2:14. The children have been whipped up to a frenzy by my regular screams of "trim trail" during the previous hour of doing "I am the music man, I come from far away..." and "Heads shoulders knees and toes" and "Grand Old Duke Of York".
All the way through their getting changed I've chanted the trim trail rhyme, which initially caused slight consternation, then amusement, then excitement and finally an air of indulgent boredom.
After two laps around the field, with me chanting "nearly at the Trim Trail" we arrive.
Oscar is shouting out uncontrollably. Daisy-Jo is hopping from foot to foot with a grimace on her face. Adrian is crouching down and jumping up in the air, like one of those popper spring insects we used to get at christmas. I could go on - all the children are so excited by the trim trail that they have all developed their own, special trim trail tic.
"So class, here we are, the...sorry can't hear you, the..."
"TRIM TRAIL"
The head pokes his master out of the school to see exactly what we're screaming about. "It's OK sir, we're just a little excited about the trim trail" I shout, raising my eyebrows and nodding at the class as I say "trim trail". The head frowns, shakes his head and walks back into the school.
"RIGHT CLASS, This is, indeed, the famous trim trail,"
We are standing in front of a log. It is on a couple of brackets and stands about 10 inches from the ground.
"Are you ready class? Rose and Peter will now demonstrate the MIGHTY TRIM TRAIL"
I shake my fists excitedly at my sides. Rose and Peter approach the log. I start slow clapping, the class join in. I shout at them to stop clapping and ask Rose and Peter to talk us through what we can do on this part of the trim trail.
After watching Rose and Peter wobble on one leg for about a minute I start to panic.
"What else can we do on this part of the trim trail? Put your hand down Adrian, I'm asking Rose and Peter. Rose? Peter? No? O.K. Adrian, what were you going to say?"
"You could jump over it,"
"Yes, brilliant!" I scream in a hyper excited voice. "You could JUMP on it. OK, Adrian, count to 10 for me"
Adrian starts counting and I start furiously jumping over the log, as fast as I can. I feel like Rocky but probably look like fat club. There is a problem though, Adrian is not counting in seconds, he is counting my jumps.
Now I am sweating and jumping. I stop and shout "NO ADRIAN, DON'T COUNT MY JUMPS, COUNT THE SECONDS, I'M GOING TO COUNT HOW MANY JUMPS I CAN DO IN 10 SECONDS"
The class have started exchanging concerned looks at each other.
"RIGHT ADRIAN, READY? GO"
"10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1"
I am jumping like a man possessed. As fast as I can. The words "Positive fitness role model" are repeating themselves inside my head. I believe that the children are staring at me in total awe, thinking "One day, I'd like to jump like that,"
I jump and jump and jump.
"ZERO"
I eat low G.I. food. A lot of it. Most lunchtimes I eat this soup made of lentils, carrots, onions, celery and garlic. It is so thick the spoon stands up in it. When it comes out of the microwave the other members of staff laugh at me. I eat loads of it. About a housebrick's worth. It sits in my stomach. It causes dreadful and only just controllable wind.
I lose control.
"Fart"
Just a little one. A little zipper. The type you'd get away with on a bus, or in the hustle and bustle of cleaning up the class.
It is a perfectly still, hot day. That's why we're at the trim trail.
Every child in the class is staring at me.
In silence.
"Whoops, I seem to have gotten so excited that I farted," I say.
10 minutes later, children are still snorting to themselves as they jump over the logs, pointing at me and holding their noses and laughing out loud when I walk past them.
"Positive Fitness Role Model"
Posted by
David Trent
at
3:41 pm
2
comments
I have year 3 children this year. They are seven. They crack me up. I have been teaching 11 year olds for the last 3 years and all of a sudden I am right down at the bottom of the school. I feel like a playschool presenter.
I have one child who just seems to be absolutely enchanted by school and walks around with an angelic grin on his face all the time. Yesterday we called a whole year group meeting to discuss fruit for the fruit break - at 2 o'clock we have a break to eat fruit and we have a problem with apples because some children are taking half an hour to eat them. He puts his hand up.
"Yes?"
"If you go to the supermarket, you can get special bananas that are about this big," holds hands close together. "Most normal bananas are this big," holds hands further apart.
"That is great, would you like to tell the whole year that information?"
"Yes please,"
"O.k. - stand at the front then, and tell them,"
Now this child, lets call him Oscar, is grinning his head off. He is so proud of himself it is unbelievable. He has enormous eyes and a very high forehead, and a very high voice.
"If you go to the supermarket, you can get special bananas that are about this big," holds hands close together. "Most normal bananas are this big," holds hands further apart.
"Brilliant Oscar. Sit down now please."
All the adults in the room are biting their lips, doing their best not to start giggling and aaaaahing.
I made him cry in the first week of term by putting him into detention. He has the horrible child affliction of shouting things out as his hand goes into the air. He'd spent most of the morning doing so, and was on one warning.
"Daisy - would you like to pick the next person to talk about their special object?" I ask.
"It has to be a boy," screams Oscar in delighted anticipation that he will perhaps get the opportunity to discuss his Pokemon figure with the class.
"Oscar, you just shouted out for the second time, please come here."
He takes the walk of death to my desk. I write him out a post it note which says "Put my hand up" and a massive number 2 underneath. I sellotape this to his chest.
"You are now on 2 warnings Oscar, I really don't want you to go into 12:30 club but if you shout out 1 more time I shall have no alternative, do you understand?"
He smiles reassuringly at me "Yes, I understand Mister Trent. I won't do it again,"
"Good Oscar, go and sit down. Now, Daisy, would you like to choose somebody to talk about their special obje..."
"It has to be a boy," screams Oscar, in delighted, and, it is becoming plain, uncontrollable anticipation that he will perhaps get the opportunity to discuss his Pokemon figure with the class.
"Oh dear. I'm very sorry Oscar but I did warn you and try to help you."
Oscar smiles very bravely at me, starts nodding his head to show he understands his dreadful fate, then he breaks down and starts sobbing.
What a cruel life.
I ran home tonight. It is 10 miles. Over hills. I also cycled in. In the rain.
I got in and ate a bunch of grapes, an apple, a carrrot, some apricots, some cheese, some barley and goats cheese souffle some green beans and some broccoli. Now I have slight stomach cramps.
Flipping heck, also, I'm not really into marketing, but isn't Google Earth FANTASTIC?
We spent about 30 minutes yesterday "flying" from Linton, Cambridge to Cairo, Egypt as an introduction to our Ancient Egypt topic. I kept shouting out "Hold On Everyone" and all the kids grabbed hold of something and braced themselves, then I hit search and off we flew. Eventually I thought it would be responsible to do something slightly more relevant to the topic of Ancient Egypt, but what a blast.
If you don't have it yet, go and get it.
Posted by
David Trent
at
6:43 pm
3
comments
I used to be top link at fenella's website, but now I am the bottom link. What kind of shit is this? I have no funny stories to tell, nothing funny happened to me for a while, I am not in trouble at work because I am not at work at the moment. What else can I write about? I'm not allowed to tell you what is good to listen to, what is nice to watch, even though I've just seen lots of films.
Hmmmm. Nothing of note to write.
Except, maybe, one tale of woe.
In order to look hot for the wedding I did a bit of sneaky dieting. I ate lentil soup and not much else for the two weeks approaching, thought of the wedding every time I picked up a knife or fork, and was strict as can be with my Low G.I. approach in general. This meant that I ended up at 12 stone and 3 pounds on my wedding day. This is a great weight. Perfect, and it meant that I looked great.
Today, just over a month later, I am 14 stone.
What do you think of that? I think this is a pretty fantastic effort on my behalf.
How to achieve such a stunning weight loss:
1) Try to eat all the food from your wedding in less than a week.
Chopped liver goes off fast. It needs to be eaten. There was lots of it. It's about the most fattening thing in the world. We had about 20 bagels left to accompany it. All of them went in my stomach. Someone brought us a kilo of taramasalata. It wasn't even open before everybody left. Chocolate cake. Wedding cake. 4 packets of Philadelphia. Crisps. The eating went on and on and on.
2) Go to Newmarket Races and eat buffet food.
Top off the week with a visit to the races at Newmarket and try to eat as much of the buffet that all the staff club together for as can be stuffed into my mouth. Eat more at the end of the evening when returning to the car.
3) Go to France.
Oh god, France. Cheese. Brie. Comte. A special cheese made of the milk of 12 cows. Chevre. Jambon. Saucisson Sec. Sausage. Steak. Frites. Crepe. Chocolat. Croissant. Pain Au Chocolat. Coffee. Beer. Wine. Escargots. Pate.
4) Stop running in France.
There's no time to run when you are trying to eat the whole of France.
5) Return to UK, try running again. Stop again.
I have put on so much weight that my insoles gave me two enormous blisters along my arches. I developed them after 2 miles of my normal run, and then forced myself to run them in good and proper over another 3 miles. Oh, well done me. Then run another 5 on top of that the next day. Terrific.
6) Eat curry and fish and chips.
When you can't be bothered to cook, go to a take away and buy this food. It never fails to pile on the pounds.
7) Go to work do do some stuff on display.
Here is what I ate on the Saturday when I went to work:
1) King Size Snickers
2) Caramac Kit Kat
3) King Size Dairy Milk
4) Quarter Pounder with Chips and diet coke (well done on the diet coke)
5) Crispy Duck - half
Here is what I ate on the Sunday when I went to work:
1) King Size Dairy Milk
2) Packet of Chocolate Chip Cookies
3) Fry Up - Sausage, Bacon, Eggs, Fried Bread, Beans
4) Aubergine and Chick Peas + Quinoa
Just very bad form.
8) Keep going out to places with the Kids that have a lovely cafe.
Summer holidays are great. I have never had a summer holiday where I've weighed less than I went in, but this is a spectacular effort.
So yeah, that's what I've been doing over the summer. Yourselves?
Oh, and I broke my little camera.
Oh, and I blew shit all over the sensor of my big camera.
Posted by
David Trent
at
7:28 pm
1 comments
Today I was ringing up for a childminder for my daughter. This is one of those nasty jobs that we put off for so long that it becomes ridiculously titanic, but once I picked up the phone and started dialling I found it was very easy and even rather pleasurable.
Apart from the first call.
"ring, ring ring, ring ring, ri..Mreoire"
"Hello, Is that Melissa Ridgers?"
"Yeah,"
(Bit rude for a woman who has organic wholefood on offer for the little ones in a large house within walking distance)
"Hello, My name is David Trent, I got your name from Joy Strotter at the nursery, I'm looking for a childminder my two children, preferably to begin in January of next year..."
Whilst I explained this I could hear the odd sigh as I was speaking.
I was a little dissapointed in this - a rude attitude and sighing in despair as I spoke to her - what was going on? This was my first call because this woman had been hand selected for me by the woman at the nursery school. She said that this woman would suit me down to the ground, organic hippy food, child centered approach, looking after all the children as if they were her own, 3 children of her own.
She had warned me of one restricting factor but I couldn't for the life of me remember what it was.
"I'm in labour at the moment, this isn't a, pant pant, very good, sigh, time..."
Oh yeah, that was it - she was about to have a baby. 3 months ago.
"Super, good luck. Bye"
I'd have switched my mobile off.
Posted by
David Trent
at
7:04 pm
0
comments
I'm going to the supermarket in 3 minutes time to buy
Broccoli
Pears
Apples
Veg to go with Roast Chicken
Cherries
Nectarines
Plums
Grapes
Salmon
Yoghurt
Baked Beans
Canned Chick Peas
Other Canned Pulses
Organic Baby Rice
Tissues
On Saturday I watched Live8. I liked it. I like Geldof too - as I said to Fenella, no Live Aid, no little Davo being influenced, no going to Nepal and saving the world like I did.
I liked watching the Killers, and I have been singing them all weekend. I didn't like the weirdo out of Coldplay very much. I really liked Madonna, and I've not liked her for years. I thought it was very moving when the african girl who was 10 minutes away from death was brought out onto the stage, and I nearly cried. I really liked Velvet Revolver. I din't think much of Robbie Williams or Mariah Carey or The Who - was that Zac Starkey on the drums with a shaved head or was it Kenney Jones or what who why? I didn't watch Pink Floyd. I really hate Pink Floyd. I didn't like McCartney or Keane or Travis. I liked Ricky Gervais and I listened to R.E.M. and I think they are really off the boil - how weird that they are playing so low down the bill, not in a reverse good way like Coldplay or U2, but in a fallen gods way. I enjoyed Sting. Only joking.
Summary - not as good as Live Aid, not as many U2 or Queen moments - well, no U2 or Queen moments, but a good thing. I am wearing a white armband today. If some of the kids in my class think about being good to people in Africa then that's enough for me. Then I read Stefz take on the whole thing and found out that I am wearing a sweatshop contradiction on my hand and now I'm confused and feeling a little bit guilty.
Posted by
David Trent
at
6:24 pm
1 comments
Oh I had the most horrible dream. I was listening to "Brothers in Arms" and I started thinking "WOW, this is the greatest lp I've ever heard, why didn't I like it before?"
What a nightmare.
Posted by
David Trent
at
8:19 am
2
comments
Boasting child, yesterday:
"I can shake my brain off,
I can shake my head off,
I'm gonna freak you out"
Posted by
David Trent
at
8:26 am
0
comments
The big issue of the day - Has hair gel been banned?
My personal opinion is that only curly haired people should be allowed to wear it.
Posted by
David Trent
at
8:11 am
1 comments
"You got anyone for 12:30?" - the 12:30 monitors come round every day to get the names of the children who will be in the 12:30 detention.
The following dialogue happens every single day of my life.
"Pardon?"
"You got anyone for 12:30?"
"Pardon?"
"You got anyone for 12:30?"
"Pardon?"
"You got anyone for 12:30?"
"Please," - this is usually shouted by about 6 children near the door.
"You got anyone for 12:30 please?"
"No,"
"Miss Marlowe told us to remind you that you said to put Giles in 12:30,"
"Oh, yes. Giles."
"Thankyou"
Posted by
David Trent
at
10:50 am
0
comments