@areya_ann: @𝓐𝓿𝓪 𝓔𝓼𝓽𝓻𝓪𝓭𝓪🌸

areya ann🍸
areya ann🍸
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Saturday 27 June 2026 01:05:11 GMT
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nuriseymore
nuri :
Hi be back tomorrow see you areya😁
2026-06-27 01:10:25
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hudson.tripp3
Hudson Tripp :
Omg Ava
2026-06-27 02:25:08
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themannnnnnnnnnnnnnnn
The mannnnnn :
I saw you both at the Del Mar fair yesterday!!!! I was too nervous to say hi though 😭😭😭
2026-06-27 01:20:40
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mattsli
Matt s :
1st
2026-06-27 01:06:23
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hillary_pham1
hillary :
BBYS
2026-06-27 01:13:34
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anabellelovesstarbucks
anabelle💐 :
favs
2026-06-27 01:06:39
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anabellelovesstarbucks
anabelle💐 :
baddies
2026-06-27 01:06:35
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jayanna2939
￴￴ ￴ ￴ ￴ ￴ ￴￴￴ ￴ ￴ ￴￴ ￴ ￴￴￴ ￴ :
You cleaned ur room
2026-06-27 01:29:47
1
zolikazolika14
Zoltán :
🥀🥀🥀
2026-06-27 02:34:28
0
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Rodney Dangerfield was born in 1921 and struggled for years before success. 	•	He didn’t really “hit” until the mid-to-late 1970s, when he was already in his 50s. 	•	His big breakout moment came with TV appearances on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, where his self-deprecating style landed hard with audiences. 	•	His peak popularity ran from the late 1970s through the mid-1980s, right in that sweet spot for Gen Jones and early Gen X. His signature comedy style 	•	Rodney’s entire persona was built around the line: “I don’t get no respect.” 	•	His humor was dry, rapid-fire, and brutally self-deprecating — jokes about his wife, his childhood, his looks, his bad luck. 	•	What made it work was his delivery: deadpan, slightly frantic, perfectly timed one-liners. 	•	He played the ultimate underdog — the guy everyone ignored, dismissed, or stepped over — which made him weirdly relatable. Movies he’s best known for 	•	Caddyshack (1980) – As Al Czervik, the loud, brash outsider crashing an elite golf club. This role introduced him to a whole new audience and made him a pop-culture icon. 	•	Easy Money (1983) – A box-office hit where he played a lovable screw-up trying to get his life together. 	•	Back to School (1986) – One of his biggest hits, playing a rich dad who goes back to college with his son. This cemented his appeal across generations. 	•	Ladybugs (1992) – A later hit that still carried his trademark humor. Beyond movies 	•	He was a stand-up’s stand-up — comedians revered him because his jokes were tightly written and endlessly quotable. 	•	He owned Dangerfield’s Comedy Club in New York, which helped launch or support comedians like Jerry Seinfeld, Jim Carrey, and Chris Rock. #GenJonesVibes #legend
Rodney Dangerfield was born in 1921 and struggled for years before success. • He didn’t really “hit” until the mid-to-late 1970s, when he was already in his 50s. • His big breakout moment came with TV appearances on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, where his self-deprecating style landed hard with audiences. • His peak popularity ran from the late 1970s through the mid-1980s, right in that sweet spot for Gen Jones and early Gen X. His signature comedy style • Rodney’s entire persona was built around the line: “I don’t get no respect.” • His humor was dry, rapid-fire, and brutally self-deprecating — jokes about his wife, his childhood, his looks, his bad luck. • What made it work was his delivery: deadpan, slightly frantic, perfectly timed one-liners. • He played the ultimate underdog — the guy everyone ignored, dismissed, or stepped over — which made him weirdly relatable. Movies he’s best known for • Caddyshack (1980) – As Al Czervik, the loud, brash outsider crashing an elite golf club. This role introduced him to a whole new audience and made him a pop-culture icon. • Easy Money (1983) – A box-office hit where he played a lovable screw-up trying to get his life together. • Back to School (1986) – One of his biggest hits, playing a rich dad who goes back to college with his son. This cemented his appeal across generations. • Ladybugs (1992) – A later hit that still carried his trademark humor. Beyond movies • He was a stand-up’s stand-up — comedians revered him because his jokes were tightly written and endlessly quotable. • He owned Dangerfield’s Comedy Club in New York, which helped launch or support comedians like Jerry Seinfeld, Jim Carrey, and Chris Rock. #GenJonesVibes #legend

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