The Online Portfolio Of A.J. Dugger III
  • Home
  • Cover Stories & TV Appearances
  • Gallery Of Work
  • Books
  • Celebrity Interviews
  • Awards
  • Music
  • Blog

A college student's review of "Who KILLED Joel Larson?"

2/10/2021

0 Comments

 
Picture

Last week I came across this random email from a woman in Brazil. She said she was in college and well, I'll let you read what she wrote. Nothing kinky though, if that's what you were expecting...

Picture
Who could say "no" to that? Not this guy! Ha! I replied thanking her for taking the time to read the novel and enjoying it enough to write a book report on it. That was quite the honor! She sent me the review and has yet to receive a grade on it. (She said she should have her grade in a few days). I asked her if I could share her essay on the book on my website to further promote the novel. She was excited by the idea! She even submitted a picture to go along with her essay. There are a few minor spoilers here, but she doesn't reveal the big reveals and surprises. So without delay, here is Vienna Oliveira's book report on my new novel, Who KILLED Joel Larson?

​
Picture
Vienna Oliveira
What is it like to be inside the mind of a person struggling with intense mental turmoil? Imagine how it would affect your relationships and career? We get to experience this by witnessing two years in the life of a police detective named Maggie Taylor in the refreshing crime thriller, “Who Killed Joel Larson?” written by an award-winning journalist named A..J. Dugger III in Memphis, TN.

​

This book is very different from typical murder mysteries. There are several storylines weaving in and around the main plot. In addition to solving the murder case, Maggie is confronted with other problems including a demanding boss, bipolar disorder, infertility, the disappearance of her adopted child, public humiliation, among other things.

The book takes place in a small fictional Tennessee town called Horono during the years 2020-22. However, there are many italicized flashbacks throughout the book. Since Joel Larson is discovered dead at the start of the book, these flashbacks are how we get to know Joel and witness his interactions with other people throughout his life and leading up to his sudden death. 

​The characters are presented realistically. Maggie Taylor is struggling with manic depression. Her self confidence is non-existent. She is a lean tomboy who wears her hair in a fishtail braid every day. Because of her mood disorder, she is failing at her job and her impatient boss Commissioner Mickey gives her one last case to solve. If Maggie does not solve Joel Larson’s murder in a timely matter, she will be fired. 



Picture
Maggie’s support system is her husband, Jacob. He is Maggie’s foil, as he is very self confident and rather silly all the time. Commissioner Mickey begins as an antagonist boss to Maggie but the two bond over the course of the novel, developing a father-daughter type of bond. Other major characters include Maggie’s adopted pre-teen daughter Mallory, the town’s favored psychologist Dr. Theodore Chung, and of course Joel Larson himself, who is the focal point of most of the flashbacks. 

The supporting cast consists of Maggie’s overbearing parents, Joel Larson’s family, and the former colleagues, classmates and caretakers for Joel, most of whom have legit reasons to want him dead. One of the suspects is Aaron Henson, a pedophile who lives across the street from Joel. Others include Kelly Patterson, (the pretty blond evangelist who Joel attempted to rape) Tiana Jones, (a woman Joel fondled at McDonalds) Maggie's secretive new assistant Damon Richards, and a host of others including Joel’s own brother Jackie, who once held Joel at gunpoint after Joel attacked his pregnant wife and made her miscarry.

There are a LOT of suspects. I only named a few. 


Joel Larson’s murder may be the main plot but there are many other problems confronting Maggie. She is infertile, so she and her husband Jacob adopted two children. Maggie and her daughter Mallory do not bond right away. Just as they start to get comfortable with each other, Mallory disappears.

Maggie’s ex-boyfriend is now a famous journalist who is intent on using his resources to destroy her. Knowing her plight, he not only rushes to solve the case before her, but he humiliates her by exposing a fatal car accident from Maggie’s past where she carelessly (but accidentally) killed a five-year African American child named Donovan Mitchell. In the midst of the Black Lives Matter movement, the public is quick to turn on Maggie, who is a Jewish police officer. Her car is vandalized, she is bullied online, and the horror will not stop. The public views her as a racist child murderer.


​
Picture
Just when you think Maggie has enough problems, more pop up. A defunct group of cop killers known as The Jaspers have reunited. They announce that Maggie and Commissioner Mickey are their next targets. Maggie has a lot to deal with and is fighting a mental illness on top of it. At times she can’t tell if her depression is maximizing her troubles or not.

In the midst of all of this happening to Maggie, we get many entertaining Joel Larson flashbacks. Since Joel's body was discovered during the prologue, these flashbacks are how we get to know him.

During his younger years, he ruins the kindergarten black history play, lifts up a nun’s dress, and finds other original ways to get into trouble.


Joel was sent to a mental hospital after trying to stab his father at age 17. We get a few glimpses of Joel’s time there, as well as his brief stint in a halfway house where he was released after knocking out the program’s director. Because of this, Joel was ordered to live in a house along where caretakers assisted him around the clock. 

Joel suffered from schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, frontal lobe autism and pathological laughing.

We get to view Joel through the perspective of others and even get to know Joel’s personal feelings by reading his journal. Joel wants to have a good heart but his diagnosis gets in the way. 

He is capable of doing heroic things, as he saved an old couple from a wolf attack and saved the life of a friend suffering from a seizure.

Still, he was rejected by a sex worker, he has racist outbursts, he has physically attacked a lot of  people (including his dentist), he obsesses over women, he has tried to rape women, etc. Joel’s only friends at the time of his death were his pet turtle and the animals in the forest near his home.

However, not only was Joel on the road to redemption when he was killed, but we also find out the understandable root of his anger later in the novel. By the end of the story, you will definitely feel sorry for him.


PictureDamn, Joel.

Maggie’s problems are eventually solved, but never in the way you’d expect. The author throws in many plot twists that will certainly catch you off guard. The story and characters may appear to go in a certain direction, but eventually the author redirects his readers. The reader is in Maggie’s shoes and she is generally just as surprised at the swerves and twists as we are. Red herrings are everywhere and planted at just the right times to throw you off.

I highly recommend this book. Not only is the story constantly moving forward and keeping you on edge, but the author writes in a straightforward way. Mr. Dugger paints a picture with his words so well that it’s like watching a movie. You can picture everything you read. The characters are well developed and realistic. Unlike other authors, he doesn’t waste time spending entire chapters focusing on character development. We get to know the suspects primarily when they are interrogated by Maggie, or in their interactions with Joel and Maggie. 

One minor character, for example, reluctantly becomes a hitman for a crime boss because it’s the quickest way he can get money to save his dying son. Another minor character was molested at a young age and copes by joining a Satanic cult. These are plots that could be novels of their own. Mr. Dugger has a wide imagination. You may think reading this that some of these subplots sound random, but trust me they are not. Everything adds up and ties into the main plot.

The pacing is well done. The story moves quickly in perpetual motion. Even when the action slows down a bit, it’s never boring and still leads you to the next inevitable shocker. The book's conclusion was quite a surprise and left me wanting more! Fans of this book will definitely desire a sequel.

I finished this entire novel in two days. The cliff hangers and constant plot twists made this one roller coaster ride of an experience. This is the best book I have read in a long time. 

-Vienna Oliveira


​

Find out who KILLED Joel Larson by clicking here

Picture
0 Comments

Who KILLED Joel Larson?

9/14/2020

0 Comments

 
Picture
My upcoming crime novel asks the question: What kind of bastard would kill a mentally ill person? Well, someone killed Joel Larson, and the clock is ticking to discover who.

But there’s a lot more to the story than a mere murder mystery. The lead character, a 35 year-old police detective named Maggie Taylor, has a lot to overcome. Due to her anxiety and depression, she is failing at her job as a leading police detective. Her gruff boss, Commissioner Mickey, gives her one last case to solve before she is fired or demoted back to uniform. The case he assigns her is the recent murder of the autistic 24 year-old Joel Larson.

At the same time, Maggie and her husband Jacob are struggling to conceive a child. With things looking hopeless, they adopt two siblings from Germany; a two-month old infant named Roger and his 11 year-old sister, Mallory. It isn’t long before Mallory goes missing...

Another problem ensues when Maggie’s bitter ex-boyfriend, a famous journalist named Lamont Jackson, decides to investigate the murder himself and publish a book before Maggie can solve the case on her own. In addition to trying to get her fired, he destroys her reputation by exposing a terrible secret from her past. And I mean TERRIBLE!!!

In the meantime, there are rumors that a former terrorist group is getting back together. These terrorists used to murder police officers, and Maggie fears she may be the next target.

In addition to the many problems hitting her all at once, she has to overcome them while struggling internally with bipolar disorder. 

Picture
Joel Larson
As these plots play out, there are flashbacks throughout the book so that the readers can get to know Joel Larson and his experiences growing up. Because of Joel’s violent past, the list of suspects is a mile long. There are plenty of people with motives to kill him, including his own family members and caretakers.

Who killed him? Was it the sex worker he tried to sleep with? Was it the pedophile across the street that Joel caught talking to a child? Was it the insane homeless man that terrorizes people in Joel's neighborhood? Or maybe it was one of the men he beat up or one of the women he sexually assaulted? The possibilities are endless.


Through the eyes of Maggie, the book gives you true insight on what life can be like with bipolar disorder and how it can affect your job, relationships and everyday life. At times, her confidence and energy are soaring high. Other times, something as minor as a mere look of disapproval from someone can send her spiraling into clinical depression and self-doubt. Her condition can amplify minor things into serious trauma, heightening her reactions in certain situations.

I have worked in several social work jobs with special needs people. Joel Larson is not based on one particular individual, but many of the clients I worked with over the years inspired his character.


Picture
A frustrated detective. (Maggie Taylor)

Joel strives to be a good person, but his developmental difficulties and poor socialization constantly stand in his way. For example, asking him a simple question like "How are you doing?" will result in a detailed and annoying long-winded answer. 

Despite this, he saved the life of a friend suffering from a seizure. He rescued an elderly couple from a vicious wolf. He acts as a role model for an 8 year-old boy. He takes care of a pet turtle. He is very intelligent and articulate in book smarts but childish in maturity. He is impulsive, rarely thinking about the consequences of his actions. He is lonely, always in search of a friend or love interest. At the time of his death, the animals in the forest are his closest friends.


Have you seen the movie, Joker? If so, you’re familiar with pseudobulbar affect, which is involuntary laughter at inappropriate times. Joel suffers from this, which greatly hurts his socialization. He also suffers from low latent inhibition, causing him to overly process minor things that most people routinely look over. He was also diagnosed with frontal lobe autism spectrum disorder, bipolar 1 disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, schizophrenia and constipation. Yes, that's right. Constipation.
​
Picture
The book also takes a personal look at his family and caretakers. Like many people who are forced into group homes or psychiatric facilities, Joel feels abandoned by his family, as they can no longer put up with his violent behavior. (Joel was sent away at age 17 after attempting to stab his father with a knife). 

Joel’s caretakers have a high turnover rate, as he regularly physically attacks  the men. The women are not spared, as they are sometimes sexually and physically assaulted. 

Some of Joel’s caretakers make an effort to get to know him and build successful rapports with the young man. Others are indifferent and there just for the paycheck. People working as direct service supporters generally fall into one category or the other. Joel is often racist and homophobic, sometimes giving African American and homosexual caretakers the hardest time.


Realizing early in life that he packs a hell of a punch, Joel's biggest goals in life are to become an undefeated heavyweight boxing champion like his hero Rocky Marciano. His other obsession is losing his virginity.

As the book progresses, character alliances sometimes shift, people die, and plot twists are at nearly every turn.


I had been aiming to write a novel for years, but could never decide on what story to tell. I came up with the murder concept, then kept adding subplots that added more suspense and flesh to the story. I've actually written several drafts of it, but I discovered that it's best to let the characters dictate the direction of the story. This might sound silly, but I really got to know these fictional people I created. And it hurt like hell to kill some of them off! 

I planned to have the book published by now, but new ideas and plot twists kept hitting me at the last minute. 


Who murdered Joel Larson? What happened to Maggie’s daughter? Will Maggie overcome all of the problems mounted against her? 

​Read Who Killed Joel Larson to find out! Coming Fall 2020


Picture
0 Comments

Does Doug Funnie Suffer From A Mental Illness?

11/30/2019

0 Comments

 
Picture

Disclaimer: This is all my opinion. 

Sometimes it takes one to know one. I used to think that Doug's anxieties and problems were typical of a boy his age. But as an adult, I see so easily now that things run a lot deeper than that. Myself being a victim of manic depression and mild anxiety, I see that Doug suffers from many of the same symptoms but worse. Far worse, actually. I don't let my anxieties run my life. In fact, you wouldn't even know I had manic depression if I hadn't just told you. But Doug, however, almost had a nervous breakdown in each episode, often making a mountain out of a molehill.

Doug is also eager to please others, often looking for their approval and acceptance. I am still this way to a moderate degree, but it was worse when I was little. But even then, I didn't let it control my actions,  and I didn't go out of my way for closure. But that's what Doug does each time. He feels that his very existence depends on the acceptance of others.

If Doug gets the vibe that you don't like him or are upset with him, he will get anxious about it and then go out of his way to change your mind about him. People's perceptions of you shouldn't matter that much.

​As an adult, is Doug going to feel threatened by everyone who gives him a mean look, or doesn't behave the way he expects them to? And will he not be able to function until he gets closure from them? Because that's exactly how he is right now.
​
Picture
When Doug thought his substitute teacher didn't like him, he tried like hell to get on her good side.


Relationship With Roger


Doug has an unhealthy mind, unhealthy enough to where his bully Roger Klotz is a real, real antagonist. Doug hates Roger to the point where he is the villain in most of his fantasy segments and comic books. Doug is one of Roger's favorite victims, sure. But that is because Roger can see how much his antics bother Doug. After all, bullies like reactions.

But Roger respects Doug as a friend – he trusted Doug to look after his cat Stinky when he left town, he “tattled” to Mr. Bone when Doug was about to get his ass whooped by Percy Femur, and the two had several heart to heart conversations, the most memorable one being in the graduation episode when both were afraid of their uncertain futures. He even threw Doug a surprise party once. Roger does not hate Doug. In fact, occasionally his actions have shown that he actually cares for Doug. I think he just gets a kick out of messing with him for his own amusement.
​
Remember also that Roger has his OWN personal problems, stemming from being abandoned by his father and living in a trailer with his mom. Roger is an unhappy and lonely individual, and entertains himself by bullying his peers.


Picture
There were numerous hints that Patti had a crush on Doug, but his anxiety made him oblivious to this fact.


​Relationship With Patti

​
Doug, on the other hand, takes Roger's antics personally. Doug is an 11 year-old kid. Roger pulls humiliating pranks, but causes no real harm or threatens Doug's life in any way. Doug can barely handle Roger, which leads me to believe that real life will really kick his ass later.

How will Doug react if a boss fires him from a job? How will he react if a girl he likes rejects him? Will he imagine these people as evil super-villains out to get him? Will he get anxiety around them and have night terrors and horrible daydreams about them? He probably will!! And this will affect him in every possible aspect of his life.

Roger is not the only person taking center stage in Doug's mind. Doug is in love with Mayonnaise. Patti Mayonnaise. Doug goes overboard trying to impress her and this sometimes backfires. What Doug doesn't realize is that Patti likes him just as much. Look at the picture above. Patti has hearts floating around and is giving him true eyes of wonderment. This is not part of Doug's  fantasy sequences. This was an actual real life scene, just after Doug psyched out Roger. (Doug To The Rescue, Season 1 episode 7B)

Unfortunately, Doug is not an observant and self-confident individual, so this information misses him completely.

In different episodes, Patti asks Doug out on a date, reveals that she likes him “best of all” out of all of her friends, defends him from Roger, and is his biggest supporter and admirer. Doug unfortunately is too self-observed with getting HER approval, so he's oblivious to Patti's obvious affection. Sighs. If Doug could overcome his self-doubts and anxieties, all he'd have to do is tell Patti how he feels, and Patti would happily be with him and they'd both be happy.

I get the feeling that in a few years when puberty kicks in and Patti drops hints to Doug about exploring their relationship sexually, her hints will go completely over his head and Patti will wind up being with someone else, then Doug will get jealous of that guy. Patti will get fed up with Doug's insecurities, and Doug will doubt himself even more, which will hurt his future romantic relationships. This is a theory and opinion, yes. But I just don't see it going any other way.
​
Picture
Doug's date with Patti was awkward. You'd expect him to "man up" and make a move.


​Doug's Manic Creativity


​Manic Depression means you have cycles of mania, which is when your confidence and creativity soars like an eagle, but you also have cycles when you're super unhappy without reason. Have you noticed that Doug is generally either  really creative and energetic OR really frustrated? He's either one or the other. That's how manic depression works. You're either on top of the world, or feel crushed by the world. There's not a real in-between, and the people who suffer from it are generally highly creative when they're feeling manic.
​

Picture


​Sweaty, STANKY Anxiety


Doug's insecurity is noticeably higher than most. When Skeeter's two year-old brother Dale calls Doug “big nose,” Doug gets butthurt about it and is severely hurt by the words of a TWO YEAR-OLD. He let an infant's words control how he felt about himself. For the rest of the episode, Doug was sensitive about his nose, all because a baby told him it was big.

​Doug often imagines the absolute worst-case scenario in almost every situation. On his way to the Honker-Burger in the first episode, he suddenly imagines not fitting in and the entire city (including the mayor) calling him a loser. Why the hell would he feel this would happen? It doesn't make any sense, but that's how people with anxiety and/or depression typically think.

Doug also assumed that Judy's performance at his school would be horrible and humiliating, but his peers absolutely loved it. Again, predicting the worst.

This can make for a humorous cartoon at times though, like when he broke Mr. Dink's grill and imagined him turning into a nasty werewolf.  But unfortunately this is a sign of true anxiety. 

Like other people suffering from anxiety, Doug is a "mind reader." He assumes that people people may not like him or something he's done, even if there's no evidence of this. 

​
An example of this is  in the episode when Doug was caught drawing a (terrible) portrait of his teacher, Ms. Wingo. Doug assumed she'd despise him for it, but she loved it and added it to her book of pictures drawn by past students.

Picture


​Unhealthy Escapes From Reality


Doug does not appear depressed, but he often escapes from the real world, which is what depressed people do.

While he feels that he doesn't quite belong in the real world, Doug often imagines that he is a super-hero in his fantasies. In this world, he does nothing but good and comes to everyone's rescue. He is needed and admired. He is special and charismatic. He gets the approval he so desperately craves in real life. And, the horrible villains in his fantasies are the very same people who cause him minor problems in real life.

When he wants to feel suave and charming, he channels Smash Adams (Secret Agent). If he wants to feel brave, he becomes

Everyone needs to escape to get away from your worries and woes. Everyone escapes in their own way, but the way things are so heightened in Doug's fantasies is not normal in my opinion. In reality, Roger Klotz is a lonely teenager who bullies his friends to feel self-worth. He is not out to kill Doug or destroy him. But in Doug's imagination that's what Roger is often portrayed as.

​
Picture
Writing in his journal helps Doug re-evaluate his problems. By the end of each episode he realizes that things weren't so bad after all.


​What Doug Does Right
​

​I know most of what I've said has been negative so far, but I'm merely stating how Doug's mental problems affect his life and relationships overall. But there are some things that Doug does right.

For starters, he keeps a journal. That's something else I have in common with Doug. Journal-writing keeps your writing skills sharp, and helps you to honestly evaluate everything going on around you. 

Doug is also vocal about his problems. Instead of bottling things up like a future serial killer, he doesn't mind venting. Generally, he confides in his father, The Dinks, his best friend Skeeter and sometimes Patti. Occasionally, he'll even go to his flamboyant sister Judy for advice. When his journal went missing, he opened up to Ms. Wingo, who understood his plight, but informed him that a lot of great authors had their journals published to give insight into their genius. This was great advice that Doug briefly considered. 

Talking out your problems is healthy and helps you to process things. You'll often discover that sometimes things may not be as bad as you think.

Doug is not a bad person and has a moral code, like the time he returned the money that he found. He often finds the courage to do the right thing when he messes up, like returning the stolen comic book he bought, not cheating to sell Mr. Swirley's chocolate, trying to retrieve Patti's "wacky whizzer," and confessing to breaking Mr. Dink's grill. All of these were things he was not forced or required to do, but he has a great conscience and felt a breather after confessing.

He goes out of his way to help others. such as acting as “Hamburger Boy” for Mr. Dink. He even felt bad about knocking out fellow student Larry. Most boys his age would feel great after knocking someone out, but not Doug. He didn't like to fight.

If Doug did not let his anxieties get in the way, he would be Patti's boyfriend. He would be more popular. He would not be targeted by Roger or even faculty bullies like Mr. Bone so much, if at all. Overall, he would get more respect from people.

I look at Doug now and realize that if I gave in to the negative thoughts plaguing my mind, I could have been just as vulnerable and unhappy, and my life would be totally different right now.

For me, it comes down to this.

If I didn't expect people to like me, they wouldn't. When I write an article, I expect people to enjoy it. And they do. I expect people to read this blog, and sure enough, you're reading it right now.

Doug (and other sufferers of anxiety) always predict the opposite, expecting things to fail. They often speak these failures into existence or avoid taking risks altogether and wind up with regrets. We never got to see Doug grow up, but I can't help but feel afraid for his future if he didn't get help.


Picture
0 Comments
    Picture
    Award-Winning Journalist A.J. Dugger III

    Promote Your Page Too

    Author

    A.J. Dugger is an Award-Winning Television and Print & Media Journalist.

    He appears as a crime analyst on the TV-One crime series, For My Man, and is the author of four books: Black Journals,  the horror anthology SoUtHeRn TeRrOr, the mystery crime thriller Who KILLED Joel Larson? and The Dealers: Then and Now, the sensational story of his mother and uncles' career as a funk band.

    The Dealers: Then and Now

    Promote Your Page Too

    Enter your email address:

    Delivered by FeedBurner

    RSS Feed

    Categories

    All
    2002
    2006
    2011
    Abby
    Abigail Anderson
    Allie Colombo
    Allie Columbo
    Al Weil
    An American Werewolf In London
    Andre Bishop
    Anxiety
    Archie Moore
    Aron Tager
    Assault
    Autism
    Bad Intentions
    Barbara Cousins
    Baritone
    Barrett
    Barry Gordy
    Bass
    Batman
    Batman Forever
    Bel Biv DeVoe
    Berry Gordy
    Bipolar
    Bipolar Disorder
    Bite
    Black Hercules
    Blog
    Bloodsport
    Bluffington
    Bobby Brown
    Bolo Yeung
    BOXING
    Brockton
    Bruce Williamson
    Carmine Vingo
    Catwoman
    Charles Winkler
    Charley Goldman
    Charlie Goldman
    Chong Li
    Chris Ferry
    Chuck Lane
    Civil Rights
    Clifford Etienne
    Cody Darbe
    Crime
    Crook Brothers
    Curl
    Cus D'amato
    Damon Harris
    Dancin Machine
    David
    David Ruffin
    David Tua
    Death
    Dennis Edwards
    Deontay Wilder
    Depression
    Donald Ho
    Doug Funnie
    Drago
    Duane Jones
    Duke Desmond
    Ear
    Earnie Shavers
    Eddie Futch
    Eddie Kendricks
    Ellie
    Evander Holyfield
    Facebook
    Falsetto
    Fight To Survive
    Floyd Patterson
    Forest Whitaker
    Frank Dileo
    Frank Dux
    Frankie Carbo
    Freddy Krueger
    Freddy Versus Jason
    Freelance
    Friday The 13th
    Full Moon
    Gazelle Punch
    George C. Scott
    George Foreman
    Ghostwrite
    Hair
    Hasim Rahman
    Haye
    Hbo
    Heavyweight
    Heavyweight Champion
    Horror
    Ingemar Johansson
    Invincible
    Italian
    Jack Dempsey
    Jack Johnson
    Jackson
    Jackson 5
    Jason Takes Manhattan
    Jason Voorhees
    Jean-Claude Van Damme
    Jeffrey Crook
    Jheri
    Jimmy Jam And Terry Lewis
    Jimmy Young
    Joe
    Joe Frazier
    Joe Herndon
    Joel Larson
    Joel Miller
    Joe Louis
    Joel Schumacher
    Johnny Gill
    John Ruiz
    Jon Favreau
    Joshua Crook
    Journalism
    Judy Funnie
    Justin Timberlake
    Ken Kirzinger
    Ken Norton
    Kevin Rooney
    Kickboxer
    Knockout
    Kumite
    Larry Holmes
    Lauren Currie Lewis
    Left Hook
    Lennox Lewis
    Low Latent Inhibtion
    Ma
    Martial Arts
    Marvis Frazier
    Max Baer
    Memphis
    Mental Health
    Mental Illness
    Mentally Ill
    Michael
    Michael Jackson
    Michael Moorer
    Michael Spinks
    Mike Tyson
    Mills Lane
    Miss. Wingo
    Monte
    Monte Barrett
    Moonwalker
    Motown
    Moving Violation
    Muhammad Ali
    Murder
    Mystery
    Mystery Novel
    Nation Of Islam
    Naughty Dog
    New Edition
    New Jack Swing
    Nickelodeon
    Nightmare On Elm Street
    Novel
    On My Own
    Otis Williams
    Paco
    Patti Mayonnaise
    Peekaboo
    Penelope Ann Miller
    Phil Funnie
    Playstation 4
    Porkchop
    Primo Carnera
    Prince
    Principal Lamar Bone
    Privacy
    Ps4
    Ralph Tresvant
    Razor Ruddock
    Rematch
    Review
    Ricardo Morra
    Richard Nixon
    Richard Street
    Rick Grimes
    Rocky Marciano
    Roger Klotz
    Roland Lastarza
    Ron Tyson
    Salvage
    Schizophrenia
    Sensitivity
    Sister Ruth
    Skeeter Valentine
    Smash Adams
    Sonny Liston
    Southern Terror
    Stan Bush
    Stephanie Mcmahon
    Stephen Glass
    Still Here
    Stone Cold Steve Austin
    Sugar Ray Robinson
    Sumo
    Suspense Novel
    Suzy Q
    Suzy-q
    Teddy Atlas
    Teen Nick
    Tennessee
    Tenor
    Terry Weeks
    The Gentleman Of Boxing
    The Howling 4
    The Howling IV
    Theismann
    The Jawbreaker
    The Last Of Us Part 2
    The Making Of Thriller
    The Old Mongoose
    The Rock
    The Tempations
    The Temptations
    The Walking Dead
    Thriller
    Timeline
    Tommy Morrison
    Tony Galento
    Tony Lo Bianco
    Triple H
    Tua
    Tyson Fury
    Uncle Tom
    Undefeated
    Undisputed
    Victory
    Video Blog
    Vince Mcmahon
    Vitali
    Wave
    WBC
    Werewolf
    What If?
    Whodunit
    Who Killed Joel Larson?
    Wig
    Wladimir
    Wladimir Klitschko
    Wwf

    Archives

    January 2022
    December 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    November 2020
    September 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    February 2013
    May 2012
    March 2012
    January 2012
    December 2011
    November 2011
    October 2011
    August 2011
    July 2011
    June 2011
    May 2011

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.