Answer Monday! (Song Girl Forum)
I'm sure you've all been waiting with baited breath for these answers.
Q: With the completely improbable return of former Song Girl Natalie Nelson to the national spotlight with her continued support for Texas, has she regained her crown as "Most famous USC Song Girl in History" from the pretenders who challenged her throne this past year?
A: I will never allow anyone to overtake Tricia Pillsbury for the most famous USC song girl award! But I would say a different honor, such as most famous ``YouTube USC song girl'' would be fine.
Q: Did the USC class where you were speaking about the USC Song Girls this past week happen to be a Political Science course regarding entrenched and self-serving dictators who preside over a very corrupt regime?
A: Yes. It was actually Dictatorship 101: The rise fall of the United States spirit squads.
Q: On the song girls website, there is a page called "Pictures with Famous Friends." This page has a picture of the song girls with Shelley Long. Isn't the definition of "famous" being used rather loosely when it comes to someone like Shelley Long?
A: She was famous in 1987, which is around the last time the song girls were relevant.



Natalie Nelson continues her return to national prominence today:
http://www.bustedcoverage.com/?p=9087
Geez, these poor people. Who is the dog in that Halloween pic with Dallas and Lofa? Pretty funny stuff.
That dirty dog is Collin Ashton.
Unless one has been eating worms or a jar of salmon eggs "baited breath" would actually be "bated breath". The term appears in The Merchant of Venice and is cited in the Oxford English Dictionary in 1596. And now back to our program.