I really hate the Bratz dolls as well...They're trying to get little girls to think that's how thy need to look and act to be cool...Evil, just evil. Ugh.
Well, at least it isn't CGI. That way there are real human beings instead of disproportionate monstrosities like the dolls. Otherwise it's looks to be your standard "high school drama for teenage and preteen girls" movie.
I'm actually a little relieved... I heard about this before and assumed it'd be CGI like the TV show they had. Now THAT would be pure acid for the eyes.
I did a search, but couldn't find where we were talking about Paris Hilton going to jail!
Anyhoo, looks like she's dropped the appeal, but will only serve 23 days:
<B>From The Hollywood Reporter:</B>
Paris Hilton won't appeal the 45-day jail term she was sentenced to earlier this month, according to court documents filed Thursday.
A lawyer for the 26-year-old socialite notified Los Angeles County Superior Court that she is abandoning her appeal, said court spokeswoman Katherine Roberts.
Hilton was ordered to report to jail by June 5 for violating the terms of her probation in an alcohol-related reckless driving case. She initially called the sentence unfair, and lawyers representing her filed a notice to appeal.
She has since changed legal teams and is now represented by Richard Hutton, a lawyer specializing in defending drunken driving cases. Hutton and a spokesman for Hilton did not immediately return calls for comment Thursday.
The hotel heiress is likely to spend about 23 days in a "special needs housing unit" at the Century Regional Detention Center in suburban Lynwood, said Los Angeles County sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore.
The shorter sentence reflects an expectation that she is well behaved behind bars.
"All inmates get credit for good behavior," Whitmore said. "The inmate knows that if they behave and follow the rules that's something to shoot for."
Hilton will be separated from the general inmate population in a unit that contains 12 two-person cells reserved for police officers, public officials, celebrities and other high-profile inmates, he said. She could have a cellmate.
Like everyone else in the 2,200-inmate facility, Hilton would get at least an hour outside her cell each day to shower, watch television, participate in outdoor recreation or talk on the telephone, he said.