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THE GUESTLIST NETWORK www.guestlist.net


Baddest Bitch


English singer-songwriter and star of the RnB scene, Jessie J, may ‘do it like a dude’, but she is one bad bitch and that is why we love her.


1) Any girl that can grab her crotch on stage and not end up in Heat’s ‘Celebrity Crotch Grab Shots’ is alright by us. Any girl that can do it whilst warming up for Kanye West at Big Chill... Legend.


2) She broke her foot and still played Glasto.


3) The J doesn’t stand for anything. When you’re that cool, who needs a second name, eh Jay-Z/Heavy D/ Ice-T?


4) When pre-pubescent teeny bopper Willow Smith asked if she would write her a new single, Jessie replied: “Precocious tweens and school detention?”


5) According to her ‘Do It Like A Dude’ video, she lives in an underground fight club where her friends make drugs and eat pigs’ feet...


7) She said she was inspired by a Ribena carton to die her hair purple... Seriously. And she pulls it off.


8) After discovering Amy Winehouse had died, Jessie J said that she would shave her head for a good cause: [Tweet] “I have decided I will be shaving my head next year to raise money for charity. To me its just hair, to those suffering its a chance to live”


Jesse will be touring the UK this October. For more information and tickets, go to www.jessiejofficial.com


We take a look at an increasingly relevant international political issue that still seems far from being resolved...


SAE InSTITuTE LOnDOn OPEn DAY


STUDY http://uk.sae.edu


AUDIO FILM MUSIC BUSINESS


3D ANIMATION


GAMES WEB DIGITAL JOURNALISM DEGREE and DIPLOMAS


At SAE London students study for careers in Sound, Audio Engineering, Music Production, Music Business, Digital Film, Web Design, Game Design and 3D Anima- tion.


UK Campuses: GLASGOW / LIVERPOOL / LONDON / OXFORD


SAE Institute London will hold its next Open Day on Sunday 21st August 2011 from 11am to 4pm. The college will present its world-class facilities with a specific focus on the newly developed recording studio complex. Featuring Neve VR Legend, SSL 4000 G+, TLAudio VTC and Yamaha 02R96 consoles, students at SAE London have the opportunity to learn using the best audio facilities available for education in the UK. Open Day visitors will have the opportunity to take tours of the


studios and facilities, as well as getting first-hand information about the courses on offer. The college is also presenting a wide range of information and demonstrations for its Electronic Music Production, Film, Animation, Music Business, Digital Journalism, Gaming & Web Design programmes. SAE staff will give prospective students an insight into the topics and techniques taught as part of SAE Institute’s programmes as well as answering all questions.


One of the biggest flaws in international politics is the way that world governments handle the issue of drugs; no other topic is so fundamentally misunderstood on a conceptual level. It is clear why the majority of people react to the idea of legalisation with horror: the word concocts horrible images of the masses overdosing or becoming junkies. However this perception overlooks the fact that with legalisation often comes regulation, as well as the equally detrimental effects of the ban itself. History has repeatedly shown that prohibition often has adverse effects. We only have to look at the USA during the alcohol ban of the 1920s to see a rise in large scale criminal enterprises, boot legging, deaths and a loss of reasonable tax revenue, all of which resulted in the flourishing of criminal groups such as the Mafia. Here and now in the UK, prohibition laws remain ineffective with regards to the import of illegal drugs; the business continues to thrive underground in western countries, whilst developing production countries such as Mexico or Afghanistan constantly see themselves being exploited. The usual objection to this argument is that illegal drugs cannot be equated to alcohol and tobacco. However, scientific findings have shown that LSD, cannabis and ecstasy are actually less harmful overall than alcohol. Now the government’s ‘War on Drugs’ policy is undergoing very significant developments; within the last few months, a Global Commission on Drug Policy has


Issue 30 / August 201


DRUGS: Is regulated legalisation the answer?


Issue 29 / July 2011


been formed, with the objective of reassessing the methods governments are currently using in order to encourage a ‘paradigm shift’ in the way drugs policies are handled. Hopefully governments will start to take a more consultative and scientific approach to the problem rather than the easy way out.


OPEN DAY 21st


Online Now!


August Register


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