Women In Rock


Speaking of the press...:

Love: Excuse me, but the last three women on the cover of ROLLING STONE have had their tits out. And I can practically see Winona Ryder's nipples on her cover.

Girls together outrageously, or sisterhood is harder than you might think

Love: I wore this gown at a video shoot - like a prom dress - and I got some tits in it. And there was like this whole PC contingent, this riot-grrrl contingent, that was there, and I was like "Oh, my God, one of these falsies is gonna pop out in front of one of these PC feminists."

Born Roberta Joan Anderson

Love's perfume: Fracas.

Child's Play, Without Chucky

Love: Play chords with two fingers like a bass player. As a teen girl, your hands are too small to do it another way. And it's like this big Masonic secret or something. No one would tell me. I'd be like "Why can you do this, and I can't? I'm smarter than you."

Sexism And Rock & Roll. No Drugs. And again, No Chucky

Love: When that guy at Time magazine wrote that Pearl Jam cover story, he used, describing Babes In Toyland, the word punkette. Punkette! Do you say poetette? Do you say astronautette? it was so disgusting. It's like "Hey, down here, we don't use punkette." F*cker. And it said alternative-band members shun dating models and groupies. That was the first paragraph. He was definitely coming from this perspective that all models and groupies are female. And this is Time.

Closing Comments

This is the thing with women, this is the issue: We all want to be in Musician. It's a common thing, you know why? Because, like, all the grungy guys are like "Why would you want to be in that fucking fascist magazine?" And it's because there's some kind of weird validation in the question "What kind of bass strings do you use?"

Email: jacqui_missworld@hotmail.com