Home | All Fwiends | Random | Online | Music | Blog | Search

breaking myspace's Blog

"Hi!"
Other
9 years old
Interzone
Last Login: 1606153224000
Contacting breaking myspace
Message
Report
Add
Block
All Blogs (847/10)

wow thats a lot

i wont make anymore blogs for real this time

1 Comment

cursed blog

this blog is cursed (666th blog)

No Comment

another funny nubmber

another funny number blog (420)

No Comment

no way i will

no way i will fill all these empty blogs

No Comment

blog 255

very special number for poorgrammars like me (im not a poorgrammer i was jus joking)

1 Comment

year 2000

nope i dont have this many blogs

No Comment

123

123456789

No Comment

100

10 times as many blogs as intended...

No Comment

nice number blog

this is blog number 69 very nice

1 Comment

hfeug

this is my final blog sory

2 Comments

cool musick for the car

does someone know that sog it goes like this
dydu dud udue duue duedyu

2 Comments
1599865465000

blogging?

are you blogging?

1 Comment

pizza joke 1

very founny piza joke1 fgrh

1 Comment

blog 21

where are the nans when i need them

1 Comment

nan gang here

calling all nans

2 Comments

nothing is eternal

this will all get patched one day

1 Comment

pizza joke 0

the top secret pizza joke

No Comment

infinite blogs!

bloging is so cool with this cool trick that will impress yoyr friends

No Comment

11th blog

free ad space
buy 5 dolar

No Comment

nan guy

when will he visit myspace again...

2 Comments

caulliflowr

Cauliflower is one of several vegetables in the species Brassica oleracea in the genus Brassica, which is in the Brassicaceae (or Mustard) family. It is an annual plant that reproduces by seed. Typically, only the head is eaten – the edible white flesh sometimes called "curd" (with a similar appearance to cheese curd).[1] The cauliflower head is composed of a white inflorescence meristem. Cauliflower heads resemble those in broccoli, which differs in having flower buds as the edible portion. Brassica oleracea also includes broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, collard greens, and kale, collectively called "cole" crops,[2] though they are of different cultivar groups.

1 Comment

sleepy

im going to sleep

2 Comments