Sunday, March 27, 2011

Lonely

Lonely am I

Lonely are the nights
Lonely are the days
Lonely am I, in so many ways

Lonely are the seasons
Lonely are the years
So lonely am I, that it brings tears.

Lonely is this place
Lonely is my life
Lonely am I, that I reach for a knife

Lonely is this court room
Lonely is my sentence
So lonely am I that I ask for repentance

Thursday, March 24, 2011

The idiot girl who think the girl hair is a cat!

Lady Lala: You have a cute cat XD
Gilly girl: WTF! lala my hair is not a cat 
Lady Lala: Is it a girl name or a boy name tehehhehehehe
Gilly Girl: Uggghhhhh lala u must be idiot
Lady lala: can i take care of her/he?
Gilly girl: WTF i'm leaving!
Lady lala: Got your cat!
Gilly girl: Waaaaaaaaaaaa!!!! my hair! my hair is bold!
Lady lala: cute cat tehehehhehe
Gilly girl: U U U!!!!!!! thats my wig!
gilly girl: wwwaaaa!!!!!!!!!!!! :'(
Lady lala: What a idiot girl......... This is a cat not a hair +_+

THE END????????

Paparazzi in France!

hey pico!
i'm the new Paparazzi lol
idiot me right?
so look at this picture!
WOW! What on earth! Why the Grandma Using a young girl Clothes?! Weird Grandma...........=_=" I think the grandma is waiting for her bf.Maybe its young....

Dating huuuu? U guys are Super star! thats why u guys are mysterious.......

Wow! nice clothes dude.. perfect model for pico XD

wow.... new nerd model lol !!!! perfect nerd model

Wait! This is the fake choco pico! Security!! Security!!! Where are u?!  take this fake Chocopico to the jail!

Look at that dress! Better steal it! lol just kidding

hhhhmmmmm......  A rock stick huuu?  :O this guys is trying to murder people! Someone Call the Police!!!!

The rock and roll Twins! What are u guys doing? gonna rock the red carpet or u guys wanna rock at my room?! so my room will be more popular!

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Rich Tiger!

I really want White Tiger in Casino!
I hope it get lots of Casino money!

Monday, March 21, 2011

Busy Busy Busy!

It been so long Adam doesn't online:'( I'm Missed him........but i know he is busy every time.Maybe it's ok.....lots of people are also busy so i don't care bye bye

P.S
maybe he don't want to play again! nahhhhh he will online bye again

P.S.S
Stop It!

P.S.S.S
Shut Up!!!!!!!

P.S.S.S.S..S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S..S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S..S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S
Knock it off girl

P..S.S.S.S.S.S.S.SS..S.S.S.S.S.SS..S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.
Ok Ok Ok Ok geeeeeeeeeee P.S :P

P.S
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Friday, March 18, 2011

French!

Hello!
It's me White.Angel :D remember?LOL
In ameba pico,there is a new park French!
its so beautiful!
 I see French, I see Food and I see me! lol

Thursday, March 17, 2011


Japan: A shattered community struggles to survive

A firsthand account from Otsuchi, Japan where 9,500 remain missing
By Patrick Fuller
Wednesday, March 16, 2011 —
It is hard to find words to describe the scenes left behind in the wake of the tsunami that struck Japan’s northeastern coastline on March 11. As I drive up the coast from the town of Ishinomaki, the road winds through picturesque snow-capped mountain passes and down through scented pine forests towards the sea where a horrific scene is revealed. A series of small bays, which were once home to thriving fishing towns, now lie shattered and scarred.
Ten-meter (33 feet) waves swept in, decimating everything in their path. The remains of houses and their contents lie disgorged in thick dark mud. The town of Otsuchi in Iwate prefecture is possibly the most badly affected place on the coast. Residents barely had half an hour to evacuate to higher ground before the waves came in.
Of a population of 17,000, some 9,500 people remain unaccounted for and it is easy to see why. The receding surge of water left behind a wasteland of tangled wreckage, but worse was to come. Fuel from shattered fishing boats and severed gas lines ignited, turning the debris into a floating inferno.
And still the fires rage. Fleets of fire engines from all over Japan are battling to contain the flames, which have now spread into the surrounding pine forests. Civil defense teams move with purpose through the acres of cement and charred and twisted metal in their quest for bodies, but the hope of finding survivors is remote.
All my senses are overwhelmed – the constant noise of sirens fills the air and helicopters hover overhead transporting the injured to nearby hospitals. Otsuchi is a scene from hell.
“This is the worst I have ever seen in my career working with the Red Cross,” said the Japanese Red Cross President, Tadateru Konoé, during a recent visit to Otsuchi. “It brings back memories of the scenes at the end of the Second World War, when cities like Tokyo and Osaka were flattened by bombing.”
In one of the evacuation centers, where at least 500 people lie huddled on strips of cardboard under piles of blankets, it is clear that this is a tragedy that has hit the young and elderly the hardest.
Hiromi Kinno, a nurse living in Miyako, is one amongst a crowd of people studying the many scribbled messages pinned on a makeshift notice board at the gymnasium. She came to look for her parents and young nephews who are missing.
“I’m worried whether they were able to escape,” she said. “I’ve had no contact with my family and I found out about what had happened on TV. At first I couldn’t believe it, and I started imaging the worst and I had no cell phone connection, so I felt helpless and had to come.”
I see one elderly couple huddled around a wood stove in the corner of the vast gymnasium stare blankly into the flames. I later learn that they lost their entire family and their home. They are clearly in a state of shock.
Everyone here has lost a friend or family member to the tsunami. For the 80 Japanese Red Cross medical teams deployed to provide care for the evacuees, coping with trauma will fast become the biggest challenge.
I pass a rescue worker crouched by the side of the road leafing through the remains of a family photo album, strewn in the mud. It transpires that he is from Otsuko and has lost members of his own family.
 “I can only think of my children when I look at these photos,” he said quietly.
The stoicism amongst local people is extraordinary, but the apparent calm is deceptive. The blank expressions of most hide the trauma that they have suffered.
The Red Cross medical teams have fanned out across the length of the 400-kilometre-long (nearly 250 miles) disaster zone. Within 24 hours of the disaster striking, they had set up a network of emergency response units from where five-person teams, comprised of doctors and nurses, operate – moving out to different evacuation centers in nearby towns each day.
It took Toda Kazuko 12 hours driving through the night from his hometown of Kobe to reach Otsuchi. Within hours of arriving, a tented clinic had sprung up and members of the team were treating patients in the evacuation centers. A veteran of the Red Cross Haiti earthquake operation, Kazuko was totally focused on the job at hand.
“We have more than 700 staff deployed and in four days the next rotation comes in,” he said before having to leave abruptly as an elderly woman shivering uncontrollably is stretchered in to the clinic, suffering from hypothermia.
The nights in Otsuchi are bitterly cold. With the temperature at minus 5 degrees Celsius (23 degrees Fahrenheit), and no electricity or mobile phone coverage, survivors are isolated and having to cope with extreme living conditions. With fuel shortages and little food coming in to the few shops that remain open, some have resorted to scavenging through the debris for packets of dried food. With such absolute destruction, it is hard to see a future for this shattered community.
Red Cross Response
The American Red Cross announced an initial contribution of $10 million to the Japanese Red Cross Society Tuesday to assist in its ongoing efforts to provide medical care and relief assistance to the people of Japan following the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.Read more
In addition to financial assistance, a disaster management expert from the American Red Cross arrived in Japan Monday for a week-long mission to provide support and advice to the Japanese Red Cross Society, which continues to support the Japanese government’s earthquake and tsunami response.
Otsutshi, one elderly couple huddled around a wood stove in the corner of the vast gymnasium simply stare blankly into the flames.
Otsutshi, one elderly couple huddled around a wood stove in the corner of the vast gymnasium simply stare blankly into the flames.
Photo: IFRC
Otsuchi, in one of the evacuation centres where at least 500 people lie huddled on strips of cardboard under piles of blankets, it is clear that this is a tragedy that has hit the young and elderly the hardest.
Otsuchi, in one of the evacuation centers where at least 500 people lie huddled on strips of cardboard under piles of blankets, it is clear that this is a tragedy that has hit the young and elderly the hardest.
Photo: IFRC
Hiromi Kinno, a nurse living in Miyako is one amongst a crowd of people studying the many scribbled messages pinned on a makeshift notice board at the gymnasium. She had come to look for her parents and young nephews who were missing. “I’m worried whether they were able to escape. I had no contact with my family until I found out about what had happened on TV. At first I couldn’t believe it, and I started imaging the worst and I had no cell phone connection so I was helpless and had to come”.
Hiromi Kinno, a nurse living in Miyako is one amongst a crowd of people studying the many scribbled messages pinned on a makeshift notice board at the gymnasium. She had come to look for her parents and young nephews who were missing. “I’m worried whether they were able to escape. I had no contact with my family until I found out about what had happened on TV. At first I couldn’t believe it, and I started imaging the worst and I had no cell phone connection so I was helpless and had to come”.
Photo: IFRC
Patrick Fuller, communications manager from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, is currently in northeastern Japan supporting his colleagues at the Japanese Red Cross Society following the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.
About the American Red Cross:
The American Red Cross shelters, feeds and provides emotional support to victims of disasters; supplies nearly half of the nation's blood; teaches lifesaving skills; provides international humanitarian aid; and supports military members and their families. The Red Cross is a charitable organization — not a government agency — and depends on volunteers and the generosity of the American public to perform its mission. For more information, please visit www.redcross.org or join our blog at http://blog.redcross.org.

Red Cross

Hi Pico friend!
U already know about the Tsunami in Japan?
Well Lots of people were killed and Lost from the Tsunami......
sad right?
but some of them were survive from the Tsunami........
If u want to help them, Click this  website:
 www.redcross.com
help them guys!
They need Donation!

Thank You for your Cooperation :)

Sunday, March 13, 2011

New Family!

 Hi guys!
 Having fun in ameba pico?
 My friend 'Honey' made a new family!
 Name of the family: Miyuki
 So join pico!
 She is the owner of the Miyuki Family!

 Thank for reading this news
  Have nice day in Pico!

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Chloe House!

Hi, friends! This is White.Angel. Are you having fun in wonderful Pico World?
Today is Pico’s 1st Anniversary!!! Chloe’ House is open for celebration!!!
Hurry up!!! Come and Check it!!!







We have some new items in Louis’s shop. Don’t miss it!!!


NY downtown in celebration

Hi, friends! This is White.Angel, Are you having fun in wonderful Pico World?
Today is Pico’s 1st Anniversary!!! Chloe’ House is open for celebration!!!
Hurry up!!! Come and Check it!!





We have a few item updates in Rinarina Shop, and RO80 Type: 1st!!!
Don’t forget to check them out!!!









Don’t you think they are so cute?!!
We have more new goods. Check them by yourself!!!



Go there and buy now!!!!!!!

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

My New Hair!

This is the new hair! I am tired of my old hair so i change my hair so thats it!


P.S
Adam like my new hair and say me cute lol!