Alec Baldwin phone message to his daughter
Originally Posted by Scot,Apr 24 2007, 09:44 AM
awake or asleep....at least mine are human.
I know.........you were just helping the sheep over the fence....

I know.........you were just helping the sheep over the fence....


Originally Posted by Scot,Apr 24 2007, 04:15 AM
I can't even imagine talking to my kids like that. I am sure that is normal life in the mountains of (insert your redneck state here), but most people who want their kids to succeed don't do that.
Originally Posted by VTEC_Junkie,Apr 25 2007, 12:13 AM
the kid doesn't need to succeed. she'll have a huge trust fund, plus the fact that she's alec baldwin's kid, she'll eventually get into the movie, tv, or music industry just by contacts and association.
i don't think what he said was THAT bad, after all, she's in what, the 7th grade? she should be able to handle a mildly pissed off parent, and it could've been way worse. i think suspending his visitation rights for a mild slight of the tongue is unjust, but that's me.
Originally Posted by shareall,Apr 24 2007, 08:22 PM
Depends on your definition of "success." IMO being successful is only partly about your career.
Originally Posted by soul_fly,Apr 24 2007, 08:26 PM
i don't think what he said was THAT bad, after all, she's in what, the 7th grade? she should be able to handle a mildly pissed off parent and it could've been way worse. i think suspending his visitation rights for a mild slight of the tongue is unjust, but that's me.
Originally Posted by soul_fly,Apr 25 2007, 12:26 AM
i don't think what he said was THAT bad, after all, she's in what, the 7th grade? she should be able to handle a mildly pissed off parent, and it could've been way worse. i think suspending his visitation rights for a mild slight of the tongue is unjust, but that's me.
Calling your kid names is okay? A parent is supposed to be the mature one and it shouldn't be a kid's responsibility to "handle" an angry parent. And just because it could've been worse doesn't mean it was okay IMO.







