chance
23-05-2006, 09:28
After an afternoon and evening spent in relative silence, Shahbaz finally conversed with the housemates again tonight - although the exchange was far from civilised.
The outcast became involved in yet another fruitless row while locked in the bedroom with the Brotherhood.
"Why can't people handle brutal honesty?" he asked, to which he received an aptly candid response from Richard. "Shaz, there's nothing honest in anything you are saying and you are completely naive to think that there is."
"It's people like you that make people want to hate gays," Sezer added, while Shahbaz compared Richard to the good witch Glenda and himself the witch killed by Dorothy's house in The Wizard Of Oz.
With his latest filmic reference an unpopular choice, Shahbaz turned the tables on his brothers and asked them how they felt about their own exits from the house.
"At the end of the day I've been myself," asserted Grace, while Sezer claimed that he was "not bothered" if the public disliked him.
Before long the discussion had returned to the issue of Shahbaz's personality and social ability. "Gay men and I don't seem to get along for some reason," he mused in the direction of Richard.
"No, you and planet earth don't get along," Richard shot back.
Appearing fed up, Shahbaz suggested that the group had lost their "sense of humour", adding: "Can we lighten up? I'm not here to eat you."
The outcast became involved in yet another fruitless row while locked in the bedroom with the Brotherhood.
"Why can't people handle brutal honesty?" he asked, to which he received an aptly candid response from Richard. "Shaz, there's nothing honest in anything you are saying and you are completely naive to think that there is."
"It's people like you that make people want to hate gays," Sezer added, while Shahbaz compared Richard to the good witch Glenda and himself the witch killed by Dorothy's house in The Wizard Of Oz.
With his latest filmic reference an unpopular choice, Shahbaz turned the tables on his brothers and asked them how they felt about their own exits from the house.
"At the end of the day I've been myself," asserted Grace, while Sezer claimed that he was "not bothered" if the public disliked him.
Before long the discussion had returned to the issue of Shahbaz's personality and social ability. "Gay men and I don't seem to get along for some reason," he mused in the direction of Richard.
"No, you and planet earth don't get along," Richard shot back.
Appearing fed up, Shahbaz suggested that the group had lost their "sense of humour", adding: "Can we lighten up? I'm not here to eat you."