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Girl Talk is a board game invented by Catherine Rondeau [1] in 1988 and became a popular game for teenage girls throughout the 1990s. It is similar to the parlour game Truth or Dare and features themes such as boys, talking on the phone, dancing, having parties and sleepovers, and other "girl-ish" concerns for the time.
Girl Talk (board game), a 1988 board game; Girl Talk (books), a 1990–1992 series of novels for teenage girls by L. E. Blair; Girl Talk, a British magazine aimed at preteens; Girl Talk Inc., an international student-to-student mentoring program; Girl Talk, a 1989 film directed by Frank Harris
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Let's Talk About Me is a 1995 girl-oriented activity centre video game developed by GirlGames Inc. and team smartyPants!, and published by Simon & Schuster Interactive. [1] It was released on Macintosh, Windows, and Windows 3.x. A sequel entitled Let's Talk About Me Too was released in 1997.
The origins of The Game are uncertain. The most common hypothesis is that The Game derives from another mental game, Finchley Central.While the original version of Finchley Central involves taking turns to name stations, in 1976, members of the Cambridge University Science Fiction Society (CUSFS) developed a variant wherein the first person to think of the titular station loses.
Danica Nava, the author of “The Truth According to Ember,” is venturing into more cowboy territory with her second novel, “Love is a War Song,” out in July. “Love is a War Song” is a ...
Released March 15, 1985, “Vision Quest” arrived smack in the middle of the ‘80s teen movie renaissance. It was preceded by John Hughes’ first two films, “Sixteen Candles” and “The ...
Mystery Date game board, 1965. Mystery Date can be played with two, three, or four players. The object of the game is to acquire a desirable date, while avoiding the "dud". [1] [2] Players acquire cards to assemble outfits in four different colors by rolling a die to move around the board, then drawing, discarding, or trading cards as dictated by the spaces where they land.