This illustrated storybook captures the unforgettable fashions, vocabulary, and characters of the iconic 1995 film Clueless with an adorable kid-friendly adaptation about making friends. Cher and Dionne are the coolest kids at Bronson Alcott Elementary School in Beverly Hills. When a new -- very unique, grunge-chic, and possibly clueless -- girl named Tai comes along, Cher and Dionne take her under their wings. They tell her how to dress and what hobbies to take up to be a part of their friend group. But Tai really likes skateboarding, baggy clothes, and wants to hang out more with the group of skateboarders. Cher and Dionne try a variety of ways to change Tai, alongside a cast of characters including Murray, Amber, Travis, Summer, Elton, and Miss Geist. But in the end, they realize that people are different and that's what makes them so cool!
Keeping Secrets: Book Two Out jock Tommy Johnson and former bully Jason Strummer have settled into a surprisingly comfortable routine.
Alicia Silverstone continues to act, appearing in movies (Beauty Shop, Butter, Vamps, Who Gets the Dog?), TV shows (Miss Match, Children's Hospital, Suburgatory), and plays, on Broadway (The Graduate, Time Stands Still, ...
Marty Sullivan’s life ends, basically, when her parents enroll her in a private high school.
Celebrate Clueless and rolleth with the homies with this illustrated adaptation of the cult classic script, retold in Shakespearean verse by the best-selling author of William Shakespeare's Star Wars.
The plot centers on Cher Horowitz, a rich and beautiful high school student who befriends a new student named Tai Frasier and decides to give her a makeover. Clueless was filmed in California over a 40-day schedule.
Clueless
Clueless at The Work provides a simple and easy to understand roadmap for success in the modern workplace.
Everyone says it's impossible to just be friends with a guy. But that's exactly what Blue and Elizabeth are. He lets her use his surfboard and calls her all the time. It's cool being just friends with Blue. She hopes it never changes.
Emma by Jane Austen and Clueless Directed by Amy Heckerling
Gerald Graff argues that our schools and colleges make the intellectual life seem more opaque, narrowly specialized, and beyond normal learning capacities than it is or needs to be.