Cassidy Klein About The Vagina

Cassidy Klein About The Vagina




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Cassidy Klein About The Vagina
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FTV Girls (TV Series)


Cass: All About the Vagina
(2015)










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Celebrity Facts
Celebrity Details, Body Statistics & More ...

Born Chelsea Brooke Wallace on May 29, 1991 in San Francisco, California, USA, Cassidy is a trained theater actress. She started her career in the ad*lt entertainment industry in 2014. Cassidy has a perfect body which measures breast 32, waist 24 and hip 32. She is with the height 5 feet 3 inches in tall. She wears a size 5 shoe and her zodiac sign is Gemini.
Cassidy Klein Personal Details:
Date Of Birth: 29 May 1991
Birth Place: San Francisco, California, USA
Birth Name: Chelsea Brooke Wallace
Nicknames: Cassidy Kline, Briget Bond, Bridget Bond
Zodiac Sign: Gemini
Occupation: Actress
Nationality: American
Race/Ethnicity: White
Religion: Unknown
Hair Color: Light Brown
Eye Color: Hazel
Sexual Orientation: Bisexual
Cassidy Klein Body Statistics:
Weight in Pounds: 115 lbs
Weight in Kilogram: 52 kg
Height in Feet: 5′ 3″
Height in Meters: 1.60 m
Body Build/Type: Slim
Body Measurements: 32-24-32 (81-61-81 cm)
Breast Size: 32 inches (81 cm)
Waist Size: 24 inches (61 cm)
Hips Size: 32 inches (81 cm)
Bra Size/Cup Size: 32B
Feet/Shoe Size: 5 (US)
Dress Size: 6 (US)
Cassidy Klein Family Details:
Father: Unknown
Mother: Unknown
Spouse/Husband: Unmarried
Children: No
Siblings: Unknown
Cassidy Klein Education:
Not available
Cassidy Klein Facts:
*She was born on May 29, 1991 in San Francisco, California, United States.
*Her birth name is Chelsea Brooke Wallace.
*She was a dancer for sixteen years.
*She began her ad*lt film career in 2014.
*She’s bisexual.
*In her spare time, she enjoys smoking marijuana and doing yoga in front of her fireplace.
*Follow her on Twitter and Instagram .
Cassidy Horn is an American actress and environmentalist, known for Veronica Mars (2004). Born Cassidy Karen Horn on August 25, 1989 in Los Angeles, California, USA, to parents Cindy Harrell and Alan Horn, her mother is a former model and actress, and her father is the chairman of Walt Disney…
Katie Cassidy is an American actress. She is best known for playing the role of Laurel Lance in The CW's superhero television series Arrow since 2012. She portrayed Amanda in the thriller Taken and played Ella Simms in the drama series Melrose Place. Cassidy's other notable works include Supernatural, Gossip…
Shirley Jones is an American singer and actress, best remembered by the public for her roles in musical films, such as Oklahoma!, Carousel, and The Music Man, and for her role as Mrs. Partridge on the 1970s television show The Partridge Family. She won an Oscar for her role in…

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Cole Cassidy looked at the table, covered with small pieces of paper of varying shapes and colors, and had a simple inquiry for his father.
“What’s a ticket stub?” the 8-year-old son of Bruins coach Bruce Cassidy asked.
The elder Cassidy sat at a conference table next to his office at Warrior Ice Arena with hundreds of ticket stubs, maybe as many as 1,000, all arrayed in a massive pile before him. Cassidy, 54, has been collecting this type of memorabilia since he was his son’s age.
It took over an hour to separate each one into every imaginable category, including the NHL, NFL , NBA , MLB , minor-league hockey and baseball, junior hockey, golf, college basketball, college football, concerts, theatre, CFL , auto racing, ski passes, bus trips, bachelor parties, graduation parties — even tickets to “Late Night with Conan O’Brien” and “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.”
He had a tale for nearly every one he picked up. In a way, they told the story of his life, one memorable night at a time.
The Canadian Tae Kwon Do Championship? Sure. How about Jai-Alai? Or “The Vagina Monologues” at the National Theatre in D.C.? He attended all of them and has the ticket stubs and vignettes to prove it.
“’Fiddler on the Roof’ was one of my favorites,” he said.
The earliest ticket stub Cassidy owns is from a 1973 Ottawa 67’s major junior hockey game. Cassidy was 8 years old and would later fulfill a childhood dream and play for his hometown team before the Chicago Blackhawks drafted the defenseman in the first round (No. 18 overall) of the 1983 NHL Entry Draft.
“I sat behind the net for $2,” he said as he read the 67’s ticket stub.

Cassidy’s collection. (Joe McDonald Photo)
Cassidy would write the final score or little notes on the ticket stubs when he was younger, but as an adult, he tries to keep the tickets in the best condition possible.
“I always liked to collect sports stuff,” Cassidy said. “I have probably five to seven thousand hockey cards and baseball cards. This was just stuff that I did so I hung onto (my ticket stubs).”
As his collection increased as an adult, he thought of building a bar at his house with the ticket stubs under the glass. Establishing a permanent residence is a challenge when anyone works in professional sports, so his ticket-stub bar will have to wait, but his inventory is ready to go.
“I thought I could shove them all under glass and people could come and see and we could talk about them,” Cassidy said. “It just became a habit and I still do it today.”
But he might not be able to much longer. Ticket stubs, his stock-in-trade, might not exist forever.
Many arenas and professional sports teams, including the Bruins and TD Garden, now require fans to use mobile tickets to enter events in order to combat fraud and counterfeiting tickets. Print-at-home tickets will no longer be accepted. Season-ticket holders are allowed to purchase an entire season of hard-copy tickets for an additional fee of $20.
“For some kids, they’ll never get an appreciation of maybe looking back. It’s great, reminiscing. You can look back at where you’ve been and what you’ve seen,” Cassidy said.
Since the Bruins are preparing for the 2019-20 season, many hockey operation employees, including a dozen players, are already back at Warrior. The conference room is off the main hallway near the locker room, so when colleagues walked by they saw the pile of tickets and entered the room to investigate.
“This is cool,” skills coach Kim Brandvold said when he popped in. “I wish I had kept mine and didn’t throw them out.”
There was one particular ticket stub that had Cassidy stumped.
It was a small, gray rectangle ticket that was ripped in half. On the front, it read: Team Canada ’72 vs. U.S.S.R. On the back he had written “Canada 8, USSR 8.” The game was played on March 17 at the Ottawa Civic Center.
“What do I have here?” he asked himself. “Maybe it was an Olympic exhibition game against Russia. It’s a $15 ticket, which would’ve been expensive (in 1972).”
Cassidy thought hard and finally recalled that it was the 1987 reunion game of the famous 1972 Summit Series.
Another made him laugh. It was a ticket for his high school senior boat cruise celebration in 1983.
“A boat would sail around Ottawa and that’s what we did for graduation. Look, it’s from 1 a.m. to 5 a.m. It was a late-night cruise after graduation with a cash bar, so we could even drink. Well, I couldn’t, because you had to be 19 and I was 18. I’m sure I found a way,” he laughed.
As he read ticket stub after ticket stub, there was one, in particular, he was hoping to find.
“I believe I was at the game when Pete Rose broke Ty Cobb’s record,” he said.
Cassidy was playing for the Blackhawks in 1985 but was rehabbing from a severe knee injury in September. He had plenty of time to attend Cubs games at Wrigley Field, especially when his favorite team, the Cincinnati Reds, was in town.
Now, there’s always been some controversy as to which was the official game when Rose became MLB’s all-time hits leader. Some believe it was Sept. 8, 1985, against the Cubs at Wrigley Field, while the record books show it was against the San Diego Padres on Sept. 11, 1985, at Riverfront Stadium in Cincinnati.
As Cassidy dug through his ticket stubs, he finally found what he sought. The date on the stub was Sept. 7. Rose went 0-for-4 with a walk in a 9-7 loss to the Cubs.
“Ugh. I was there the day before,” he said. “I honestly think I went back the next day. I swear the game I was there he got hits and fans were getting excited. Anyway, I could be wrong; your memory gets a little scattered.”
As he digs through, there are a surprisingly large store of tickets to the Ottawa Rough Riders of the Canadian Football League, but nothing tops his concert ticket pile. His list of concerts is impressive.
His two favorites bands are Pearl Jam and U2, and Cassidy has the ticket stubs to prove it. He’s seen Pearl Jam a dozen times all over the country. The same goes for Bono and the boys — Cassidy even attended a U2 concert in Switzerland.
The other bands he’s witnessed could fill a legendary jukebox, including Van Halen, No Doubt, Helix, George Fox, John Mellencamp, Styx and Kansas, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Taylor Swift, David Lee Roth, Dwight Yoakam, Bruno Mars, Eagles, Fleetwood Mac, REO Speedwagon, Bon Jovi, Billy Squier, Farm Aid, Lollapalooza, Elton John, Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen, Loverboy, The Rolling Stones, Def Leppard, Tom Cochrane, Neil Diamond, The Four Tops, The Cure, Rod Stewart, Stevie Nicks, The Chieftains, AC/DC, Crosby, Stills and Nash, INXS and, of course, The Tragically Hip at the House of Blues in Chicago.
“I liked KISS back then and saw them a few times,” he said. “I remember seeing them at Market Square Arena.”
As Cassidy combed through the pile, his mindset changed. Instead of reliving the events he attended, he thought about the ones he missed during his generation. He was asked to pick an event for each genre that he would have wanted to attend.
“NBA is easy,” he quickly answered. “It would be the Celtics and Lakers (from the ’80s) because I never saw them play. That would’ve been great.”
While playing for the Indianapolis Ice of the IHL in 1989, he did attend a Pacers game on Nov. 21 at Market Square Arena, one that finished with a 119-111 win over the Boston Celtics.
Cassidy’s Cincinnati Reds fandom was real, and he saw them play whenever possible, though he’s been a fan of the Red Sox for the past 10 years since he began working in the Bruins organization. He’s been to a Red Sox World Series game, but Cassidy would like to attend a Super Bowl, even though logistically it would be tough given the NHL season.
As far a music concert he missed out on, he sat and thought.
“I was too young for Woodstock,” Cassidy said. “I’ve been to Lollapalooza in Chicago. I’ve never been to Bonnaroo Music Festival in Nashville. I’ve been to Farm Aid.”
“Live Aid at Wembley Stadium,” he said.
Thinking back to his numerous Pearl Jam concerts, he recalled another show he missed out on — when the band played two dates in September 2018 at Fenway Park. Cassidy went to the first show on Sept. 2 and was then asked to attend on Sept. 4 in the VIP section. Due to work and family obligations, Cassidy had to decline the invite.
“Julie and I were finding every excuse to get a babysitter, but we finally said, ‘Let’s not do it.’ Then, Eddie Vedder went to the VIP area (after the second show), which we had access to, so it would’ve been cool to chat with him. But, I did see the show the night before and I’ve seen (Pearl Jam) a lot, but to meet Eddie Vedder and to chat with him would’ve been cool.”
While working and living in Indy, Cassidy attended the Indianapolis 500 three times and the Brickyard 400 once.
“I would like to see a Formula 1 race,” he said. “Oh, I know. The Derby. The Kentucky Derby is on my list. That’s a spectacle I’d like to see.”
Those words weren’t even out of his mouth when he found two of his favorite ticket stubs. He paused, took a breath and told the story behind each one.
“This was my last NHL game. My mom and a friend went,” he explained before looking at the next one. “This was my first NHL goal.”
His first NHL goal helped the Blackhawks to a 6-4 victory over the Detroit Red Wings on Jan. 26, 1988, at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit. He scored only four goals during his 36-game NHL career. He played his last NHL game on March 17, 1990, against the Montreal Canadiens at the Montreal Forum. His mother sat in the balcony, section 515, Row C, Seat 7 and paid $19.
At this point, Cassidy neatly packed each pile into separate envelopes and stuffed them into his bag.
“Good walk down memory lane,” he said.
Cole Cassidy watched him clean up, knowing, but not quite understanding, that he’ll never have this same experience.
(Top photo of Cassidy: Joe Sargent / Getty Images)
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