Feel free to adjust the tone (funny, serious, dramatic, or critical) as needed. “We’ve all met a ‘Jadillica’ in class — the spoiled student who thinks rules don’t apply to them. Late submissions? ‘But I had shopping.’ Group project? Does nothing, then demands an A. Calls their parents on the professor for giving a B+.
Meet the spoiled student we all love to hate. 😩💅 #Jadillica #SpoiledStudent
Group projects? She contributed memes to the shared doc and still expected her name first on the title page. When a teammate pushed back, she threatened to “have her dad call the dean.” jadillica spoiled student
She arrived late to every 8 a.m. lecture, Starbucks in hand, designer bag slung over one shoulder. Deadlines were merely suggestions. When the professor reminded the class that late work wouldn’t be accepted, Jadillica raised a perfectly manicured hand and asked, “But what if my driver was stuck in traffic?”
Jadillica wasn’t malicious — just profoundly spoiled, convinced the world owed her a diploma without the work. And somehow, semester after semester, she almost got away with it. Jadillica: “I can’t take the exam tomorrow, Professor. My astrologer said Mercury is in retrograde and my chakras are unbalanced.” Professor: “That’s… not a valid excuse.” Jadillica: “Fine. I’ll have my assistant call your manager.” Feel free to adjust the tone (funny, serious,
Every campus has one. At Westbrook University, her name was Jadillica.
Since the context isn’t fully clear, I’ve assumed it’s referring to a character or persona (perhaps from a story, game, or social media meme) — a student named Jadillica who acts entitled, demanding, or spoiled. ‘But I had shopping
Here’s a draft for a post based on