I'm honestly surprised The Rock isn't a mani/pedi kind of guy. I could totally see him getting his nails done.
I'm honestly surprised The Rock isn't a mani/pedi kind of guy. I could totally see him getting his nails done.
I agree it is very insensitive and screams privilege. I still have an off-topic and besides-the-point point: germany does not have a royal family. Why? Well, you remember the little chain of events in the first 50 years of the last century, yes? Ok.
Poor Montana.
I....am fairly horrified by how BAD he looks in the resting screen shot from the video!
"By day I was this sort of mild mannered kid who nobody really saw. And by night I was listening to Charlie Parker and John Coltrane and Freddie King and Jimi Hendrix and Eric Clapton,"
Oh, they're not destroying everything - far from it. They're selling anything they can put on a truck on the antiquities black market, like the fucked-up mobsters they really are.
I'm in Canada and I have never heard this expression /phrase before either!
I've heard that a lot and I'm in the US. Maybe it's regional? Maybe it's generational? Not sure why some have heard it in the US and some have not.
I've heard the phrase before and I'm in the U.S. Another data point to mention is that I'm also in my mid 40s so it may just be because I'm an oldie.
Looks like it is French in origin: http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/81900…
I've heard it before - many times in fact. I thought it was a US phrase as well.
I am an old; and in the U.S. Yes, it is known here.
Yes I would consider it very standard US idiom. Have heard it many many times.
I have heard it, but only from older people. I'm from the southeastern US.
I'm in the US before, and I've heard it and read it though it's certainly quite dated here. Something my grandparents would have said.
That's surprising. I've used and heard the term quite frequently. I'm originally from NYC, if that helps/makes sense.
Or it might be an old-timey phrase in the US. I'm an old.
US here. I have heard it. Maybe it's more common in the south (I lived in Texas for a few years growing up)?
It's a southern phrase, It appears several times in 'Gone with the Wind'. (Book version). Equivalent to the northern 'cool as a cucumber'?
I'm an American, and I hear that phrase plenty. I think it's pretty common here, at least in the South.