According to a friend who works for the municipal water department, several of these chemicals, notably triclosan, can’t be removed from water. That’s reason enough for me.
According to a friend who works for the municipal water department, several of these chemicals, notably triclosan, can’t be removed from water. That’s reason enough for me.
More like early-’70s. That era was all about the wedge.
Hey, The Onion made that image of Uncle Joe and the Trans Am and is due credit and probably licensing.
CP
CP.
What, is this a bi-weekly feature? How many times has this question been posed before? Fresh ideas, y’all.
Thanks, Tinder.
Ah, don’t you see, the writers have to make a post and were running short on ideas. It’s much better to post something like this then let the bosses know that you don’t have anything interesting to post.
At $2.5 million, it was way over-insured.
Jalopnik is eating its head with this post. This has to have been done, with the exact same answers, before.
Great choice! Also, has a failure-prone part in the fuel injection system that is totally, totally unavailable. The 912E was a single-year model with a few key rare parts that are irreplaceable. It’s a pity.
It’s a pity that white men can’t find more places to dominate and be in charge. Any self-respecting faux-retro barbershop should welcome women who want a stylish man-style cut. This place just sounds pretentious and insincere.
Just imagine the poor copywriter and ad editor who had to make this Acura look “interesting,” “cutting edge,” and “exciting.” IRL, this car ad would be picking kids up from after-school programs and sitting at a toll plaza in rush hour traffic.
It’s amazing how incomplete this piece is. Every single one of them should have the “who, what, where, when, how, and why.”
Behold, at the 0:50 mark, a poem by the Pimp of the Year.
Sorry, I'm going to have to respectfully disagree with you.
You shouldn't have to mention that pastrami should be hot because pastrami should be hot!
Here's the thing, it's happened several places, mostly in the Bay Area. And, more than once, when I got aggravated at all the questions, the folks behind the counter said, "Are you from the East Coast? [Yes, I am.] Okay, I'll make you a Reuben."
No way, you're right about a Sloppy Joe. Those folks got something else, and it might be sloppy, but if it isn't ground beef in special sauce on a bun, they need a new name.
So, to comment on that first story, there is no sandwich more misunderstood than the Rueben. Only in California have I had problems ordering a Reuben. It's listed on a menu at a deli and you're asked questions like: