BoyHowdy
BoyHowdy
BoyHowdy

But... why does it matter how the t-shirt is folded? Is he folding it at all, even if it's "wrong?"

"Born in October of 2000 – this handsome boy, 'Rick' was placed from India a year ago and is obedient and eager to please."

I'm contemplating indiegogo in addition to as many jobs as I can get.

I hope you celebrate your graduation by buzzing their house.

Eeeeeehhh...

I believe so! Everyday Food is one of her brands I think, she's got a website for it too. The books are the most helpful though, something about the beautiful photos and having it in front of you while you cook...

Anything from America's Test Kitchen. I also love old Julia Child cookbooks - the & Company ones are great. You can usually find them at second hand stores. For pure food porn pictures, "the beautiful" series of cookbooks - Italy the Beautiful, California the Beautiful, etc. The recipes are okay but the pictures are

My absolute favorite cookbook that I own is the Better Homes and Gardens New Cookbook - the 1969 edition (I think this is the right year). Somewhat oddly, I'm not a huge fan of the current version of the cookbook, because I think it skimps too much on the general cooking knowledge in favor of trendy recipes. The older

Mexican Everyday by Rick Bayless is my most used cookbook by far. It's pretty healthy, and most of the recipes happen to be gluten free, which is nice since my husband has Celiac.

"I don't know if I would still be alive in some ways if it wasn't for Paula," Thicke, 36, tells the magazine. "She's been my rock, my muse, my inspiration...

Drunk.

That is such a totally Benny Hill image. Love it!

I think if we want video games to progress as an art form, we do need to stop using the word "fun," and start using the word "engaging." Look at novels, many are fun and those are great, but there are also engaging, thoughtful novels that are often even more acclaimed than the "fun" ones. Many of the of the "classics"

Narc.

"Help"?

Mississippi 1957 called - it wants it's terminology back.

Well, thank god. The aesthetic in the first movie was incredibly tacky, because Lionsgate is notoriously cheap. The budget on the first movie was really low for a sci-fi blockbuster - $78 million. The costumes in the Capitol were horrendous, especially for the tribute parade and the interviews (everyone just looked

I actually don't really like how they did the Capitol in The Hunger Games, part 1. It seemed too gimmicky — like what a child would imagine utter lavishness to look like, rather than an adult. It took away from the harshness of it all. Not my aesthetic, alas.

And I can only think of that when people speak of Prince George.

This is awesome.

Personally, I'm not crazy about seeing articles about kids or parenting that have comments sections full of people going on and on about what they do or don't do in their own home.