20ppm is following the guidelines from the Celiac Disease Foundation. I trust them.
20ppm is following the guidelines from the Celiac Disease Foundation. I trust them.
He's going to be there doing commentary, though not for NBC, because Scott Hamilton would never allow that.
No, Scott Hamilton is the guy who often goes off about how the sissy-boys are destroying his beloved fancy-dancing sport and that the openly gay skaters need to tone it down. His favorite compliment for performances is to say how "masculine" they were. This is also why he loves Evan Lysacek, because even though that…
"Our partners at MSNBC will bring you curling at 4 AM," and other such bullshit.
I don't really have a comment. I just want everyone to note how gorgeous Rashida Jones is even when she's not trying to be.
Maybe. I'm in Connecticut and regularly change the channel to escape those two, only to find them playing on the other stations. Even the "lite music" stations for workplaces are constantly replaying the rap- free edited "Blurred Lines." It's "Rolling in the Deep"-level saturation. And there's that commercial with…
It's getting play, but not "song of the summer" hype. That's going to "Blurred Lines" and that Icona Pop song.
The thing that bothers me most about this song isn't the lyrics or video. It's the fact that everyone is so focused on it that they're ignoring how great "Get Lucky" is. :(
They promised to not make this type of mistake again. So I promise to stop reading them.
If you're working to make sure it doesn't happen again, I'm cancelling my subscription.
/hands over mouth
They'd be annoying instead of endearing, though. Same for Horatio Sanz.
"Hoombas ... a human Roomba. It's that thing of when you put a midget on a skateboard and it slides around on your floor eating garbage."
I drive an hour each way in Connecticut cow country to see my GI. A cousin in Vermont recently drove her son 90 minutes each way for eyeglasses.
Well, this is gonna go over well.
I was actually finding myself wondering if this is more of an imposition on urban people than rural. My family in Vermont are used to driving 30 minutes to see their GP and 45-75 minutes for specialists, so having to drive to their nearest provider probably wouldn't feel like a huge deal. Even in Connecticut, I am…
fun fact - Edward chose his title from Shakespeare in Love!
For the record, she keeps restating this every time they go back to her. This clip isn't even of the first instance. She must find her analysis...brilliant.
Hey, hey, we spell it "morans" over here. Know your audience.