Falcongirl77
Falcongirl77
Falcongirl77

High fat, low fat? Anybody? Dust. High fat, low fat? Anybody?

That's how I read it first, too. Then I thought about how creative I would get trying to get as much food as possible onto a fork.

I have a cousin who can't marry his longtime girlfriend, the mother of his children, because of "goverment policies". Actually, because of "government policies", if they get married, their daughter may die.

Who wears a tie in bed?

I read the headline as "Doctor Who provides abortions..." and I thought, Whoa, the next season of Doctor Who is going dark, huh?

Thanks for posting that. I can't see the main picture for some reason.

You didn't mean that gay guys dream about marrying their brothers... right?

Whoa, seriously, go back and listen to Back to Black again. It is a really solid album from start to finish.

I wonder how much of this is priviledge speaking. For Ms. Ripa and the cohort she probably travels with, paying for dinner is no big deal. Paying for theater tickets or whatever is no big deal. But if you're a 22 or 25 or 27 or 30 year old guy still trying to get established, making $50,000 a year, then, yeah,

I don't have any naked pics of me in my email (or anywhere else that I'm aware of), but I'm off to empty my sent mail folder nontheless.

I read that thread, too. Pretty much put me off my lunch.

Did it?

I think you're right, but there's another element that makes for a higher rate of showbiz set hookups/divorces: when you're making a movie, you're probably also away from your current husband/wife/significant other and you're probably away from home.

I don't think it's a rebound relationship if it lasts more than five years.

He also named himself Sting, so, y'know...

Thanks for posting that. I thought it was just the result of bad/overdone plastic surgery.

I don't know who Imogen Poots is, but both her shoes and her name are adorable.

According to Dave Weigel, Congressman West actually lives in Congresswoman Wasserman Schultz's district. [www.slate.com]

From the Washington Post: "Jeanne Monahan, director of the Center for Human Dignity at the socially conservative Family Research Council, said that many Americans may object to birth control on religious grounds. "They should not be forced to have to pay into insurance plans that violate their consciences. Their

Dick Cheney's steampunk heart