Spooky2k
Spooky2k
Spooky2k

This is what fast-food places do. It’s not even just McDonalds. There are a lot of things that aren’t popular enough to justify offering full-time, but bringing them back from time to time is usually a nice little boost in PR. The McRib might be the most famous example of this.

And you can bet if we’re not gonna do anything about mass shootings then we’re not gonna do anything about people getting trampled to death on Black Friday. I swear, this country.

To be clear, this is not a PR disaster for McDonalds. They played along with a joke from a cartoon, made a limited run of sauce, didn’t anticipate demand and manlets are losing their shit over it. So now, they are playing along even further and going to satisfy the whiners by bringing it back again later in the year

McDonalds serves 69 million people a day. Rick and Morty averages about 3-4 million viewers per week. McDonalds literally could not fucking care less about Rick and Morty viewers coming to buy their sauce.

I prefer the term “manlet”, but the sentiment’s the same.

Can we not normalize manbabies crying about a sauce packet?

Indeed, watch out Apple, cause Bose knows a thing or two about overcharging for overhyped and style driven products.

They should have just named it Cowboy Vs. Wizard.

I’m guessing that they clearly have know clue how to market this movie.

You’ve got to be impressed by their level of confidence, shelling out the money for such cutting-edge, PS2 era CGI!

A few thoughts:

1) I’m going to miss Capaldi so much. I don’t care who comes after him, they’re going to have one hell of a battle on their hands to try and match his performance. He’s eclipsed my prior favourites, McCoy and Baker.

2) Simm and Gomez had searing chemistry. We need some sort of convoluted timey-wimey

Somehow I get the feeling that if one were to use an adjective before the target of a racist rant, one can get a way with a lot of s- according to the ways these convoluted rules are set up.

It is everyday people who demand, and eventually get, safety regulations and the agencies to enforce the regs. Its is RICH people (corporations & individuals) who do their best to get around the regulations, or better yet, get the laws and rules revoked under the guise of “freedom”. Death is free.

When concrete is delivered to a building site for a high rise building, you have the architecture firm and the building contractors perform seperate tests on to verify the mixture is correct.

To start you probably shouldn’t be ordering products from China. But regardless, if you are a contractor who buys goods you or the client should have a list of approved vendors that have been previously vetted, including work product, shop conditions, fabrication procedures, QA/QC procedures, etc to ensure the goods

There was a study done by a company housed in the World Trade Centers before 9/11 and they found that when people are told by building staff anywhere to stay put during any sort of emergency situation they increase their survival chances by totally ignoring building staff recommendations. The guy who ran that company

The fire was probably limited to the unit on the 4th floor until the windows blew out and ignited the insulation under the cladding. Once it started racing up the building there was very little the fire service could have done. The fire on the exterior would have blown out the windows on each floor and ignited

God damn the grays.

Since you missed the nuance, here it is. Rich people didn’t kill poor people. But the attitude that the appearance of the building in the sight of rich people was more important than fire alarms and sprinkler systems sure seems to have.

This is literally the point of regulatory agencies and independent testing labs. The general public may not see the point (and actually typically see them as a hindrance) in all of the building codes and material testing that goes into this stuff, but without them, problems like these would be a lot more prevalent,