Tylas
Tylas
Tylas

I broke the door handle off on the inside of my first car. Door froze shut while I drove to work.

Had to roll the window down to get out for the last 2 years owning that car. 

On one car I had in the past, the door handle broke off when trying to open a frozen door.

It is  not a flamethrower, it’s a door key!

Sounds somewhat similar to my gas door. It’s a Subaru where you have to pull the floor mounted latch to release the door. In the winter it’s very common that you pull the lever, walk around the car and find the door is still frozen shut. So you give the door some taps, walk back around, open the driver door, pull the

I lost a headlight this way. This giant sheet of ice flew up like 2 or 3 stories high off of a Transit Connect. I watched it flutter in slow motion wondering where it would land. It was beautiful. Like that plastic bag that flies around in that one movie? Except it smashed my headlight. I suppose I got off easy.

they are fantastic, usually they use the scale for their 10-second review series where they go through a franchise’s films with quick reviews and then deep dive the best and worst. the Scooby doo review is a great video. (they also do a few other notable series like “so this is basically *blank*” and “Welcome to

https://xkcd.com/1357/

Fuck off, Spotify - you may not be the producer of JRE, directing what content is discussed and with whom, but you sure as shit are its publisher

I agree with all you wrote. Too many knuckleheads like the guy in the video have no comprehension of the life changing consequences of firing a handgun, let alone have the temperament for such responsibility.

It's so sad. My parents had a lovely ash tree that died in 2001, and I was able to make furniture with it, but I still miss that tree.

Also, emerald ash borer is no longer a huge problem in Michigan because it has killed nearly every adult ash tree in lower Michigan.

I found one in the bathroom and man, that sucker could take a lot of chemical sprays from under the sink and keep ticking. 

Well said. Thank you. I have a friend who was active duty in the mid 90's so was fortunate to not see active combat but that training is still deeply ingrained. He is always scanning for “threats” and has a concealed carry permit. I trust him because I know he is very responsible with his weapons and regularly trains b

Wow, one hell of a comment. Thank you for that. 

When I moved to Ohio from California, I learned very quickly NOT to smash these suckers. They have rightly earned their name. I collect them very carefully in a small piece of toilet paper and send them to a watery grave ...

Caution: use a tissue, paper towel, or similar means when crushing stink bugs. They have that name for a reason, and that reason does not wash off easily.

Everyone who’s ever served in the military has heard some version of this. Truer words have never been spoken.

My right-wing brother lives in an exclusive waterfront community of seven-figure homes but owns a military-grade AR for home protection. I guess in case neighbor comes to steal his Jimmy Buffett CDs.

To a man with a hammer everything looks like a nail. To a man with a gun everything looks like a threat. These people feel the need to have a gun with them all the time because deep inside they are just scared little children.

They do this on like TV shows all the time and I’ve always wanted it as a real feature.