9/10 times it has far less to do with the dog than the owner. Just like any other dog, pits are good, loyal dogs in the right hands.
9/10 times it has far less to do with the dog than the owner. Just like any other dog, pits are good, loyal dogs in the right hands.
To be truthful, most probably do.
I love the C2 coupe. My lottery-winning dilemma has always been which one to get.
C2 big block coupe.
Wire Daytons, Pit puppies.
"Can I press the ah-ooo-gah button?"
I'm not a big Gibson guy, but I loooove me some 335s. Natural finish dot-neck, please.
I've had mine for about 20 years, and I'm pretty sure it cost $300 or so new. I've spent at least that much in upgrades for it. It is pretty good for what it cost, though.
I've never gotten into PRS that much (the only one I've ever really liked was a Santana I - waaay out of my price range).
We need to figure out the "V6 Mustang" equivalent to guitars. You know, something that's perfectly good, but nobody really wants.
As someone who is equal parts guitar guy and Jalop, I can't say I've ever seen a "car themed" guitar that I've liked.
WORST BLUE CHEESE EVER.
Can you imagine if afterbirth was actually made of polenta?
How's about you guys start with a car nobody cares about?
As an "on the ground" CT guy (power generation), I have to say: great clarification.
"Navy Seals!"
Trying to teach your son right from wrong by watching the NFL draft?
Back when I was a news photographer, I remember trying to quickly and succinctly explain the whole "reasonable expectation" thing to someone. I came up with:
I never thought he was innocent; however, the prosecution did a piss-poor case in attempting to prove his guilt. Given that according to the law, he was to be prosecuted on the evidence and arguments that the prosecution presented, he should have been found not guilty.