Between this and the first comment I’m realizing I seem to have made a critical error with this question.
Between this and the first comment I’m realizing I seem to have made a critical error with this question.
Random question, which model of Frontier has the ridges on the tailgate? Because for whatever reason, I really like that model.
Holy hell! That’s terrifying.
Dude, my man! I’m a fastback nut. The RF has a great profile, but I can’t get behind those buttresses. I mean, it’s moot since I don’t fit, but they got so close and just missed it. If they make a proper fastback that I can fit inside? I will serious buy it.
I don’t fit in a Miata, so can we please have a big brother to Miata with a fixed roof? (Preferably fastback. I’d buy it tomorrow.)
In my defense, I hardly eat it anymore because I don’t make a lot of sandwiches for myself. My mom always made the best sandwiches, but living on my own I don’t buy lunch meat so I’ve never bought MW. I eat the delicious burgers I described much more often.
Oh it’s amazing, but yeah, I don’t like thinking about what it’s doing to my heart.
Most sandwich shops must agree with you because mayo is the only option and I really don’t like it on a sandwich, so I don’t like sandwich shops unless I’m getting something with chicken and bacon on it. (ruebens and cheesesteaks are good too). I like a good hot sub with every meat on it, provolone cheese, and miracle…
Surprisingly enough, google seems to yield a relatively safe option that ends in Hub, of all places.
And I get that, to a degree. I guess the other thing that’s always bothered me is exactly what you’ve described. The name of the game in business is to always do better, right? I get it. But it is basically impossible to improve every quarter and every year, yet companies base entire business plans around constant…
First Gear: Stuff like this will always boggle my mind. “Company suffers massive losses, still makes billions.” Maybe it means something on an economic scale, but I have a hard feeling bad about rich people making slightly less money.
I don’t have anything against ketchup, but for whatever reason I rarely use it. Never on my burgers, and rarely on my fries (though I’m partial to housemade ketchups for fry dipping if that’s an option). If I’m eating a typical burger I usually like it with just cheese, or cheese, lettuce, and mayo. (Mayo on burgers,…
So, I just put this on a different comment, but I find it fascinating enough to spread it around. I haven’t done enough digging to tie in the racism (don’t care to) but... Thoroughbred does mean pure blood, which is probably why one of the translations for purosangue is pure blood, because a thoroughbred is a pure…
You know what’s interesting? Thoroughbred actually means purebred and the dictionary/thesaurus actually puts purebred and pure blood in the synonyms, so even if the Italian word translates into thoroughbred in English, the English word still means pure blood. I didn’t dig far enough to find anything about race, but I…
I asked at the Rock Bottom in downtown Cincy if they sold their glasses (because for a while, I was collecting growlers and glassware from local breweries) and the bartender said no, but I could have one, which he promptly wrapped up and gave to me.
True enough, I guess that makes a lot of sense. Most of the reason I went with farm horses is because it’s an SUV and most of those breeds seem quite dependable/very good at surviving harsh conditions and terrain. You can evoke a lot of free advertising by comparing your new SUV to a hardy breed of workhorse. But then…
Basically my second comment. The TPR is their clydesdale. It’s name is the Italian Heavy Draft.
Just enough to tease Ford, but not quite as blatant as that whole F150 thing? Sure, why not?
Or they could just call it the TPR, which is the abbreviation for a horse literally named the Italian Heavy Draft. Of course, they could be insufferable and try to use the full name somehow, Cavallo Agricolo Italiano da Tiro Pesante Rapido
And I just spent like 15 minutes reading Wikipedia instead of working, and there’s over a dozen native horse breeds in Italy that all have interesting stories and varying degrees of hardiness. If they want to stick with the horse-motif they don’t have to stick to just the Italian word for Thoroughbred.