Great now I have a dinner recipe for tonight!
Great now I have a dinner recipe for tonight!
How on earth are these 1850 daguerrotypes not in the public domain?
How on earth are these 1850 daguerrotypes not in the public domain?
I’m sure the studio just put him on an anti-inflammatory diet. Nothing but sweet potatoes, kale, and grilled chicken breast until filming wraps. :)
Indeed I have, and love it, although it’s usually not that citrusy.
I think I would happily drink a glass of salsa (or eat it with a spoon, more likely) except for the saltiness. :)
I don’t know why this sounds weird to people. Tomato and citrus are are great combination and the main reason why salsa works.
We should extend or remove the statute of limitations, at least for cases that can be prosecuted with DNA evidence. The statute of limitations is there to protect against testimonial evidence that becomes more and more unreliable with time, as memory fades. But DNA evidence does not become more unreliable with time…
This has to be an elaborate practical joke, right?
I like the smegma toaster and would buy it if they took the big SMEG letters off the side AND priced it at under $100.
Well that makes it perfect for a dessert topping!
Or just pour limoncello on it. :)
It’s been said before, but sugar is the Mormon alcohol.
Honest question here, what’s the real crime alleged? Bribery is immoral but not a crime unless you’re bribing a public official, and USC is a private school.
I could maaaaybe see trying to bribe your way into a top-tier school like Harvard or Stanford, because it’s damn hard to get into those schools even if you have perfect grades and speak five languages. But bribing your way into USC?
Thanks for giving me law school flashbacks.
“Please consider skiing.”
“a free-to-play title that kids could have been playing for nothing at home”
Ach, I’m having law school flashbacks. Under the statute of frauds, contracts for actions that cannot possibly be performed within one year must be in writing. But lifetime contracts don’t need to be in writing, at least at common law, because there’s no guarantee that the person will live more than one year.
A promise is usually a contract. “I promise to give you my bike if you promise to give me $100.” “I promise to give you free food for life if you promise not to sue me.”