clockworktomato
Holly Jones
clockworktomato

Excellent, point! "One spoonful," then? I haven't had one since 1989, and that one was Nerds-infested, so my recollection on how thick they are is a little fuzzy. I know the experience ended in sadness and regret, just as it had every time before. I'm not sure I've ever actually enjoyed an entire Blizzard.

Excellent point. "One spoonful" would be more accurate. I haven't had one since 1989, and the last one (as with every one before it) was Nerds-infested, so my recollection of the process is a little fuzzy. I know it ended with sadness and regret.

Ah, good point. Probably a spoonful, to be more precise. I haven't had one since 1989, and since that one was Nerds-infested, my full recollection of the experience is a little fuzzy. It ended in sadness and regret, though.

YES.

Wait, no, I amend my statement to C.A. Pinkham. There *is* a candy I hate more than Nerds. It's banana Runts.

OH.

Brilliant! That makes perfect sense! Thank you for explaining! :)

I haven't learned my "something new" yet today, so I have to ask!

Wait, you are ranking candy bars, but you just said chocolate sucks.

But German. Chocolate. Cake!!!

Interesting twist — after all of the UK-specific references to Mars bars, I started thinking that it had actually been a while since I'd seen the bar I consider a "Mars" bar, because the one I'm talking about was made by M&M/Mars in the US. I kept wondering why something made in Chattanooga, TN was so UK-loved.

You've never seen a Mars bar?! :'(.

Another "We have Symphony bars, here" comment. They're so readily available here in Tennessee that I've never thought they would be anything particularly special, so I've never tried one. Might have to check one out, now, though I always imagined they are similar to Dove.

Oh, you had me nodding and cheering along when I saw Payday in the dregs of the list (though I couldn't imagine anything worse than those — actually, no, Zero bars are that bad, too — so I'm scared of that Mallow Cup thing, which I've never seen).

I have a Bon Voyage Duffel that is my go-to travel/airline bag. Fits easily in the overhead bin and holds a week-worth of Lulu easy. I've had it for three years, now, and it still looks brand new. I throw it in the washing machine, it gets shuffled around on the airplane (I never check baggage, though, so I can't

Absolutely! I know there's a whole separate discourse on the downfall of civilization because of women like me wearing yoga pants all day, every day, to do everything from grocery shopping to seeing Mme. Butterfly, but I always feel like the conversations about "$98 yoga pants" miss the mark a bit.

For me, they're

Lululemon banned those people from further shopping on the Lululemon website.

So, yes, you're correct, Lululemon had no authority to (and did not attempt to assert that it did) prevent customers from reselling their clothing.

But Lululemon does have authority to refuse to sell to customers (as long as it's not for a

I don't have any Lululemon items that are 10 years old, but I do have some that are going on 5 years old and still look and fit as well as they did the day I bought them. My Victoria's Secret, Old Navy, and Target pants would end up in the Goodwill pile after a year because they were so pilled, baggy, and faded that

It really is. Now, this is coming from someone who *does* still shop there, but I end up returning about half of what I buy, now because the "wow" factor isn't always there like it used to be. (That said, I'm also still keeping things and finding nice items, too.)

The other thing that I think is sometimes overlooked