The old fashioned calls for Rye. It's the original American spirit!
The old fashioned calls for Rye. It's the original American spirit!
At least Tony Romo had a front-row seat so he could see in person what clutch QB play looks like.
Maybe if the AL didn't have a DH, it wouldn't be so hard for Farrell to actually manage the game in an NL park. How many double switches are done per year in that softball league, one... two?
Kicking up your heels isn't how you get up from a prone position, Middlebrooks. Also, stop throwing to 3rd base, Sox. Bad things happen. Only bad things
This guy was never gonna shave even if he lived to 200, so nothing's really changed, has it?
Art Linkletter's House Party? It would be awesome to find out this was a black and white version of Pee-Wee's Playhouse
Soccer has been billed as the sport of the future since I was growing up in the 70's. Now, it's the future, and we're still being told soccer is the sport of the future. Naturally, I'm dubious about these claims.
D'oh! Reading comprehension fail. Although, I've often been told I'm not quite sane too, so you may be correct in that assumption.
How far above/below 'hit by car' would shepherds pie fall?
bus = bugs
Stupid phone.
Relevant.
Shoofly is an actual thing? This ignorant northerner always thought that was just how southerners referred to ALL their pies, as they have no winter frost to kill their bus, thus they have flies trying to fuck up dessert at all times.
Close, but it was Nipsy Russell that got hit in the shoe on that great 1957 Braves team. How do you think he got famous in the first place, his rhyming skills? As if! Rap hadn't even been invented yet.
Stupid Portland.
But at least Adam struggled the right way
/pours one out for Bart
D'oh! I'm confusing Carl Sandberg with his famous teammate, Gracie Allen. SHE's the one who coined the term, "slump-buster"
Duh. Carl Sandburg played for the Cubs. Was a real hit with the ladies, wrote poems in his spare time and invented the term, "slump-buster".
Intentional misspelling is sometimes used on the interwebs to make fun of laughably bad posts. The "hot taek" is specific to poking fun at bad posts, such as your own, that one might see on ProFootballTalk.com
Intentional misspelling is sometimes used on the interwebs to make fun of laughably bad posts. The "hot taek" is specific to poking fun at bad posts, such as your own, that one might see on ProFootballTalk.com