discreet-chaos
Magister
discreet-chaos

Clicking through from the "popular" widget, I thought it'd be a rump roast.

I'm sure it was a traumatic experience. Condolences, best wishes and everything, but from the incident description, I have to ask if the driver looked like this...

While I'm all in favor of anything supporting the Al Franken Millennium and I like everything I know about Elizabeth Warren, a Minnesota/Massachusetts ticket might not be the best electoral strategy. Separately, they haven't done that well in the recent past.

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Clearly you didn't watch ABC's "World News Now" (their old overnight broadcast), otherwise you'd have fond memories of this gem (with Barry Mitchell).

I guess it's great that somebody found a clip and it'd probably be a service if someone would check to see if it remains in the show's official archive on screen.yahoo. Now that I'm reminded, I remember it, mostly because of the Kenan part, but I'm not really getting why her doing a bit on SNL is surprise or

At first I was a bit saddened by the news that Burt was selling his memorabilia, but then I scrolled through some of the item listings and there are football trophies from when he was a kid, books others have autographed to him and random stuff he's accumulated. I hope he's keeping the best stuff for a Burt Reynolds

The only real difference (and what prompted my reply) is that as I read the excerpted quote, it doesn't appear to have anything to do with Taylor Swift, rather her involvement in the title and the original post is something similar to me saying to my wife, "the Dairy Queen we used to stop at after the kids' swim meets

The source article is behind a paywall, so I'm not seeing the quote in context, but based upon the little bit we have, it sounds like she's complaining about the book and how the character only looked like her. The Taylor Swift connection appears to be that she was attached to the film at one time, which may be how

I believe Joni was describing herself as having "high cheekbones" and she was saying that it was the only resemblance between herself and the character in the book.

I'm seeing nothing on KCRG's site as of yet, acknowledging the video. I looked because I was reminded of the time in '04, when the Lexington Herald-Leader apologized for not covering the civil rights movement. (I'm not quickly finding the series which discovered their error — the existing links produce a 404 — but

I hadn't watched it, but Jacob on Gawker's MorningAfter called it "awesome" and said Kate Walsh was having "a blast", so the other day when I wanted a mindless sitcom to stream on my second screen, I gave it a whirl. And yes, her supervising judge wanted her to file a motion, which didn't make any sense.

According to the original link, he gave a wide-ranging interview where he also discussed politics, in addition to how he thinks the US locks up too many people, like Martha Stewart, African-American teens on minor charges and he told a story about his friend. The bit about his friend is what they pulled out to promote

Gawker covered an adult sleepover at one of the NYC museums and I believe one of the Chicago museums had one a couple of years ago, but I'm not finding it on a current schedule.

My wife has been a Girl Scout leader for ten years, in different parts of the country and I've recently been roped into becoming a Webelo Leader. We also know people who put together badge workshops and I can co-sign most of what you've written. Though, I do think that if someone wanted to put together a co-workshop

Badge workshops are designed to fulfill all or most of the requirements for a specific badge. If there aren't space limitations, an age-appropriate Girl Scout troop may be able to register for the museum's Webelo Scientist or Cub Scout Astronomy workshop and do everything for those Boy Scout badges, but only the

I'm sure generic science programs are offered by the museum to all kids as their explanation suggested and Scout groups would be welcome to register. What sets apart a museum or park's Scout programs are that they include elements to earn a specific badge.

That's an important distinction. For whatever reason, they are guys without a life partner or mate, who are looking through a dream catalog for a date.

We don't do gender roles and have never had any kind of gender stereotypes at my house, other than maybe purposefully not buying anything pink when my daughter was a baby, letting the pink mostly come from relative gifts, yet she now loves the color — the pink hoodie she ordered was delivered today — and she's right

If I may help take things full circle, here's a 2010 Jon Stewart clip.

Thanks for linking to the reviews. I thought they helped paint the scene.