True.
True.
Bill Clinton worked his ass off as president though. I don't know if that was the point you were trying to make but his work ethic wasn't similar to Trump's at all.
Actually she's 64.
Have a friend who's a little hysterical around spiders swear she had seen a brown recluse in my garage. And that I would end up with gangrene/maybe die from a bite. So I looked up this crazy spider apparently now living in my garage and yeah they don't even exist on the West Coast.
I read the book. Considering how many men died going on these types of explorations, it seemed less like an adventure and more like playing Russian roulette.
Could he possibly use this in a food auction? To steal an advantage someone else bought during the auction? That's the only reward that would be worth stealing imo but I'm not sure if he's able to do this.
The DNA that was found is called touch DNA and can come from as few as seven skin cells. You can pick up touch DNA indirectly by handling an object that someone else has used. It's really not that signifigant compared to what we normally think of as DNA evidence left at a crimescene.
I thought Verbinski's remake was leagues better than Ringu, save for exactly that one scene. It was just awful compared to the original.
Thought it was silly and meh until those last fifteen minutes or so. Then it got really scary and I think I ended up sleeping with the lights on that night. Rec was another movie I only found truly frightening towards the end but the leadup was entertaining and fun. And gads what an ending.
Ronan Farrow had the best tweet about that idiot posing with the cut off tail of the elephant he killed.
Sometimes you just feel uncomfortable around a guy when he asks you out but can't explain why exactly. When I'm in that situation it's because I think when I say no he's going to resent me/feel angry about it. If I say I have a boyfriend I find these type of guys are far more likely to accept that because it isn't my…
The Instagram photo has her hair covering the part of her face that was allegedly injured. You wouldn't be able to see the injury or lack of one in that photo.
I'm sure it's been mentioned by now but I noticed when Olenna talks to Sansa at the reception she reaches out and touches her hair and necklace briefly. When you see Sansa's necklace again there is a stone clearly missing.
You might want to check out the book Minds on Trial: Great Cases in Law and Psychology, which has an interesting chapter on the Woody/Mia custody trial. It explains why the destruction of the notes was unusual in a case like this: