fharynheit
Fharynheit
fharynheit

My brother’s was “snipped” with lasers. I did enjoy his story because it wasn’t about the pain, but more the awkward waiting room and the lasers.

We really should make this a thing. My insertion was SO painful and even though my boyfriend took very good care of me afterward, he really couldn’t understand how painful it was. It would’ve been nice to have some camaraderie. Of course, if I’d known just how painful it was going to be, I would’ve chosen a female

Oh cut it out.

Since mine heard they were being done with lasers he’s become so psyched about getting one you’d think Jedi robes were involved. This party sounds like a step in that direction.

i can think of one group that would claim that’s unfair, see: men.

Quite a snippy tone to this post.

Don’t you mean ridickulous?

There is way more to the story, this is just the tip.

Still less painful than a group bro-state exam.

I’ll be deferens-ial to your opinion.

This story is ridiculous. We should really snip it in the bud.

I will say “goddamn” as many goddamn times as I goddamn please you goddamn fool, goddammit.

The one that gets me is the car insurance commercial comparing two insurance companies. One company covers changing a tire and the other doesn’t. So, having “our” insurance means you don’t have to worry about your kid being stranded with a flat tire.

Not any more. But it was a genius move. That was back in the dark ages when everyone got the TV Guide in the mail. By starting shows at :05, TBS got separate entries for every time slot in the Guide. Also, this practice ensured that when a show ended, it was too late to watch a show on a different channel since

This tweet made my day (as much as one’s day can be made these days...)

That’s definitely TBS. They do it that way so you get more invested in the movie and won’t turn away. Air the first 20 minutes or so with no commercials. Quick break then back for like 15. Longer break. Another 10 minutes. Even longer break. You get sucked in and won’t stop watching because you already invested so

I have that book, too. It’s called The Internet.

I’m not going to defend Spicer’s choices, but he was visibly uncomfortable since day 1 and it wouldn’t shock me to learn that he signed on thinking that the administration would fall into line with general behavioral norms once in office, which was a stunning but common delusion. He was one of the few people there who

I was 17 when 9/11 happened and was working as a projectionist at a movie theater. I had the opening shift, and it was eerily empty that day. However, we were getting tons of frantic phone calls and emails from movie producers to pull any trailers that had any thematic connection to the terrorist attack, including one

So sad, but I didn’t happen to be watching tv that day so the memory isn’t as raw. Watching the wreck of the Hesperus though — broke my heart.