fozberry13
Fozberry
fozberry13

“Olympic dreams!”

Given our country’s current climate (pun intended!), I, now more than ever, value and appreciate expertise.

Hearing about punting from a former NFL punter? I’d want to know about *everything*.

My friends and I went to see this for our bad movie podcast (sigh), and it turned out to be pretty decent! We thought that Gerard Butler meant we were in for another London Has Fallen (which is amazing), but instead we got Heat mixed with The Usual Suspects with some really solid performances. Pablo Schreiber was good

When asked by several reporters how the happy couple were enjoying their time, Belichick repeatedly stated, “The injury report will be up Thursday.”

I love pieces like this. Is there any way we could get a semi-regular series like this across all sports? Hearing someone this knowledge about something talk about that something is always interesting.

I wonder if you can hear the hosts breaking the sound barrier to complain about this as soon as they’re on air again.

“Just keep feeding me in the post.”

Didn’t want to type out degrees because I’m a lazy internet person, and I couldn’t find my “degree” sign key on my keyboard.

I can’t imagine that athletes who train for these kinds of events are going to be too put off by 27'. I know it’s different at night, and if there’s wind, it’s much worse, but it’s not inverse Death Valley.

“These undies don’t hide skid marks.”

As a lifelong Mainer, I fully understand the adjustment to the return policy. But seeing as I’ve been paying for that open return policy in the form of mark-up, I’ll be happy to see that nice price reduction, right? RIGHT?

George Harrison was a legitimately great guitar player, and Paul is routinely underrated as a bassist (I play the bass, and outside of other bass players, he gets zero love). John was an OK rhythm guitarist, and Ringo owned a drum kit.

My wife and I had the testing done when my wife was a few months along. It’s a hard conversation to have, but you have to make the decision that’s best for your family. There are a whole slew of difficulties that both you and the child will face for the rest of your life, and you have to weigh all that out.

I know the seeds go back to the early 1960s, but 9/11 proved to be the perfect catalyst for all this shit. You’ve got the military, anti-Muslim sentiments, terrorist threats, surveillance, etc. Having just been attacked, it was easy to get wrapped up in that (I know Hillary had plenty of dings, but pinning her vote to

It’s probably due to my age; being 17 when 9/11 happened means my brain was still super-soft, even if I was otherwise cognizant.  

My intent isn’t to make those generalizations; technically speaking, we’re both in the same generation. I also know plenty of Gen Xers who are more into that stuff than anyone.

More mentality. There are plenty of distractions for people. I’ve noticed that a lot of politically active folks on my FB feed (SO IT MUST BE TRUE) who tend to be younger, are much more focused on social issues (trans rights, gender identity rights, etc.).

I’m wondering if it’s a product of growing up in a post-9/11 world. That’s really the watershed moment for millennials; I was a senior in HS, and therefore remember what it was like before that. Politics were partisan, but it wasn’t as noxious as it is now. Honestly, you’d have to look back to the 1800s for real

My brother and his wife (mid-20s) think I’m just really far left because of my occasional FB posts about the Mueller probe (I’m 33, for reference). I think and read about it constantly, because it’s the most important thing that’s happened in my lifetime; meanwhile, they’re excited about new Snapchat filters. Nothing