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As soon as it is allowed, I move my under-seat carry-on so it is under my legs, then put my feet are under the seat in front of me. It lets me stretch out a bit and is a tiny bit more comfortable that way.

An article thesis NEVER in the title is likely to be poorly-informed. This article follows that pattern. It’s the author’s personal feelings without any sort of reference points and he uses terms like “better” or “terrible” casually.  This is column-filler at best. 

Wal-Mart hate is fashionable and, to be sure, Wal-Mart has lots of problems. But I always feel like the Wal-Mart bashing articles have an underlying air of “Don’t shop there where the poors go!” Because yeah, if you live in a small town, there’s a good chance your food options are either Wal-Mart or a gas station. So

Yea because I want to go to a reunion filled with people who never talked to me 20 years ago at this point and never made an attempt since except to ask me to come to the 10-year reunion 10 years ago. Not a peep since.

This article is pretty much useless without pictures.

Elizabeth, you are to be congratulated on not doing this a a slideshow, but you still need to include pictures of these itchy plants.  What is the plant at the top? I have it in my yard, and I would like to know it’s name.

“Coupons CAN lead you to spend more money, so never use them” is a really odd take, especially for here. Coupons can literally save you money on things you were going to buy ANYWAY as well. Pointing out the manipulative psychology behind them on the part of who makes them is a valuable insight to help from

I feel like "don't use coupons" as the solution here is a flawed one. If you're aware enough of the psychology to stop using coupons, you're aware enough use those coupons only on the thing you want/need, then leave. Also, you compare that people spend more when using coupons than without, but that doesn't take into

Never been to Costco we didn’t have one here, but they are in the process of building one, but Sam’s has GREAT hotdog’s. They are Nathans brand and absolutely massive and I think the same price as the one’s at Costco.

i don’t get it. if modern dishwashers have sensors to tell how dirty the dishes are, then why aren’t they “sensing” that the dishes have been pre-rinsed, and adjust the wash cycle to be shorter automatically?

Meanwhile, it’s fine to bark at your cat, because they already loathe you on a level you can’t even comprehend.

The entire trend of videos that are “fuck with your pet by doing X” needs to die. Some of the things are harmless but all of them encourage the attitude that pets are entertainment instead of responsibility.

I think the one unifying theme is to always remember that your wedding is an event in your guests’ lives, not the most important thing in their year, or maybe even their week. Make it fun, meaningful, and as low-stress as possible for those traveling or in special situations (like single friends who may not know

I’ve heard you should avoid the clumping type.  The cheap stuff actually does better

Jordan, as you can see from these comments that slideshows and videos are the lowest of forms of communication on the internet, especially for simple topics like this.  Please pass these sentiments along to your editor in chief, or whomever decides the formats.  I have not watched one video or slideshow on

How’s about auto-playing videos, can we put those in the dishwasher and kill them good?  

Thanks. If video is the format of the future for Gawker, I’m out. I already skip the slideshows unless I’m on mobile (so that I don’t have to see a slideshow). If they want to load pages faster, reduce the advertisement overhead.

1. Wood
2. China, Glass, and Crystal, Easily chipped items
3. Cast Iron and Copper
4. Non stick pots and pans
5. Knives
6. Cheese Graters
7. Thin Plastic
8. Sticky Labels
in text form:

In case you don’t want to watch the video: