highandtight
HighAndTight
highandtight

Ray Fisher : his allegations :: Geraldo Rivera : Al Capone’s vault

Even setting aside my opinion of the cops and their bootlickers... twenty-one thousand dollars for a two-decade-old car whose only remarkable aspect renders it legally unusable? So it’s really $21K+ the cost of taking all that trash off. That’s a real thinking-face emoji, right there. Shoulda saved this one for a

The ocean-themed one has the Poseidon Adventure sinking happening behind Cast Away and Life of Pi, near Swiss Family Robinson, Pacific Rim, and Abyss.

That happened a couple times to me. You just gotta hit any other button *except* Play first, to get the screensaver to go away.

Who would’ve thought? It figures.

If it could pass as a standalone bill it would have already.

With these herbs in charge, driving folks away from the site entirely is probably considered a feature not a bug, too.

But less focus is placed on the male consumers who’d rather see anonymous strangers reveal their bodies for the camera over professional, adequately paid performers

First, why is this column still missing from the header on the site? I have to scroll through a bunch of stuff to get here if I don’t catch it right when it is posted.

A first prize of under a hundred dollars? In 2021?

Depending on exactly where its owner was listening to KFOG, the life might well have been rotting away on the West Coast, too. We think of dry ol’ California as a place where cars can romp around forever, but as an SFSU classmate of mine once morosely summed up, the Sunset District is where things- especially metal

I got a video of my cat jumping for his toy that I posted nearly a decade ago and have not viewed since. I was pretty damn mind-blown until I saw the replies you were getting.

That car has the expression of a golden retriever whose person just got home.

Well, for one, it’s not theresay.

“Jeep-ne-sais-quoi” 

is /chef’s kiss.

“Heresy” is going against accepted thought. “Hearsay” is unreliable testimony.

It is indeed pure ads. The Inventory is the source of all those articles that aren’t actually articles, they’re article-looking ads where Shep McAllister or someone goes on excitedly about Amazon’s great deal on blu-ray releases or five pounds of gummi bears or our readers’ favorite hiking socks etc.

All three of the sequels are Disney’s wild overreactions to the reception of the previous film(s) in the series.

It feels episodic, like a tv show 1930s film serial at times, I think because of the direction