He is in EVERYTHING lately. He must be tired. But he doesn't look tired. I'm not sure he's doing enough to distinguish Liam, Cal, and Dario. At least he looks good, though.
He is in EVERYTHING lately. He must be tired. But he doesn't look tired. I'm not sure he's doing enough to distinguish Liam, Cal, and Dario. At least he looks good, though.
That was my main question. My parents paid my tuition and rent, but it went straight to the university, not to me.
Her parents may be naive, but I'm gonna go ahead and blame the person who dropped out of school and called in a fake bomb threat. Call me crazy, but ...
To be honest, I'm not familiar with the southern suburbs - it was all Gwinnett, North Fulton, and Cobb. They weren't really built up when I was growing up (I'm 30). I've never been to Peachtree City.
Ooh. I've decided that "This is the rhythm of my type" is also going to start happening.
I have a friend who makes all kind of mundane duties into hilarious ditties. I'm sending this to her so she can work "this is how we glue it" into her repertoire.
Incorporation is a terrible trend that is just going nuts lately. We already have more counties than any state except Texas, and now cities are incorporating left and right. It makes coordination of services damn near impossible (see: snowpocalypse '14).
I mean, they do call us "the two Georgias" for a reason.
That is terrible to hear. I went to college in Nashville and fondly remember it as a haven of blue in a land of red. I'm sure that Nashville proper is still that way, but it's a bummer that legislation has been taken over by Republicans.
Vinings is not nearly as bad as most of the burbs. Several people I like very much live in Vinings. I just adore living downtown - I'm right by the Beltline and Freedom Park Trail, and I live a mile from my office on Peachtree, so I have zero commute and walk everywhere. It's delightful.
Atlanta is FIRMLY in the 21st Century, just not the rest of the state. That's why they call us "two Georgias." Well, I think technically, according to economic and social metrics, we are now five Georgias. But there is A LOT of political and economic animosity between Atlanta and the rest of the state.
Haha. And didn't Bieber rent a house in Sandy Springs? Of all places. I hope you were in one of the good suburbs. I grew up in Snellville. Never again.
The latter is definitely an urban myth. I mean, sorority houses at UGA house A TON of girls. I went to school in Tennessee, and only a few girls were allowed to live in the sorority house (like, seven?), and rumor had it that it was because of an outdated brothel law, but I think that might have been an urban myth,…
My Midtown vet is next door to ... Staples. Boooo.
I was wondering. I think some of my girlfriends bought stuff from Inserection, like, last year? Was it a different one?
Is it me, or is that really cheap for that area? I mean, I know it only has two bedrooms, but still. My family lives in a less expensive part of SoCal, and their pretty standard four-bedroom house was like $2.5 million (which is still CRAZY ABSURD to me, because I could never afford that and I live in a one-bedroom…
I know, right? It's frighteningly close. But, I mean, the buffer between Sandy Springs and Atlanta is Buckhead, so that kind of explains everything (I am not a fan of Buckhead - it's one big frat party forever, and so much sameness).
Ha, I just wrote that. I have lived all over this county - seriously, in every single region, including the waterfront in both New England (Boston) and California. I wouldn't trade a single one of those places for Atlanta. I absolutely love it here; I just don't ever go OTP.
Atlanta is fucking delightful. Trees everywhere, liberal, renewed commitment to walkability, great old neighborhoods, solid arts culture. Just DON'T LEAVE THE BORDERS OF ATLANTA. Ever. The Atlanta suburbs (of which Sandy Springs is one) are a special hell. I grew up in them.
I would.