luvmesome142
luvMeSome142 & some Lincoln!
luvmesome142

Well, the fix is either going to reduce power, or reduce fuel economy.

goddamit

My wife is from Milwaukee and I kid her about that accent. She would always say, “people don’t talk that way around here!” Then we went up to Fond du Lac one day and asked a mailman for directions. He said in the thickest Midwesterner accent ever, “Well, you just go through da stop-and-gOO light...”

Yep. This is exactly how a series-hybrid system operates most efficiently.

Agreed.

Jack, I’m not sure if Blogtor Doom meant to imply that using antibacterial soaps create antibiotic resistant bacteria. But there is a point to be made about not using them. You naturally have bacteria on your skin that are beneficial and help prevent colonization of bad bacteria. Many people who wrestle have had the

For sure! I had three passengers with me and hit the guy doing about 40 mph. The two in the back seat weren’t even wearing seat belts. The only serious injury was the guy in the passenger seat. His knee got cut pretty bad on the dash. No airbags, of course.

I got hit by a drunk driver. The guy was blitzed. He made a left turn in front of me like I wasn’t even there.

I’m so jealous! I lost mine way back in ‘92. :-(

Well, I’ve already crashed! So, I don’t have to worry about it anymore!!!

Now playing

I immediately pulled this up when I got to the mac and cheese title:

1st gear: The first thing that came to mind was HOV lanes. Person inside + AI driver = HOV-2!

This assumes that calorie counting is helpful. Reference:

Your statement is true, but in this particular case, the acceleration of the brain would have been reduced dramatically if additional padding were used on the cage.

Hells no! Something’s wrong with that person for sure. Even if I had stood there filming, I would have dropped to the ground and yelled some expletive when it exploded (not that either would have helped).

I’ll be that guy. ;-)

I really enjoyed that video. Awesome.

Waddya mean, “good luck?” Obviously it’s the 1984 RS200

Ice sublimates (changes from a solid to a gas) even at atmospheric pressure. In space, it does even more so.