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You don’t have to pay royalties for the use of products like this in films. There’s some liability in regards to whether your depiction is disparaging or potentially making a claim about a product. Or creating an association or impression of endorsement where that might undesirable.

From what I gather from some similar shit I got stuck on this Baseball Card Exchange place has no background in anything but Sports Memorabilia. Hasn’t really authenticated much Pokemon stuff, isn’t terribly well known, and this isn’t how that’s handled. They seem to be generally considered OK by baseball card guys. 

T

In other countries like India. Where 30% of people are vegetarian, 80%+ don’t eat beef.

Oddly enough salt marsh lamb seems to be completely unavailable in the US, and I doubt many people would know what it is.

That’s despite having plenty of salt marsh, near farming areas, where farming sheep is becoming more popular. And proposals to graze animals in or near marshland for recovery and control of ticks

Yeah the beer business is headed for a crash. And the pandemic is not helping. Something like 70% of the alcohol market is in bars and restaurants, no amount of retail uptick was going to offset what COVID has done there. And the retail uptick kinda a went away last spring.

Part of the focus on Seltzers is, especially

There is another swoop gang involved. Albeit in the flash backs.

That is dated October 1980.

We changed the rules in 2005. From what I recall it’s actually ensconced in a trade treaty at this point.

SURE. But long standing connotations are long standing connotations.

Millions of people in the US drink tea everyday.

But Tea still has a connotation of fancy schmancy here. Cause English people.

For context .5% of the population in the US is like million, a million and half people.

And not everyone with a meat allergy needs to avoid cross contamination. My brother picked up an alpha gal allergy from a tick bite. After the acute period passed, cross contamination wasn’t an issue for him at all. I’m allergic to

terrible functional design.

I think more importantly. The bottle has been seemingly melted a bit to make it look old and crunched.

And the siracha there in is the disturbing dark red-brown that results from some one never refrigerating a long open bottle.

The prop was clearly dressed, carefully, to look extra gross and college studenty.

If “cap

There are rules to the stock market?

I’m wondering where you’re getting that number from. Telsa’s own announcement says they were just shy of 500k cars in 2020, and that they manufactured a bit more than 500k. That appears to be the most recent solid number, and I do see them doubling production and sales without anyone noticing. 

By comparison. Subaru,

Thing is you’re not the market.

Neither are the vegans. Vegans are at most half a percent of the US population. Vegetarians in general, where cross contamination is much less of an issue, are still just 5% in the highest polling.

Numbers globally are actually smaller.

In most given markets you’re talking about a few

I really don’t think it does.

Like I said actual sales numbers and revenue show a 4% drop at major retailers and convenience chains (most of what Neilson tracks here). More comprehensive looks including beer distributors and small retailers show a larger one. Up to 14%. That’s not a drop in growth, it’s actual volume

Did you not catch the end of the episode? Mayor is clearly said to be working for the Pykes, then they immediately show up. It was a very one two setup and payoff from the “other syndicate” bit. 

I saw it as a clever flip of the whole punk henchman/street thug.

Instead of Bill Paxton they’re very fashionable.

I saw it as a clever flip of the whole punk henchman/street thug.

Instead of Bill Paxton they’re very fashionable.

peppermint extract to put in my brownie bites

The whole “life expectancy was low back then” trope is mostly based in very, very high infant mortality rates. Particularly in the middle ages. You take infant deaths out of it, and pretty consistently at least 50% of people who made it past 12, made it to or past 55-60 from the middle ages through the 19th century.