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Clarification: was Ronson pissed drunk, or pissed mad?

Oh, I posted this in tips on Gawker a few days back.

@_sottovoce: Seems he used faux fur like others would have used discretion.

@SlayBelle: But the first one is the worst one!

@eadubbs: Same! I have actually been wondering for several years now if this is just some peculiar quirk of the American 'rudeness' you always hear so much about.

Coco's bottom really is a feat of nature. (Or implants, or enhancements, or whatever. Point is: it's mesmerising)

@moosesanddeers: Ibuprofen isn't especially hardcore though, is it? I got prescribed it last winter when I got tendonitis from only wearing ballerina flats.

@IBleedGlitter: The High Priestess of Tinsel: He was always the crazy holier-than-thou uber-Catholic who thought his wife was going to go to hell, it's just that once the veneer cracked, it was easier to break it.

Yeah I get the intense anger that comes with certain break ups (and I've definitely been there before), but the wilful destruction of someone's property is just not cool. No matter the circumstances, it's just a line that you shouldn't cross.

You know what, I enjoyed it. Daulerio made things interesting, and the varied reactions were hilarious.

@SuperJew: fair enough, I suppose. Although because it's part of the everyday, informal vernacular here, I guess I wouldn't have such a strong reaction to an American using it. I mean, it's the kind of word you use in certain situations. It just makes sense.

@champagne: Well that's the thing, really; Miss Marple is always referred to as part of 'our class', but she's also consistently overlooked as being a gossipy old biddy, or what have you. And Poirot isn't 'of' that class, but moves in the same social circles, and the gentle xenophobia never seems to go unmentioned.

Funny, Gawker just posted this. Are y'all conspiring?

Having lived in a first year hall of residence (and therefore have witnessed many of them), I can confidently say that nothing is more heinously unattractive than the 'ironic' mullet.

'Cheers' is also a Kiwi/Australian thing. And it's such a part of everyday conversation here, that I was kind of shocked to find out how phony Americans thought it sounded. I still can't cut down on it, though- unless the email is formal, saying 'cheers' is an authentic part of my everyday vocabulary.

@shrinking_lover: There is no way to look at this and not die laughing. It's science!