I really miss Weaver Street Market. I love living out west, but nothing out here quite compares.
I really miss Weaver Street Market. I love living out west, but nothing out here quite compares.
Yep, it was a risk. I'm an attorney, and you never go to court before talking with your client about the risks and benefits of taking a case to trial rather than settling beforehand. Nintendo clearly thought the risk was worth it. It looks like they rolled the dice and lost.
You're probably thinking Carrboro, which is essentially a hippie commune annex to Chapel Hill.
Chapel Hill and (some parts of) Durham are lovely. Depending how deeply embedded you are in Chapel Hill (or better yet, Carrboro) you may not even notice that the rest of the state is slipping into the 19th century.
(1) Buying it costs money, presumably significantly more than the amount they spent litigating this.
Oh, I know, I'm just making fun.
Is it bad that my first thought upon seeing the sign was that that poor naive kid lives on the New Mexico or Utah border and really doesn't want any coyotes coming over the border to cause trouble? Honest to God.
So I imagine Nintendo's going to have to open up their wallets now if they want to get this domain. What would we expect the running price to be? It looks like the court made the right decision, but if the owner isn't using it, I do hope that it can be put to good use.
Because this may be my best opportunity on Jezebel to use my username for pedantry, it's Tar Heel, not Tarheel.
Epic Yarn was an easy, short play, but a genuine delight of a game. I wouldn't spend $60 on it but I spent $10 and don't regret it even a little. At less than $8, I'd highly recommend it.
But that's precisely my point. I believe you when you say you're a good guy and that you wouldn't hit a woman. And as a good guy, it's not hard to take a stand against domestic violence. It's even easier to refrain from trying to defend an alleged abuser on the theory that "you know what you're getting yourself…
The issue is that this is a man who is using violence to defend what he believes to be his property, but what you and I might refer to as "his girlfriend's agency over her own body and life choices".
I've been cheated on before. It wasn't a fun experience. I'm, just like you, "hardcore against cheating". I dealt with the situation by breaking up with my girlfriend, which is probably almost always the right response. But in that moment, I was tempted toward violence, at least against the man who took "my"…
And that is a problem.
Someone help me with the science here. Is this Boyle's Law, or is it merely the pressure resisting a phase change? I'm sure it has to do with the pressure, but it's been years since chemistry.
Damn it, I'm going to have to break down and buy a 3DS, aren't I? And here I thought I'd be safe until the new Pokemon games came out.
Same reaction here. Can someone elaborate on this for me? Can you find Majora's Mask in-game?
Should I be concerned that one of the early promotional images for the game, hand-selected to demonstrate the graphical quality, shows what appears to be the Wii Fit Trainer's arm inside of Mario's head?
Re: the "Dating in the Office" question. The phrase "I played a big part in getting her hired" should be a HUGE red flag in my opinion. I can't tell if he is in a supervisory role with respect to this woman, but anything that could appear to the outside world as though an intimate relationship were in any way …
And you would be right. God, the moment I completed my first successful round-trip to Mun was one of the greatest moments in my video game life. I'd miscalculated my trajectory on the return trip, and wound up running out of fuel not five seconds before achieving an orbit that grazed enough atmosphere to allow a…