theaveng2010
billsmith
theaveng2010

Sasha was very cute, and I had a crush on her, but she displayed an inability to defeat Kwan.

The sad thing is NBC recorded in digital during the 1990s, so these older Olympic performances are available in DVD-level quality. They started recording in widescreen HD in the year 2000 (approximately) to meet the new ATSC broadcast standards.

WARNING: The linked website leads to a Blocked viral website. (Thanks a lot bud.)

She didn’t “just die”. She knowingly terminated her life. She made a choice, just as my old college friend made a choice when he hung himself. At least my friend’s death only hurt himself. (We were obviously sad to lose him, but it didn’t harm us physically or financially.) HER actions cost ~2400 people thousands of

P.S. You forget that some of us are also stuck on a delay. It might be because we live on the west coast & things air three hours behind those in New York, Atlanta, Miami, etc. (Example: The Walking Dead finale just killed off Glenn, but people in L.A. and San Francisco haven’t seen the show yet.)

You are clearly Not in the majority. Way back before you were even born, people using the internet or usenet in the 1980s developed something called “netiquette” which basically meant be nice to one another. It also included spoiler alerts:

No actually they didn’t. They said, “You’ll see what happens to Hammond later in the show,” in order to preserve the mystery of the ending.

No you did not have to click the link. The author RUDELY inserted the spoiler in the title, which is visible from twitter. That’s a violation of basic Netiquette (which goes back to the 1980s, and requires Spoiler Alerts on brand-new television shows).

> where the hell have you been for the last 6 month?

When you say “nothing to spoil” it becomes clear you’ve never watched Grand Tour or its predecessor Top Gear. The boys often go on journeys (which is a story in and of itself). Hence there is an “ending” that can be spoiled

When you say “no much plot” it becomes clear you’ve never watching Grand Tour or its predecessor Top Gear. The show has a LOT of plot, since the boys often go on journeys (which is a story in and of itself)

HINT: Television shows are never taped or aired in proper sequence. Directors take multiple videos of several car runs. They then throw-away the bad shots & edit together the “best” shots. So you might be watching Run #3, followed a few seconds later by run #1, and then run #5, followed by run #3 again.

I AGREE. It’s standard netiquette (dating all the way to the primitive 80s internet/usenet/fidonet) to put SPOILER WARNING in the title, or the first line of the post.

Actually the GM ignition switch ALSO involved a coverup. They found the faulty switch circa 2005, redesigned it to eliminate the flaw, and then covered-up the modification (rather than inform the government/customers as required by law). So people were driving around with faulty ignitions (a dangerous condition) with

> “ No one is asking white people to stop being white.”

>ill-advised and desperate move

It’s legal to make a recording in any public venue, per U.S. court rulings (based on their reading of the “freedom of press” clause of the 1st amendment).

ACTUALLY if you read the CEO’s full interview, he says he needs lots of rural subscribers where ticket prices only cost $6 to balance the expensive city subscribers costing him $12 per show.

(1) I don’t like having to drive an hour (including trying to find parking) to make the trip. That’s time I could have caught-up the latest episode of Game of Thrones or Walking Dead.... or sleep. (2) I don’t like wasting gasoline which is not free... about $3 round trip. Online streaming costs no gasoline. (3) I

> “there was only one show at 9 PM at night. That is highly unacceptable and definitely hurt the box office take”