twinetime22
Twinetime22
twinetime22

I just want to reply to the chicken guy. Just rinse and dry all the chicken, both what you cook and freeze. Then wrap the chicken you are freezing in saran wrap and put that in a bag. It minimizes the chicken juice (because you’ve already rinsed and dried) and it keeps all the juice on the inside of the saran wrap.

Wait, is this photoshopped or is Goodell really giving Brady a death stare?

I was just thinking the same thing. What are the rules for when you are not able to make a catch. If he climbed over the wall and is standing in the first row is that a catch? Are there “out of bound” type rules or does he just have to originate his jump/attempt from the field of play?

I’m not sure if this is a legitimate question or not, but I’m going to ask anyway. Since this is the last game of the regular season and it’s a known by all parties that if the Heat finish 11th overall for worst record they lose their pick, what’s to prevent the Heat from just forfeiting? Is that allowed? Just say

Well I looked in the official NFL rule book and turns out I'm completely wrong on this. Unless there's some other definition of a "passer."

Why don't running backs and receivers ever throw the ball away like quarterbacks when they're behind the line of scrimmage?

Yea this was my first thought as well. Retire now, let your rights expire and then you are free to sign with whomever you want next year. A 27-year-old speedster (next year) with a cannon for an arm and a strong baseball background would certainly generate interest from a number of teams...I'd assume.

This is completely random, but isn't it bizarre/crazy that we have a freakin' robot just hanging out on Mars, driving around taking pictures and drilling for samples? There's not a damn thing on Mars outside of Curiosity. It makes me think of the movie Wall-E. That's all

There's a big difference between "catching" the ball and "possessing" the ball. By definition, yea Dez Bryant caught the ball, but that doesn't necessarily mean he had it long enough to possess it per the NFL rules. If a guy goes over the middle and "catches" the ball for the length of time Bryant had the ball in his

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Technically, that's not a sidewalk slam. Regardless, it looks like the receiver reverses it into a DDT.

If he's in the middle of taking a step and dribbles then it doesn't count as one of the two steps he's allowed. All of his first steps are the last step he takes while dribbling and then he is given two steps after that so I don't think any of these are travels because from a referees perspective, he has not yet

Yea, but by Stephen A. Smith's rationale, a man could try and excuse his domestic violence by saying "hey man, she provoked me and she knows what provokes me and I've told her not to do it." That still doesn't excuse the end result. But hey, Stephen A. Smith was raised by women so he knows what he's talking about.

Isn't this the same thing as saying "women...if you don't want to get raped don't dress slutty? If you dress slutty and you get raped, it's partially your fault..."

Ricardo Lockette is not a 49er...he's a Seahawk. Might want to change that headline

In a couple days we'll probably hear from him again...in the form of a corporate apology and suspension.

Is it just me, or does this point out how unoriginal the use of his name is. Great, you're Mourning, like Alonzo. Wait, like who?

Hair/Makeup people insisted I put some product in my hair. I just told them I'd wear a hat all day for that "natural look"

Can we stop calling this, and other similar dunks, 360-degree dunks? His feet are facing away from the rim when he jumps and he barely makes it 180 degrees before dunking. He then finishes facing the basket and has only turned, in the air, 180 degrees. If it was a 360, he'd spin 360 degrees between leaving the ground

I think Seattle fans need to calm the eff down and just wait until something is ACTUALLY FINALIZED. Stop jumping to conclusions based off rumors...we've been down this road before.

every "perfect tackle" in the video involves the offensive player slowing down and standing upward. The NFL should use this to promote "safe running technique" as well.