weatherman
wætherman
weatherman

Yeah that’s my question - if it’s put on before the pizza is cooked, it would seem to stop some of the nice browning that pepperoni and cheese need, and if it’s just put on after.. well that doesn’t sound appealing at all. Maybe that’s the reason the flavor is strange to Dennis?

This sounds interesting and good. My biggest question when I first heard about it was whether the ice cream had cream cheese in it. That, you’ve answered. But it’s not clear if it’s just in there for texture, or if there’s enough of it to give it that cream cheese zing?

I’m confused - is the sauce cooked? It looks like it was put on after the rest of the pizza was cooked.

I just watched a half dozen of his vids, and for TikTok content, I’d say they’re better than most. I do appreciate his enthusiasm and willingness to try new stuff - reminds me of that excitement I used to get visiting a foreign country and discovering new foods - sometimes even just on the way there; I actually

I guarantee 100% that the reason the new steering yoke is that shape is because of this;

Tesla has gotten into the position where it gets paid to exist by its competition”

These days they do.

It’s a headline. But unlike the previous administration, his headlines usually come with a plan, which I’m sure includes (or will include) an accounting of existing vehicles in the fleet, which are due for a replacement, and which are good candidates for replacement with electric vehicles in the near term. 

Maglev dogs, that’s absurd. It’s clearly ground effect airflow created by the dog that’s keeping that car up.

Gasoline is a sin. For now, I agree it’s a necessary sin, and that makes the impacts of taxing it regressive. But countless studies have shown that when gas prices are low, people use more and buy less efficient vehicles. If taxes reflected both the true cost of our car-based infrastructure, and took into account the

Well they just look like jeans to me. But then, I’m a dad.

Not increasing taxes on gas is like not increasing taxes on cigarettes, just because poor people smoke cigarettes more than wealthier people. I don’t disagree with you that taxes ought to be increased to other things that the rich use more, but ignoring the societal costs expenses associated with increased gas

The jeans can be deflated, refilled with gas, reassembled, and used over and over again so you don’t have to get a new pair every time you take a spill get off your bike but forget to take off the tether.

Does this work for burgers too? I assume it would be sprinkled only on the exterior, not mixed into the meat?

Exactly. This argument that poorer people can’t afford fuel efficient cars might have been true a few decades ago (like when I was poor and driving my 10 mpg Chevy) but nowadays there are plenty of options for efficient cheap cars; Honda Civics that cost $2k and get 35 mpg, or $3k-$5k Toyota Priusii that get 55 mpg.

We certainly have to be aware of the impact of regressive taxes, but not every tax can or should be implemented in a progressive way. The fact is that there are very direct costs and externalities associated with using gasoline, and effectively subsidizing it only encourages its use.

Yeah I didn’t say it was a good deal, just that it wasn’t as bad as I thought it was going to be. For some, the novelty of it and the idea that they’re getting wines selected by “master sommelier” Bobby Stuckey is enough to entice them to sign up. Obviously, if you have a good wine store somewhere close, where you can

That is a nice shade. there’s one in Florida that’s on-budget...

That actually doesn’t seem to be the terrible deal that I was expecting. A quick search of some of the wines seen on their site shows the wines usually retail for $30-$35, and they’re good wines.