In liberal Vermont, I spent eight years offering counter-points when kids parroted their parents’ negative comments on Bush. It was draining.
In liberal Vermont, I spent eight years offering counter-points when kids parroted their parents’ negative comments on Bush. It was draining.
I don’t think she cares about being a good history teacher. That’s not what she’s about.
Three roles he is often forgotten for, but are great:
I posted above, but threads get lost:
I posted elsewhere in the thread, but here it is again:
I enjoy non-alcoholic beers and am tired of the easy joke. Sometimes I want to get drunk, but other times I just want a cold one, be able to drive home or not fall asleep in my chair. Here’s a complete list (I disagree with the order), but here are my thoughts:
In 2016 I moved up to smartphones (I had a slider) and chose Windows on Nokia because of the tiles and it was the only phone I could find that was still a small 5".
There are days that I miss the amateur Olympics. It wasn’t always great sport, but you knew everyone there had a story and people seemed human.
Or you could just be polite and use another term.
On the surface, I don’t disagree. It’s like when Obama breaks tradition he’s relatable (“He’s on “Between Two Ferns”!) but Trump is unfit for office.
I wish you would just write what happened. I found this really hard to follow.
Mondays used to be my crash-hard day—I’d leave work at 5:00, walk home, buy a loaf of bread for dinner, and put Joe Frank on (it was the early 90s and he WFMU at 6:00). I love Joe Frank, but I never got through one of those Monday episodes. I’d wake up some time around 9:00, meet a friend for pool, and go down again…
I can’t get past this photo.
I want to know if they explore Ginsburg’s friendship with Scalia. I’m fascinated about that, and an in-depth look at how two very different minds could vacation together might be just what this nation needs to get along.
I thought this was going to be about portraying disabilities. This play is a minefield.
Barnes & Noble’s policy in the 90s was “We never say ‘No’.” Then, they would teach how to, basically, say “No” while upselling and diverting their attention to something else.
I worked at Barnes & Noble when the megastore craze was hot in the late 90s. I had a woman return a book because she did not like the ending. People used to ask us to photocopy recipes from cookbooks. People shusshed others like it was a library. Ugh.
I’m sad.
In the show “The Magicians” Alice says how her parents insisted she have the original edition of “The Joy of Sex” so she could see what real people look like (hair, droopy body parts, more hair). That made me laugh more than anything Season One.
A Boston area native, I was raised on the (fake) underdog story.