
We were the ones watching it when it was first airing. I don’t think there was anyone in my highschool that wasn’t watching it.
We were the ones watching it when it was first airing. I don’t think there was anyone in my highschool that wasn’t watching it.
Not the OP but I have read the book. It’s very unique and the story is told in some pretty strange ways. Parts are written backwards, in code, in the margin of the pages, etc. I think it’s a great experience and I’m glad to see it on that table. I’ve never read anything else like it.
Why would you say that?
My fellow hair-impaired brothers finally get some justice.
Well I guess reading that is now a permanent memory for me.
People like to talk shit about Limp Bizkit, but you’re lying if you grew up during this period and say you didn’t rock out to these songs. If you grew up in the 90s, you 100% knew this song, Faith, and Rollin at minimum.
No experience. All bad experiences means more potential for either a lot of unchecked baggage, that person is the cause of the bad experiences, or both.
I hate this, but I also want to share it with everyone.
Is it just the Hennessy that is being pointed to as the stereotype? Because I’m sitting here trying to figure out if there’s a stereotype about chocolate cake as well.
So I think this might be getting misrepresented. Now I don’t in anyway support"interactive ads" like this, but I’m pretty sure that is all this is. I actually had this exact commercial yesterday and didn’t even realize that it was actually asking the question in a non-rhetorical way. So I didn’t touch the remote and the commercial just plays out and ends as it would if the text wasn’t on the screen. I don’t know what happens if you actually answer the question. Hulu puts an ad countdown timer on the screen when ads are playing so you know how much of the ad is left and my show resumed at the time it said it would before the commercials started.