Maybe Next Valentine's Day...
Don't click on the below link before, during, or immediately after food consumption:
Women of the world: rejoice!
Don't click on the below link before, during, or immediately after food consumption:
One of our dedicated readers (i'd venture to say she'd be reader of the month, if we had a budget to actually get her a ribbon), sent in the following e-mail written to her by her father this morning. Read it for its emotional depth, its tragic undertones, its yoda-like grammar, or just because it's the funniest eulogy to a pet you will ever read:
This friday night, I decided to forego my normal slew of endless dates to sit at home and enjoy a wholesome film about young love. Um, relatively young love. Well, not-quite-old love.
(CAUTION: This is really, really long)
A few quotes from last night's Olympic women's free-skate that highlight why Olympic announcers should think about careers in motivational therapy:
For those of you who can't read French, that means HAPPY BIRTHDAY RBIE!!!!
The RBIE staff, finally together for their annual meeting, run into some trouble at a NYC bar and establish why 2/3 of them are single and alone:
So, recent adventures in myspace have kept me off the RBIE page lately, mostly because myspace offers the opportunity to stalk the lives of others in return for putting oneself out there. But like the prodigal son, I have returned to you. And I demand my fatted calf. And at least 40 virgins, if you can find them.
Dick Cheney shot his "friend" in the face. Reminds me of a few "friends" i'd like to go hunting with. Which brings us to the topic of today's post: What makes people haters?
Friday night was my law school's "Barrister's Ball", but as far as dances go, I just couldn't imagine it surpassing my experience at the senior prom in highschool: me, standing against the wall with glittery Payless heels digging into my ankles, wondering when the dance will end so I can get drunk on the beach, while I watch my date dry-hump the foreign exchange girl on the dancefloor, her lime-green tafetta dress rising to dangerous heights.