PrattRules wrote:The water in Ruben's hand in the banner looks pretty damn cold.
smitty wrote:I think dogs are the most advanced species out there. They don't have to work. They get to lay around a lot and do nothing. And they get us to feed them and take care of their every need.
Sounds like a pretty good deal to me.
TenuredVulture wrote:In science, fiction humans generally encounter aliens who are technologically far in advance of us. However, despite several decades of looking, we haven't discovered any aliens who even have radio or tv. Which means we may be the most advanced life form out there. Depressing.
thephan wrote:pacino's posting is one of the more important things revealed in weeks.
Calvinball wrote:Pacino was right.
Barry Jive wrote:my box spring doesn't fit up our stairs so I had to chuck it. getting some plywood to throw down on my frame this weekend
Grotewold wrote:smitty wrote:I think dogs are the most advanced species out there. They don't have to work. They get to lay around a lot and do nothing. And they get us to feed them and take care of their every need.
Sounds like a pretty good deal to me.
Cats have all of that with less effort
Cats make you earn it
PrattRules wrote:Barry Jive wrote:my box spring doesn't fit up our stairs so I had to chuck it. getting some plywood to throw down on my frame this weekend
Let me know how this all plays out. I was thinking about doing the same thing.
Grotewold wrote:smitty wrote:I think dogs are the most advanced species out there. They don't have to work. They get to lay around a lot and do nothing. And they get us to feed them and take care of their every need.
Sounds like a pretty good deal to me.
Cats have all of that with less effort
Phan In Phlorida wrote:Grotewold wrote:smitty wrote:I think dogs are the most advanced species out there. They don't have to work. They get to lay around a lot and do nothing. And they get us to feed them and take care of their every need.
Sounds like a pretty good deal to me.
Cats have all of that with less effort
...and they can lick their own junk.
jerseyhoya wrote:Going to Brooklyn for the first time in my life, non driving through division I think
The average wait on weekdays, according to MoMA, has been four to five hours for nonmembers and two to three hours for members, who use a fast-track line. Weekends are worse; a nonmember can expect to wait more than five hours. Some visitors last weekend reported waiting nine hours, longer than a standard work day.