- What’s the top selling men’s underwear style? My guess, the boxer-brief.
- I also think most men buy non-white underwear.
- That Wise County Lawyer blogger sure was posting all the good stuff before me yesterday. For those of you that follow both of us, sorry for the double posts.
- It’s amazing how much PTSD is now diagnosed, which makes me think how tough it must have been for all those vets from WWII, Korea, Vietnam, and of course other battles.
- I’ve always enjoyed tug-of-war, but some students in Los Angeles lost some fingers in a recent competition.
- A very, very Disney themed wedding
- Ninja History 101 – TIME Magazine
- Great ‘Walking Dead’ Advertisement
- Vanilla Ice has his own ceiling and wall light lighting line: VanillaIceLighting.com. The color of one chandelier is “Ice Bronze”.
- ESPN The Magazine used atheletes to recreate famous album covers (look at the left side column for the pics). I thought the Ryan Lochte as the Nirvana was funny.
- BeastModeForChrist.com
- Tempting Pictures of the Day: I never thought of it before, but if you are driving a Lamborgini with doors that open up instead of out to the side and it rolls over and catches on fire, you’re doomed for.
- There’s a town in Canada called Swastika.
Judge reacts to being flipped off and being told “f— you”
At least she still has her jewelry.
Kid suspended over imaginary gernade
LOVELAND, Colo. — A 2nd grader has been suspended from school in Loveland for a make believe game he was playing.
The 7-year-old says he was trying to save the world. But school administrators say he broke a key rule during his pretend play.
“I was trying to save people and I just can’t believe I got dispended,” says Alex Evans, who doesn’t understand his suspension any better than he can pronounce it.
“It’s called ‘rescue the world,’” he says.
He was playing a game during recess at Loveland’s Mary Blair Elementary School and threw an imaginary grenade into a box with pretend evil forces inside.
“I pretended the box, there’s something shaking in it, and I go ‘pshhh.’”
The boy didn’t throw anything real or make any threats against anyone. He explains he was pretending to be the hero. “So nothing can get out and destroy the world.”
But his imaginary play broke the school’s real rules. The school lists “absolutes” designed to keep a safe environment. The list includes absolutely no fighting, real or imaginary; no weapons, real or imaginary.
Spotted In a Mineral Wells Pizza Restaurant
A good friend that still lives in my hometown of Mineral Wells spotted this picture in a pizza restaurant and noticed a YoungLittleGeeding. I haven’t seen this photo in years, and all I can remember of it is that was my first year of Little Dribblers, probably third grade, and our coach was a high school student at the time. Sadly, I only remember one person in the photo, and that’s the guy in the glasses who was my best neighborhood friend that lived around the block.
Oh, in case you can’t spot me, I’m on the bottom row second from the right.
EDIT: Actually, I’m on the bottom row second from the LEFT.