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THE OFFICIAL CALIFORNIA PLUS BOOMER 'N WHISKERS THREAD! (pg. 1408)
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| Mebot |
there are two foods in the world that i absolutely hate and despise and i will not eat them at all, no matter what
Banannas are one of them |
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| whiskers |
| quote: | Originally posted by Tranc3
WTF???
There's a tune labeled Scott Bond vs. Solar Stone - Emerald, when it's really Digweed's classic.
Edit: Digweed + Nick Muir |
don't you hate mislabels?
back in the days of audiogalaxy there were SO many of them
even now if you go onto kazaa and search for "oakenfold" you'll get lots of tracks like
oakenfold - rave techno tiesto
:haha: |
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| Boomer187 |
| quote: | Originally posted by Mebot
there are two foods in the world that i absolutely hate and despise and i will not eat them at all, no matter what
Banannas are one of them |
I think its all psychological, let me guess teh other one is huge oversized hotdogs... |
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| whiskers |
| quote: | Originally posted by Mebot
there are two foods in the world that i absolutely hate and despise and i will not eat them at all, no matter what
Banannas are one of them |
so much hate.. what's the other food
BANANAS (since 2 people mispelled it) are awesome, i can eat like 5 at once especially if they're sweet and nice |
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| Mebot |
no the other food is sweet potatoes (or yams)
i dont think its psychological cos i cant remember anything traumatizing me to not like em. I just dont like em.
*side question here*
i was thinking if you call coke and pepsi = pop., then do you also call drinking fountains = bubblers?
i heard someone mention that and ive never heard of it being called a bubbler before and the same person mentioned pop. |
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| Photo_bot_2k1 |
| texas got its own forum! |
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| whiskers |
| quote: | Originally posted by Mebot
no the other food is sweet potatoes (or yams)
i dont think its psychological cos i cant remember anything traumatizing me to not like em. I just dont like em.
*side question here*
i was thinking if you call coke and pepsi = pop., then do you also call drinking fountains = bubblers?
i heard someone mention that and ive never heard of it being called a bubbler before and the same person mentioned pop. |
that's strange because "bubbler" is what they say in new england, i've heard
and hey, i absolutely hate onions so... it's just taste |
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| whiskers |
| quote: | Originally posted by Photo_bot_2k1
texas got its own forum! |
HOW??? |
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| Mebot |
| quote: | Originally posted by Photo_bot_2k1
texas got its own forum! |
thats awesome, i just posted a reply congratulating them on their new forum.
| quote: | Originally posted by Whiskers
that's strange because "bubbler" is what they say in new england, i've heard |
huh, you dont say...
well im at loss for words so im gonna go study now.
TaTa |
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| whiskers |
| quote: | Originally posted by Mebot
thats awesome, i just posted a reply congratulating them on their new forum.
huh, you dont say...
well im at loss for words so im gonna go study now.
TaTa |
did you just capitalize my username??
this is pretty cool:
| quote: | Q. What is it exactly that makes your head hurt when drinking a cold beverage quickly? -- Bill Munson, Charlotte
Brain freeze!
(POUND, POUND, POUND.)
Whew! That's better. For a minute or so, that pain between the eyes was excruciating.
Bill, this thankfully brief condition -- often referred to as a brain freeze or ice cream headache -- is caused when something very cold touches the center of your palate (also known as the roof of your mouth).
The cold food or drink sets off certain nerves that control how much blood flows to your head. The nerves say, "Hey, that's really cold! We need more blood to warm up!" And blood vessels in your head swell up with blood.
Now, the nerves in your palate are connected with other nerves throughout your head. Those other nerves feel all that blood rushing to your palate. That's a "brain freeze."
(Nothing is really happening in the brain. It's all in the blood vessels of the head.)
It usually lasts a minute or less, almost never lasts more than five minutes, and goes away on its own.
If you find yourself getting a brain freeze, hold your tongue against your palate. This will warm it up and stop the sensation.
Studies show brain freezes might be more common in people who suffer migraines. The two conditions might be similar in that the blood vessels cause the pounding. Many migraine sufferers report getting ice-cream headaches in the same place they get migraines.
The term "brain freeze" was registered in 1994 by 7-Eleven, the convenience store giant, "to communicate the painful joy of drinking a frozen Slurpee beverage."
Of course, you know what the ultimate brain freeze is: Cryonics.
Anybody else remember the joy of being served an old-fashioned milk shake at a real soda fountain? I loved the whole set-up. You weren't just handed a machine-made shake in a paper cup.
No, sir.
You took a spin on a counter stool. You watched creamy hunks of cool vanilla tumble into a tall metal cup. Squirt, squirt of chocolate syrup. Splash of whole milk. Shiny cup slapped onto a pastel blender the size of a small tractor.
Then you were presented with the whole ensemble of Official Milk Shake Equipment, each apparatus noble and important in its role: The frosty metal cup, the tall glass, the long-handled spoon and the paper-wrapped straw.
It tasted like happiness. THAT was worth a brain freeze.
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| Boomer187 |
| quote: | Originally posted by Mebot
no the other food is sweet potatoes (or yams)
i dont think its psychological cos i cant remember anything traumatizing me to not like em. I just dont like em.
*side question here*
i was thinking if you call coke and pepsi = pop., then do you also call drinking fountains = bubblers?
i heard someone mention that and ive never heard of it being called a bubbler before and the same person mentioned pop. |
bubbler, wtf, hell no. Its a drinking fountain.
more importantly, is it pronounced milk or melk, pillow or pellow...
ive heard em both... |
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| whiskers |
milk
pillow
:rolleyes:
:gsmile: |
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