What I really need on social media: A lie emoji, and one button blocking.
What I really need on social media: A lie emoji, and one button blocking.
Via Soul of Thoughts
September 13, 1949, maybe the last a Vanderbilt football player got as much attention as Diego Pavia?
A relic from my father's collection. It was in his shed, so I suspect it was a gardening cap.
I'm convinced Nextdoor is a Russian plot to encourage self destruction. ๐
Just despicable and disgraceful. The US government is now indistinguishable from the mafia.
Is this the Admiral telling Burchett about "documented" football field sized object moving hundreds of miles an hour underwater? Timmy needs to check into a facility for a few weeks. thehill.com/homenews/hou...
Winter tool porn.
How ironic. I suspect that Saban has never read Kurt Vonnegut's "Harrison Bergeron." archive.org/stream/Harri...
Corn muffins from my Day of the Dead cast iron, to go with the obligatory black eyed peas.
LBJ says party on!
I just witnessed a National Anthem with a full complement of twists, turns, scoops, falls, and grunts. The most intestinal Star Spangled Banner yet.
A Christmas gift from my great-niece, who understands my sense of humor. Well done!
Five year-old me as Santa. Except for one poorly delivered line in a high school play, that was my entire acting career. I resent the allegation that I only got the part because my mother offered to sew the Santa suit.
Party on, Lyndon.
Once again, LBJ drank a bit too much punch at the Christmas party.
Nashville
Macyโs balloon Grover has escaped his bonds and is floating over the Hudson with the Tappan Zee Bridge in the background
Sometimes, the balloons get free. Witness a liberated Grover heading up the Hudson past the Tappan Zee Bridge.
Dusting off the hat that's good one day a year.
That time of year again.
The operative word there is persuadable, and the phrase "persuadable Trump voters" is an oxymoron.
My grandfather Preston Ford (far left) US Army 5th Division, Company K, Sixth Infantry - World War I. Gassed in the Argonne Forest on October 14, 1918. Came back home to Tennessee on August 22, 1919.