Well, clearly, it wasn't Emmett, but it was at least his long lost brother, if not his long lost twin.
Hmmm. Maybe I should check in with my ex-girlfriends in Massachusetts.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Well, clearly, it wasn't Emmett, but it was at least his long lost brother, if not his long lost twin.
Hmmm. Maybe I should check in with my ex-girlfriends in Massachusetts.
My gimlet, OTOH, which I'm grateful seems to be popular where I live, has lime juice pulp in it.
I don't get too much pulp, since they tend to use the squeezy thing which just juices the lime.
Which Bar Lubitsch's didn't, now that I think of it.
Bar Lubitsch is such a cool name. Nothing's more sophisticated than an Ernst Lubitsch film.
Hmmm. Maybe I should check in with my ex-girlfriends in Massachusetts.
He was probably around the same age (I'm pretty good at twigging to that age group, because of Ben), so I don't think you have too much to worry about.
That Tyra picture is Not Right.
yoiks. seriously. She needs a fake-tanning intervention.
Who here knew that the Leader of the Lords in the UK was Baroness Amos?
Anybody?
Whereas Secretary of State for Health - Patricia Hewitt "set up Labour's feared computer database, Excalibur, that spearheaded the party's "rapid rebuttal" of Tory attacks during the 1997 election campaign."
In England they have a feared database named Excalibur.
I'm killing Natter all by myself.
Well, me and the BBC News.
In England they have a feared database named Excalibur.
However, they don't seem to have foreheads.
Just don't wear them out in the rain:
Here is the world's first dissolvable dress, the culmination of a creative partnership at the University of Sheffield between the award-winning designer Prof Helen Storey and Prof Tony Ryan, a leading chemist, to show off new materials that can make consumer products less environmentally harmful.
Prof Storey has worked with the University of Ulster to develop a series of innovative dissolving textiles based on polymers created in collaboration with the Sheffield Polymer Centre.
During a forthcoming exhibition, up to eight dresses made from these textiles - minus their wearers - will be lowered into enormous goldfish bowls where they will be left to liquefy.
The fabric is knitted from a clear polymer - polyvinyl alcohol - of the kind used in sachets that release detergent in washing machines. The dresses will dissolve and turn into a form that can be recycled as a bottle.