1) I keep forgetting that Lewis has the same last name (including spelling) as my grandmother,
Really? Given that it's a fairly uncommon variation on the name, y'all may be cousins. We actually have a book that at the time, had the most complete listing of Pollaks in the country.
Sounds like Big Bang Mini.
Why am I not surprised that it was you, ND?
I'll make Lewis pay. Next time we have dinner.
I read Kotaku pretty regularly and remembered reading about that boss battle. Haven't seen or played it though.
Stephen reports that he doesn't know Big Bang Mini, and he knows way more games than I do.
Check the Pollak book for my great-grandma Recha (or Susan, as she was called for most of her U.S. years.) (1890? - 1981-ish). You may also be interested in the fact that she worked in Havana as a seamstress after leaving Austria and before she was allowed into the U.S.
My grandma (Alice, born 1916) married shortly after getting here, and my great-aunt (Marianne or Maryan, born 1913) had already been married for the first time (of five) before immigrating, so I'm less sure they'd be in the book.
Well, I don't know what it says about me, but I was relieved to find, once I'd cracked and Googled, that a plate job was not nearly as unpleasant as I'd been braced for. I mean, ick, but after having recently googled 'two girls, one cup' because of you people, this is
nothing.
I think "two girls, one cup" is the last one I looked up.
It's a good place to stop. Thing is, it's easy to assume it's just them that do that. You bother naming some practice and put it in the Urban Dictionary, then a lot of people do it, or are willing to talk like it's done.
I still haven't looked up "two girls, one cup."
I will.not.google. I've learned my lesson in the past.
Hil, I say with absolute sincerity that your choice is a wise one.