The world is not ready for a Quarter Pounder/Filet-O-Fish combo with Bic Mac sauce.
Sounds like something on the Doublemeat Palace menu.
Buffy ,'Help'
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.
The world is not ready for a Quarter Pounder/Filet-O-Fish combo with Bic Mac sauce.
Sounds like something on the Doublemeat Palace menu.
The world is not ready for a Quarter Pounder/Filet-O-Fish combo with Bic Mac sauce.
Dude, WHITEFONT!
mmm, Filet-o-Fish . . . am now hungry. Where is nearest McDonald's?
The world is not ready for a Quarter Pounder/Filet-O-Fish combo with Bic Mac sauce.
Dude, WHITEFONT!
I lived it, and now I'm taking you all on my stroll down memory lane.
I don't think I've had a Filet-o-Fish in 10 years and now I want one SO BAD.
When I was pregnant, the McDonald's in my building wouldmake me a double cheeseburger with tartar sauce cause a) very pregnant and b) they loved me.
I also worked at McD as a kid. When somebody came in with an unusual order like that (one regular liked hamburgers with Big Mac sauce), we'd serve the sauce or the like in a courtesy cup "on the side."
I also worked at McD as a kid. When somebody came in with an unusual order like that (one regular liked hamburgers with Big Mac sauce), we'd serve the sauce or the like in a courtesy cup "on the side."
The McDonald's I worked at -- maybe it's a difference in franchise owners -- was emphatically anti-"on the side." Employees would get written up for doing stuff like that.
For Jess: Motion Activated Swearing Turtle.
This is freaky: DNA sample may be enough to build an image of your face
FORENSIC SCIENCE is about to take a startling new turn – reconstructing facial features and skin tone simply by reading your DNA. This goes far beyond doing an identity-proving genetic fingerprint, it means the person’s actual face will emerge after analysing a collection of genes, according to a scientist from Pennsylvania State University.
The process, “forensic molecular photofitting” relies on mapping genes that are linked to skin pigmentation and in its more complex form, to groups of genes that control facial structure, stated Dr Mark Shriver.
The approach has already been used to help identify and convict a serial killer in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Dr Shriver said over the weekend at a presentation to the American Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting in Chicago.