Very bizarre men's fashion show: [link]
By John Galliano.
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.
I wonder what's going through the models' heads during a show like that?
I wonder what's going through the models' heads during a show like that?
Mentally spending their paycheck?
I wonder what's going through the models' heads during a show like that?
Banana hammock!
Called a "zorse" or a "zebroid" (pretty much lose, lose if you ask us), typically the offspring of a zebra and horse have stripes across the entire body.
I think they should go with "hor-bra".
I wonder what's going through the models' heads during a show like that?
If ANTM tells us anything they're alternating between "Stomp!" and "Look FIERCE!!!"
C'mon, I don't that's even the weirdest Galliano show ever.
Timelies. Just caught up. Wanted to give a belated thanks for all the birthday happies I received. Very relaxing weekend, though one of my plans got frelled up.
Off to catch up in Bithces.
"hor-bra".
Oh, dear. All I can think of is the kind of pointy thing Madonna used to wear.
Here's something I didn't know: By law, a deactivated cellphone must still be able to call 911.
Apparently a mother who let her 4 year old daughter keep a deactivated cellphone didn't know this either. So guess what - her daughter used it to call 911. Not just once, but almost 300 times.
July 05,2007 | CARPENTERSVILLE, Ill. -- Authorities tracked down a 4-year-old girl who called 911 nearly 300 times last month by offering to deliver McDonald's to her suburban Chicago apartment.
Unbeknownst to her mother, the girl used a deactivated cell phone to call dispatchers 287 times in June -- sometimes as often as 20 times a shift.
Dispatchers heard the child's voice but could only track the phone's signal to the apartment complex.
So authorities used a ruse to pinpoint her.
"We asked (the caller) what she wanted. She said she wanted McDonald's," said Steve Cordes, executive director of QuadCom's emergency center, which covers Carpentersville.
"We talked with her and we convinced her if she told us where she lives, we would bring her McDonald's," he said. "She finally gave us her address. So we sent the police over -- with no McDonald's."
After police arrived, the girl's mother took away the phone, Cordes said.