My first trip to Subway came a few years ago. And truly, all the questions were daunting, I didn't even know what kind of cheese I'd like. But that was just the beginning.
After making my way through the question gauntlet (sweating bullets the whole way), with my completed sub in sight, the cashier asked, "Is this going to be a meal?" I panicked and responded with, "Ummm. . .I don't know, we'll see." Had no idea "a meal" at Subway meant a sub, chips and a drink. I just thought the cashier was being nosy. I remember wondering why the hell they cared if a sub was going to be enough to fill me up. We ended up just staring blankly at one another, before she just slowly moved toward the cash register to ring me up for my lone sub.
I do this all the time and then my arms start flinging around weirdly and my legs buckle and I end up looking like that guy on the game where you control his legs with arrow keys to make him run.
I do this all the time and then my arms start flinging around weirdly and my legs buckle and I end up looking like that guy on the game where you control his legs with arrow keys to make him run.
I do this all the time and then my arms start flinging around weirdly and my legs buckle and I end up looking like that guy on the game where you control his legs with arrow keys to make him run.
Originally posted by BestServedCold
QWOP is the game that you speak of I do believe
I just wasted 10 minutes of my life playing that damn game. Thanks a lot fellas. LOL
P.S....The furthest I "ran" was 7.6 meters. Thank God that we don't have to consciously think about how to walk in real life.
The best ones are the ones that the other people go along with it.
Originally posted by Anthony Bourdain
The celebrity chef culture is a remarkable and admittedly annoying phenomenon. Of all the professions, after all, few people are less suited to be suddenly thrown into the public eye than chefs. We're used to doing what we do in private, behind closed doors.
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