@Crystal: Watched the first two episodes of Gekkan Shoujo Nozaki-kun . I'm loving it so far.
Yeah, it's a real sweet show, isn't it? Everyone's an absolute idiot - but without being assholes to each other (un)fortunately - and cute, plus the style's easy on my eyes.
You are the end result of a “would you push the button” prompt where the prompt was “you have unlimited godlike powers but you appear to all and sundry to be an impetuous child” – Zero, 2022
US Route 66 is interesting.
Technically, it no longer exists--it was deleted from the US Route system in 1985--but it's such a tourist attraction that it's still on pretty much every map, and most of its length is marked by signs reading "Historic Route 66"...so effectively, it does still exist.
Is Here We Come A-Wassailing actually a Christmas carol or is it a drinking song disguised as a Christmas carol
Actually neither, it belongs to the distinct genre of Wassailing songs. Here's another:
Wassailing was a traditional South English practice, which took various forms but always involved drinking and singing. "Wassail" is in fact the name of a drink, though the specific ingredients vary. Rather similar to modern carol singers, wassailers would knock on your door and sing songs at you, and you would give them food and drink. In return for this, they would offer you a drink from the wassail bowl (said to bring good luck) and would leave without vandalizing your house.
It was celebrated during the Yuletide season, and so became associated with Christmas, but was not Christian in origin.
Is Here We Come A-Wassailing actually a Christmas carol or is it a drinking song disguised as a Christmas carol
Actually neither, it belongs to the distinct genre of Wassailing songs. Here's another:
Wassailing was a traditional South English practice, which took various forms but always involved drinking and singing. "Wassail" is in fact the name of a drink, though the specific ingredients vary. Rather similar to modern carol singers, wassailers would knock on your door and sing songs at you, and you would give them food and drink. In return for this, they would offer you a drink from the wassail bowl (said to bring good luck) and would leave without vandalizing your house.
It was celebrated during the Yuletide season, and so became associated with Christmas, but was not Christian in origin.
Hm. I should really stop thinking about what video games I'd stream before I actually am able to do so comfortably. Plus it's not even that difficult a list to make anyway.
Technically, it no longer exists--it was deleted from the US Route system in 1985--but it's such a tourist attraction that it's still on pretty much every map, and most of its length is marked by signs reading "Historic Route 66"...so effectively, it does still exist.
I've been on the Santa Monica Pier, which is the end of that route!
Is Here We Come A-Wassailing actually a Christmas carol or is it a drinking song disguised as a Christmas carol
Actually neither, it belongs to the distinct genre of Wassailing songs. Here's another:
Wassailing was a traditional South English practice, which took various forms but always involved drinking and singing. "Wassail" is in fact the name of a drink, though the specific ingredients vary. Rather similar to modern carol singers, wassailers would knock on your door and sing songs at you, and you would give them food and drink. In return for this, they would offer you a drink from the wassail bowl (said to bring good luck) and would leave without vandalizing your house.
It was celebrated during the Yuletide season, and so became associated with Christmas, but was not Christian in origin.
I like how you could tell when the Sonichu reviews did references to jokes from RLM, because they're always, without exception, unfunny, obnoxious, and the worst things in the review.
Comments
Deeeeeaaaarrrr.
Need to sleep to be prepared for blood tests tomorrow
Unable to sleep because of panicking over blood tests.
Help.
Wassailing was a traditional South English practice, which took various forms but always involved drinking and singing. "Wassail" is in fact the name of a drink, though the specific ingredients vary. Rather similar to modern carol singers, wassailers would knock on your door and sing songs at you, and you would give them food and drink. In return for this, they would offer you a drink from the wassail bowl (said to bring good luck) and would leave without vandalizing your house.
It was celebrated during the Yuletide season, and so became associated with Christmas, but was not Christian in origin.
But ah, ok. i wasn't sure about that. Figured it'd been mostly assimilated into the carol-singing tradition, tbh.
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
i'm just going to post illegal pornography in everyone's threads i think
WANT. 0w0
as an electronics person i should probably just fleece people out of their money and go from there
Not necessarily. I wouldn't call it "earthy," though. More gritty. Like literal grit stuck in a record groove. But in a good way somehow.