Now that it’s pretty clear that either Donald Trump or Ted Cruz is going to be the Republican nominee for president, reporters who’ve collected dribs and drabs of information on the candidates once thought to be contenders are taking that material and stitching it up into story form. After all, if “labor” doesn’t result in “content” then can these reporters truly say they ever existed at all? That’s the best explanation for a story by Manuel Roig-Franzia and Scott Higham in today’s Washington Post titled “Rubio’s summer of ’90: An arrest, then newfound purpose.” In it, you’ll find the incredibly true tale of that time Rubio was nicked by the cops for standing in a park that was closed, and how this could have potentially been — you never know! — the singularly profound experience that would forever change his life. The backstory on this: Rubio is a man who is alive and 18 years old. He has some bad grades and he hurts his neck, and he needs money. Poor dissolute Marco, what’s he gonna do? Ehhh, he’s going to hang out in a park at the wrong time, drinking a beer, that’s all. Per the Post:
That’s it? I’m just not feeling the weight, guys. What else do you got?
I can picture the scene. Mom is wailing in the bedroom. Dad, a bent and downcast portrait of wrecked middle-class masculinity in the kitchen, stares at his feet, as his son Marco quietly, almost imperceptibly, vibrates with worry by the stove. Marco’s dad slowly unwraps himself, and takes a deep breath before speaking:
And he obviously never did. But as the Post relates, he did forget to include this event in his book, An American Son. Now, my explanation would be that getting poached by a beat cop for drinking in public while underage is a pretty common thing to happen to anyone around Marco’s age, and when you write a memoir, you tend to want to focus on details that set you apart from everyone else on the planet. At the very least, you don’t include quotidian things like that time you were 18 and had a beer like almost every other 18-year-old. (Sometimes I think political reporters don’t understand that memoirs have editors and they typically inveigh against including every piddling detail of your stupid life, because no one wants to read a 4,000-page autobiography about Florida’s junior senator.) The Post reporters seem to have gotten it into their heads that this event was some sort of formative, game-changing experience that put Rubio on the path to coming in fourth, or maybe third, in a presidential primary. Go read, if you want, and judge for yourself, but the only real conclusion the paper arrives at is that some stuff happened, and then Rubio got nicked in a park, and then some other stuff happened, and here we are. To listen to the other guy who got cited by police, Rubio’s friend Angel Barrios, it doesn’t sound like a big deal at all: “We were there just hanging out.” He goes on to say that he and Rubio received, from the police, a promise-to-appear form, ostensibly obligating them to appear in court. “I don’t think we even ended up going to court,” he told the Post. So there you have it. For a brief moment as a teen, Marco Rubio’s life was almost but not quite as riveting as a Hold Steady lyric. Stay tuned to find out if Rubio will strenuously deny ever having gotten with your little hoodrat friend. Source: http://allofbeer.com/wapo-bombshell-marco-rubio-was-a-teenager-once/ from https://allofbeer.wordpress.com/2019/01/21/wapo-bombshell-marco-rubio-was-a-teenager-once/
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A handful of letters from the first century CE have been unearthedat a fort along Hadrian’s Wall in the UK.Far from the stuffy nature of many historical documents, these texts show the ancient Romans in a personal and bizarrely familiar light, including a request for leave from work. Previous tabletsdiscussa lost birthday invitation, a guy asking his boss for more beer, andsomebody complaining about the condition of theroads. The collection of 25 documents were found last month at Vindolandain Northumberland. They consist of fragile postcard-sized pieces of wood, rarely more than 2 millimeters in thickness. The letters were discarded around the end of the first century. They remained relatively intact because they had been laying in anaerobic (low oxygen) soil, meaning there was a lack of microorganisms to biodegrade the wood. The Vindolanda was a Roman fort built just south of Hadrian’s Wall,a 117.5-kilometer-long (73-mile-long) defensive wall across the north of Britannia that was created to separate the Romans from the barbarians in the north (and George RR Martin’s inspiration forGame of Thrones). Experts are currently hard at work deciphering the contents of the texts, using infrared photography to reveal the full extent of what they say. The tablets hold the accolade as being Britains Top Archaeological Treasure because they give us detailed personal accounts from a period of history that we know very little about, Sonya Galloway, of The Vindolanda Trust, told IFLScience. There is no other evidence from this period that tells us what people are thinking and feeling… We have birthday party invitations, complaints about the state of the roads, and strength reports.” This site has been a goldmine for archaeologists since they began excavating in the 1970s. In 1992, the first Vindolanda tablets,similar tablets that also talk about everyday life in Roman Britain, were found. Curiously, many of the names mentioned in the huge ’92 cache of tablets can be found again in these new ones. One of whom is a man called Masculus. In the ’92 tablets, he askedhis Commanding Officer for more beer to be supplied to his outpost. In these new ones, hes asking to go on leave for a break. Sounds like a hangover to me. We do not know if the rest of the archive will belong to Masculus or the person he is writing to,” Galloway added. “We expect if it is the latter then we will pick up some of the wonderful characters we already know about and of course get to greet some wonderful new ones as well.” We will all have to wait for the full translations but there could be some sensational information in these new ones! from https://allofbeer.wordpress.com/2019/01/20/ancient-roman-letters-reveal-rather-familiar-requests-for-more-beer-and-holidays/
You’ve probably been told at some point not to drink your calories, but you obviously ignored that and ordered another drink because well, thats just unrealistic. I mean, as much as we can avoid sugary drinks and 500-cal fraps during the day, going out means drinking your calories. Thats just like, the rules of feminism. Anyway, its no shock that alcoholic drinks have a shit ton of calories in them, but it might actually shock you how much exercise youd need to do to burn it all off. In case you’re wondering why you’ve been slowly putting on weight even though you totally did half an hour on the elliptical once this week, sorry, but this is your rude awakening. Heres how to burn off those calories based on what you drank.
1. A Glass Of FrosAs if ros wasnt WASP-y enough, fros has become the cocktail of the summer, but sadly, this Instagrammable piece of art clocks in at around 230 calories with over 30 grams of sugar PER GLASS. That Wlffer Estate Vineyard geotag might be getting you a ton of likes, but whether or not the calories are worth it is debatable. To burn off 230 calories, youd have to run for about 30 minutes, which is about how long it takes to run a 5k. Just let that sink in. Now look at your life, look at your choices. 2. Rum Or Vodka ShotsVodka and rum have the same amount of calories, which is about 100 per shot. Taking shots is obviously the best calorie-saving option since youre avoiding sugary syrups, but considering youre taking AT LEAST 3 shots when you go out, lets do the math for 3 shots of either vodka or rum. In case you skipped the second grade, 3 shots is 300 calories, which is basically a 45-minute HIIT or bootcamp type of class. I mean, you might need an extra shot just to deal with the trainer yelling in your face to stop half-assing your burpees, so you might want to factor that in as well. 3. Margarita On The RocksThe good news here is that tequila is the lowest calorie alcohol (blessings), clocking in at around 70 calories per shot. However, thats the ONLY good news. Margaritas are filled with sugar and sweet liqueur, and ordering 2 glasses can add up to about 700 calories total. You might have thought you were making the healthy choice by saying no to a blended drink, but even standard margaritas on the rocks are packed with more sugar than the box of Munchkins you proudly rejected this morning. Youd need to burn around 700 calories in an intense 45-60 minute spin class to account for that happy hour at Dos Caminos, so Id book your bike ASAP if I were you. 4. One Bottle Or Can Of BeerSo you thought you seemed super chill by ordering a beer with your guy friends at a sports bar, even though you literally don’t know the difference between basketball and football. The good news is, beer isnt THAT high in calories. One bottle is only about 90-150, depending on the brand. However, the fact that youre super bloated afterwards sucks, and lets be realyou demolished the chicken fingers being passed around anyway. Luckily for you, youd burn more than 150 calories in a Vinyasa Yoga class or a 20-minute jog. 5. A Pia ColadaUnless youre a high schooler at your cousins bat mitzvah or youre at a bachelorette in Aruba for the weekend, Im not sure why youd randomly order a Pia Colada, but if you do, just know youre consuming about 300 calories per drink. The pineapple juice itself is super sugary, and then the coconut milk and coconut cream blended in with the rum just add a ton of calories. Youd have to jump rope for about half hour to burn 300 calories, which sounds like something I haven’t even attempted since seventh grade gym class. Enjoy that. 6. One Vodka SodaIf youve been ordering a vodka soda ever since the day you started drinking, youre a true betch. This staple drink is less than 100 calories, and even though were obviously not only having one, its our best bet for a legit cocktail you can order when no one else is down to pound shots. The perfect vodka soda consists of one shot of vodka, some club soda, and a Source: http://allofbeer.com/how-much-youd-have-to-work-out-to-burn-off-every-type-of-alcohol/ from https://allofbeer.wordpress.com/2019/01/19/how-much-youd-have-to-work-out-to-burn-off-every-type-of-alcohol/ WeWork says its mission is to help people do what they love. Now the office-sharing giant is testing that ethos on a smaller clientele: kindergartners. The $20 billion startup, built on a vast network of hip co-working spaces where entrepreneurs and freelancers rent desks, is making its move into children’s education, launching a private elementary school for “conscious entrepreneurship” inside a New York City WeWork next fall. A pilot program of seven students, including one of the five young children of WeWork Cos. founders Adam and Rebekah Neumann, is under way. “In my book, there’s no reason why children in elementary schools can’t be launching their own businesses,” Rebekah Neumann said in an interview. She thinks kids should develop their passions and act on them early, instead of waiting to grow up to be “disruptive,” as the entrepreneurial set puts it. The students—this pilot crop is five to eight years old—spend one day at a 60-acre farm and the rest of the week in a classroom near the company’s Manhattan headquarters, where they get lessons in business from both employees and entrepreneur-customers of WeWork. Neumann, who attended the elite New York City prep school Horace Mann and Cornell University, studying Buddhism and business, said she’s “rethinking the whole idea of what an education means” but is “non-compromising” on academic standards. The students will have to meet or exceed all of the state’s benchmarks for subjects such as math and reading. At the farm, which the Neumanns bought last year, “if they are learning math, they are not just sitting in a classroom learning about numbers. They are also using numbers to run their farm stand, they’re reading about natural cycles of plant life,” she said. “It’s a very hands-on approach to learning.” WeWork’s education ambitions are the latest offshoot of the rapidly growing company’s “We” brand, which promotes a seamless integration of meaningful work and a purpose-driven existence—make a life, not just a living, the motto goes. Last year, the company unveiled “co-living” residences under WeLive, furnished apartments in buildings with shared amenities, planned events and communal spaces (here’s what that’s like). Last month came Rise by We—a facility that features gym equipment, co-ed saunas and yoga classes that connect “wellness” and spirituality with entrepreneurism—and a coding boot camp. It is a brand, atop a real estate leasing company, that some critics say is overvalued. With their foray into schooling, the Neumanns join a growing list of entrepreneurial billionaires trying to reshape American education with their influence and investments. Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, along with other tech entrepreneurs, for example, are investing in public, charter and private schools that use technology to foster personalized education. While there’s broad agreement that the nation’s education system has its failings, the solutions are especially fraught because the beneficiaries, or guinea pigs, are children. The kids have already gotten lessons from the Neumanns’ employees in creating a brand and using effective sales techniques, and from Adam Neumann on supply and demand. Mentorships with WeWork customer-entrepreneurs are available. “Basically, anything they might want to learn, we have people in the field that can teach it,” Rebekah Neumann said. When one of their students, an eight-year-old girl named Nia, made T-shirts to sell at the farm stand the kids run, “we noticed she has a strong aptitude and passion for design,” Neumann said. She is securing an apprenticeship with fashion designers who rent space from WeWork. The hands-on, project-based learning, encouraging children to ask questions and take ownership of their education, sounds like what “progressive pedagogy has been teaching for 100 years,” said Samuel Abrams, the director of the National Center for the Study of Privatization in Education, at Columbia University’s Teachers College. But WeWork’s “very instrumental approach” to learning, “essentially encouraging kids to monetize their ideas, at that age, is damaging,” Abrams said. “You’re sucking the joy out of education at a time when kids should just be thinking about things like how plants grow and why there are so many species.” Neumann argues it’s conventional education that is “squashing out the entrepreneurial spirit and creativity that’s intrinsic to all young children.” Then, after college, she said, “somehow we’re asking them to be disruptive and recover that spirit.” The Neumanns, who founded WeWork in 2010 with the chief creative officer, Miguel McKelvey, started out renting sleek office space to nomadic workers and entrepreneurs. There’s beer on tap, micro-roasted coffee, and aphorisms on the walls about working hard. But Adam, WeWork’s CEO, has said he wants the company to be the architect of entire neighborhoods. A former officer in the Israeli Navy who as a child lived for a time on a kibbutz (McKelvey grew up in a commune), the 38-year-old is after a kind of entrepreneurial utopia, or a “capitalist kibbutz,” in his words. He has even branded his customers—now about 150,000 of them in 52 cities around the globe—the WeGeneration, a collaborative group that “cares about the world, actually wants to do cool things, and loves working,” as he told Fast Company last year. Rebekah, a co-founder and the company’s chief brand officer, launched the pilot in September with guidance from a family friend, Lois Weisswasser, a former principal of P.S. 41, one of the city’s top public schools. For now, she has just two full-time teachers, one from the high-performing P.S. 234 and one from P.S. 77, a gifted-and-talented school. The first WeWork school probably will be built inside the headquarters and be accessible through a separate entrance. WeWork has enlisted the innovative Danish architecture firm of Bjarke Ingels, which has designed a building at the World Trade Center campus and a flood prevention plan for New York City. Neumann plans to have about 65 students next fall—with about 10 each in a 3-year-old and a 4-year-old class, and 15 each grouped as kindergarten/first grade, second/third grade, and fourth grade—and then go straight through 12th grade. Her grand vision for the project, which is called (wait for it) WeGrow, is to open schools in WeWorks around the world, move into higher and continuing education, and perhaps expand the business to training other teachers in WeWork’s pedagogy. WeGrow talks about educating people “from birth to death.” It isn’t clear yet how all this will be funded, though the funds may come directly from the Neumanns. The company is still working on tuition and hopes to make the school “accessible” to a broad swath of parents through a sliding scale based on income, a spokesman said. Private school tuition in New York City can soar past $30,000 a year. WeWork hasn’t decided whether the school should be a nonprofit, either. A certified yoga teacher and former actress, Neumann sometimes teaches a yoga or drama class herself in the pilot program. The kids learn to cook and do mindfulness and meditation exercises. Neumann sees the job as “raising conscious global citizens” who “understand what their superpowers are … and use these talents and gifts to help each other and help the world.” And if entrepreneurial parents need to travel for several months? Take the whole family along, Neumann said, looking ahead to her international vision. There, as in New York, the kids will be just a staircase away. In her own family, she said, “there are no lines” between work and life or home and office. “My kids are in the office. I’m doing what I love, he’s doing what he loves, they are observing that, and they are doing what they love.” Source: http://allofbeer.com/wework-is-launching-a-grade-school-for-budding-entrepreneurs/ from https://allofbeer.wordpress.com/2019/01/18/wework-is-launching-a-grade-school-for-budding-entrepreneurs/ If you’ve ever had one too many and gotten behind the wheel of a car, Dame Helen Mirren has a few choice words for you.The world’s indisputable favorite f-bomb-dropping, manspread surviving British actor recently shot a Super Bowl ad for Budweiser that combats drunk driving. And, boy, was it good. She gets straight to the point: The PSA racked up more than 180,000 views in just the one day after it was posted to YouTube. And it’s no mystery why.There are exactly three reasons this Super Bowl PSA is a total win: 1. Mirren knows the power of being incredibly blunt with a British accent. 2. She really doesn’t hold back at all. Like, at all. 3. She brings it back to what’s most important doing what’s right for your loved ones, and yourself, and staying away from the driver’s seat when you’ve been drinking. Here’s the full text of the PSA:
In the time it took Mirren’s PSA to garner over 180,000 views, almost 30 people have died from drunk driving one death every 53 minutes according to the stats.Mirren hilariously slamming drunk drivers? That’s something we can all get behind. Actual fatalities from drunk driving? Not so funny. On average, 27 people die in the U.S. every day in a crash involving an impaired driver, according to the NHTSA. Maybe the seriousness of the issue is in part why certain anti-drunk driving ads by alcoholic beverage companies are resonating with people. This isn’t the first time Budweiser has used its Super Bowl ad to strike a chord with consumers through a drunk driving PSA. Remember that one with an adorable dog from 2014?It sent a powerful message to puppy-loving beer drinkers: Crash at a friend’s house instead of driving home drunk (and, also, apologize to your pet after doing so). But shouldn’t all alcoholic beverage companies bear some responsibility in curbing drunk driving?Plenty of people seem to think so, and that includes Katherine Clegg Smith, the lead author of a 2014 study that found not one of the 1,795 ads for alcoholic beverage in her research gave specifics on how to drink responsibly. Sure, those ads came with messages like “enjoy in moderation,” and “please drink responsibly,” but seeing as consuming alcohol can pose a significant and immediate health risk shouldn’t they be required to go a bit further into detail? If you want to warn people against something, you need to be clear about what youre warning them against and why, Smith told The Kansas City Star in 2014, noting that health warnings must be specific to actually modify how people think and behave regarding the product. Mirren’s PSA doesn’t lay out specifics, but she does spell out what type of person you’ll be if you get behind the wheel of a car after drinking.The next time you even entertain the idea about driving drunk, remember what Helen Mirren thinks of you. Hopefully that’ll keep you safe and sound and most importantly off the roads. Check out Mirren’s Budweiser ad below:Source: http://allofbeer.com/helen-mirren-slams-drunk-drivers-in-this-epic-hilarious-super-bowl-ad/ from https://allofbeer.wordpress.com/2019/01/17/helen-mirren-slams-drunk-drivers-in-this-epic-hilarious-super-bowl-ad/ Ever heard of the Dunning-Kruger effect? It’s what happens when a moron, taken to task on his skills at not being a moron, vastly overestimates just how much of a moron he isn’t. Wikipedia articles are Dunning-Kruger digitized. Someone writes an encyclopedia page, then thinks they’re an expert because they wrote an encyclopedia page. But lack of oversight makes this as effective as claiming to be an astronaut after writing about urinating in space; like zero-G pee, the reality is far more complicated. And when multiple random strangers try it together, things get awful for everyone. #6. Final Fantasy‘s Aerith Vs. AerisFinal Fantasy has a wider following and more coherent apocalypses than most doomsday cults. (Though with 15 “final” fantasies so far, the series is about as good at keeping its promises). One of the most famous characters by far is Aerith Gainsborough, adorable virtual shish kebab of the PlayStation One. It looks like she should just pop Final fanatics have put more effort into tracing her name’s history than most royal families. There have been faces on currencies with less documentation. It’s neatly summarized on the regular Wikipedia page: Why this looks perfectly sane Seems simple, right? Actual name, earlier version of the name, and not a single mention of tentacle porn. For most of you, the difference between “Aeris” and “Aerith” is so tiny that you’re sort of upset I even mentioned it. But that line is the tip of 18,000 words of vicious online bullshit. Not debate, not discussion — just a flaming screaming match with people posting entire new subsections just to call everyone else involved an idiot. Someone here has definitely lost their mind, yes. These chucklefucks got more upset than a Klingon with a lisp trying to voice-deactivate a ship’s self-destruct. They argued for longer than most players even remembered playing the game. They argued the validity of Japanese translations with all the linguistic skill and respect of sex tourists. Yes, that last one DID redefine the Hebrew until it ended in “s” instead of “th.” It’s a way for the worst kind of nerds to claim they’re “better” fans than everyone else. Like many infinite internet arguments, it’s driven by the delusion that there can be objective truth about fictional values. The real answer is laughably simple: It’s a made-up thing, and even the people making it up didn’t give a shit. But those points hurt when you’ve replaced your personality with PlayStation discs. Which I guess is why armies of alleged adults who encountered FF VII when they were eight years old have decided that pixelated fart in the wind has made up their entire identity. And they’ve found nothing better to do in their lives since. #5. Cloverfield‘s MonsterLanguage changes with time. There are three approaches to this: Dickdictivists say, “Actually, it was Frankenstein’s monster. Frankenstein was the scientist. Which of course I know, because I saw I, Frankenstein in 3D. Twice.” And this Dickdivism is compounded in a situation wherein we don’t have a whole catalog of shitty movies from which to take our guidance, like with Cloverfield. Wikipedia editors became their own Frankenstein and monster combined, hacking together an all-new abomination out of all the worst bits of people who used to have lives, when they tried to name the monster in Cloverfield — a monster that producers just didn’t bother officially naming. Rational discourse. This sent Wikipedia editors into an existential meltdown. They wanted to make a page about the creature, but didn’t know what to call it. Or rather, some knew exactly what to call it and that everyone else was A LYING SHITHEEL HERETIC. The thrust and parry of intellectual debate. For months, they waged most pointless war imaginable. They didn’t know the movie wouldn’t name it back then. As far as they knew, the real answer was only weeks away, and they STILL stayed up at night capslock SCREAMING at each other over Cloverfield (Monster), Monster (Cloverfield), Clusterfuck (Motown), Clamshucker Mumblenuts, (Crowded Bus) Mobstopper, and so on. They even invoked the invasion of Iraq to bolster their arguments about naming a fictional special effect. “This nightmarish slaughter will help in my argument about a fake monster name!” Which shows that editing Wikipedia is worse for your sense of perspective than M.C. Escher-designed beer goggles. #4. Silent Hill‘s Obsession With Forced HospitalizationThe Silent Hill series includes some of the greatest horror games ever made, but even in the best ones, the plot is totally fucked up. They have explanations like “a child thought your apartment was his mother and grew up to become a murderous dimension-wizard,” and I swear there are no words missing from that summary. “Who ordered the Roswell Extra Crispy?” It gets creepy to start nitpicking plots like these. Which is how the Silent Hill Wikipedia discussions ended up sounding like Hell’s quarterly ISO-666 report on the proper bureaucratic synergistic labeling protocols for the seventh circle. They’re the most demented discussions about exact wording you’ve ever seen. There was a full-on feud over whether the word “forced” should be before the word “hospitalization” as it related to a demonic murder-child possessed by an evil god who happened to be in the burn ward. And no, there is no situation on this or any parallel nightmare-dimension Earth where that argument is a good thing. The result looks like it was drafted by Hell’s attorney as a punishment for lawyers. This is just a tiny part of the terrifying text barrage: We STRONGLY RECOMMEND against reading all that, and probably should have said that earlier But this wasn’t just a grammar torturer. This shit got personal. User “Yomiel” had chosen this Silent Hill to die on — specifically, the bit about how Alessa had been forcibly imprisoned in a nightmare terror hospital, not merely imprisoned. He was worse for that force and how it applied to an obsession with women and people being burned without dying than Anakin Skywalker. Get it? Force? Burning? Yeah, you get it. I have never cared this much about my own pets This is the sort of substory that the original Silent Hill writers would read and go “Wow, that is screwed up”, before going back to programming people slam-dunking decapitated dog heads. Source: http://allofbeer.com/6-hilariously-nerdy-surprisingly-epic-wikipedia-fights/ from https://allofbeer.wordpress.com/2019/01/17/6-hilariously-nerdy-surprisingly-epic-wikipedia-fights/ Actress files for domestic violence restraining order against celebrity lawyer Michael Avenatti1/16/2019 CNN made porn lawyer Michael Avenatti a celebrity porn lawyer through endless cable news appearances; we do wonder what he’d be doing if he’d never hooked up with client Stormy Daniels … who now claims that her career has been ruined. Avenatti was arrested on domestic violence charges last week, though initial reports incorrectly named one of his ex-wives as the alleged victim. That person wasn’t identified until Monday, when she filed a restraining order against Avenatti.
from https://allofbeer.wordpress.com/2019/01/16/actress-files-for-domestic-violence-restraining-order-against-celebrity-lawyer-michael-avenatti/ All of us know that a time will come for us to take our last breath and leave this human body – yet, the people in this list decided to make their last hours wonderful by doing something they longed to do for a long time. We live as if there are countless days ahead. We fail to seize the moment and grab the opportunities to enjoy life to its fullest, do things that make our hearts sing, or express how we feel about the ones we cherish the most. It always seems that we will be able to do that ‘later’, when the only thing we really have is now. So, what’s on your bucket list? Don’t wait for later, enjoy your life now.
Source: http://allofbeer.com/10-peoples-last-wishes-that-will-make-you-cry/ from https://allofbeer.wordpress.com/2019/01/16/10-peoples-last-wishes-that-will-make-you-cry/ We know them, we love (most of) them: the impossible-to-buy-for people in your life. Whether its the husband who has everything, or the BFF who just doesnt want a lot of clutter around, they can make gift buying feel like a search for the holy grail. That’s why we scoured Amazon to find fifteen of the most amazingproducts notebooks that erase themselves in the microwave, to magical pens that let you draw in three dimensions that are sure to surprise, and probably please, those hard-to-buy-for friends. We hope you love at least one of these odd and awesome products. Just an FYI: 22Words may get a share of any sale through links on this page.
via: Amazon
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AuthorHi my name is Samantha Roberts I am 23 years old and I just graduated with my BSN degree I love to enjoy going out with friends on my spare time and enjoying the Bachelor life. Archives
April 2019
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