Why does it always come back around to the RATO guy somehow?
quote:She said it wasn't a non-fault divorce. Reading is fundamental.
A non-fault divorce? Sorry, no such thing.
quote:
Holy crap, I remembered my old login.
quote:Oh no! Someone on the texags general board asked a question whose answer would be none of their business! Millions of posts, this was bound to eventually happen. Join hands with me as we venture forth into bold new anonymous online questioning territory!
I am also going to post some questions for Blue Eyes that are none of my business.
BombayAg said:Quote:
Recognizable as in a face only a mother (or Julia Roberts) could love.
agreed.
so fugly. I wonder what Julia saw in him.
unless you watch dancing with the stars, need glasses in the Denver area and cant afford them, saw him on Saturday Night Live, whereOregonAggie said:
Should've said I agree with the article. I just think that if you had a picture of both of them next to each other, more people in the country would recognize Lyle.
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Miller bumps into another rapper, Kanye West. The Denver pass rusher happens to have with him a pair of Adidas sneakers from Kanye's line, the Yeezy 750 Boosts, gray high-tops with thick soles and various strapsthe kind of shoes that look dreamed up by an astronaut on acid.
Miller asks for an autograph, but Kanye leans back against a wall, ignoring the football star until Kim Kardashian, Kanye's reality-star wife, intervenes. Miller retrieves a Sharpie, Kim hands it to Kanye, and the rapper signs the shoes without saying a word, as if he's welcoming Miller, in the most Kanye way possible, into the world of celebrity.
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These are the perks of mainstream stardom, the free packages arriving without warning from admirers and sponsors and neighbors and strangers, all of which Miller stacks outside his house. There must be 30 boxes, arranged in a giant square, a Rubik's Cube of untouched swag. The ones he's opened suggest that his admirers are both well-meaning and, frankly, a little strange. They send shoes, salami, posters, beef jerky, cheese, underwear, fruit. . . .
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This was part of Miller's off-season, too, branding himself to wider audiences as less of a football player and more of a personality, strange as his personality may be. He reinforced certain themes: his style (a cowboy-couture mash-up of designer sneakers, 10-gallon hats, ripped jeans and diamond-studded boots), his nerdom (oversized glasses, constant shout-outs to science), his widespread appeal (DWTS, for starters). . . . And it worked. Obama complimented Miller on his fashion choices. Strangers stopped him in airports to gush over his dance moves. He so dominated social media that The Guardian described him as "the closest sports Snapchat has to a house hipster."
WorthAg95 said:
Dr. Red Duke
Gets my vote.