The general manager, who's also dating Shelly and is 10 years younger than her demands Gordon show him where the mouse was. He asks if it's been captured on film and says he thinks Ramsay brought the mouse with him.
Ramsay sees he's gonna have to break a buck so he asks the general manager to go to the back with him. On his way he asks a server when's the last time he saw a mouse at the restaurant. He says he never saw one... After Ramsay walks away, he adds something to the other staff... see picture #2
They go into the basement. What the manager doesn't know is that the Kitchen Nightmares staff sneaked in last night and hid a negro compliance engine for Gordon to use on him. Muffled screams are heard from the kitchen.
@heavens_feel@deadheat It's a unique game for several reasons but it flows well once you play it. I'll attempt to give you a /quickrundown/ but there's a lot to go through. Until reboot #2 it was even exclusively monster cards. This will be for G era since that's what I know and it's the foundation anyway.
So, the field is 3x2. Your center top is your Vanguard Circle. This where you put your Vanguard. He can never die, but if an attack hits him you take one damage. Each turn you can place another monster on top of him of a higher or equivalent grade. You start with 0 and go up to 3. Your other two front circles are rearguards. They can also attack but they don't get drive checks ((more on this later). They die when killed. The back three circles are there to boost the monster above them. They can not attack. You get unlimited summons each turn.
@aral As a citizen of #authoritarian state #2 in the EU , what I see as the biggest threat is the normalization of the participation in public life of parties and organizations with overtly proto-fascist agendas, which only a few years ago operated on the complete margins. Today they have representation in parliament and the mainstream media invite them to programs, giving them time and their millions of viewers to present their "views."
@Boomerman In choosing partners though, temperament is important. If I were making an LLC with people, I probably wouldn’t put a very detail-oriented, “autistic” guy on top unless he knows the ins and outs already. I’d pick someone more even-keeled and make the autist the #2 to oversee things, but maybe not give him full authority. The friction that comes from incompatible expectations can lead to this kind of thing (and often does).
But, beggers can’t be choosers, and there aren’t that many people who CAN be relied upon for this kind of thing to begin with. I can hardly find someone worthy of owning property with, much less pledge his “life, property, and sacred honor” or however the old saying goes. People need to respect the level of risk he took on if he’s the sole owner of a gigantic, mile-wide bullseye like the NJP.
That’s….well, I wouldn’t let anyone in my family do it. I wouldn’t even let my brothers get their name in the OA.
I've probably mentioned this before, but TurboKid is one of my all time favorite movies. Probably #2? Maybe just #1.
It's hard to say for sure. When people ask me what my favorite movie is, I usually say The Life Aquatic with Steve Zisou, which is probably true.
But The Life Aquatic is a weird, difficult, sad movie that is hard to share with other people.
Turbokid is definitely my favorite film to share with other people. It's fun, it's funny, it's exciting, it does World Building, but small and silly and low stakes. It's also about how capitalism will kill us all, which is a plus.
A few games used the dual screen mode well, but eventually Nintendo began to realize the truth is most people used screen #2 for something else entirely; gaming anywhere in the house. Furthermore; it was not uncommon for diehard Wii U evangelists to bring their Wii U on the go and a Kotaku writer in 2013 wrote an article lamenting the fact that Nintendo Marketing was so sorely missing the fact that Off-TV play was the most popular feature among owners. https://kotaku.com/nintendos-new-wii-u-commercials-ignore-the-consoles-b-1476637030
didymus (didymus@poa.st)'s status on Saturday, 28-Jan-2023 22:28:29 JST
didymusthe evidentiary basis of the subsequent nuremberg trials is quite amusing. prosecutor says USA captured 250 tons of german documents during and after ww2. this could be between 300 and 400 million documents (think about that), which were shipped back to the usa and analyzed by german-speaking jews. those which seemed worth of use in the war crimes trials were shipped back to germany where the prosecution sorted them and created "document books" for use in the trial. defense attorneys had access to "85 to 90%" of the documents selected in this way by the prosecution.
here is the chain of custody 1. german document, written in german, captured, sent to washington 2. a copy of #1 is typed out on a typewriter 3. an english copy is translated from #2 4. a german translation is made of #3 (sometimes) 5. a photostat (an early xerox) is made of #3 and #4 as necessary
so in court the documents presented by the prosecution are typically #5, which bear no actual signatures, no place of origin, no history, they are "a copy of a copy of a copy" and sometimes a re-re-translation. sometimes a part of the document-book will be scattered pages (page 3, page 15, pages 21-24, page 55) from other documents of which the remaining content is unknown.
hans laternser for the defense beat up the prosecution on this so bad that they cried and begged the tribunal to let it slide, since this is what was done in the main NMT trial anyway.
Cop #1 responds with, "They'll finally be able to buy that new rescue boat!" Cop #2 responds with, "Looks like we're on track for Net-Zero Murders by 2050!"
The man with the bag over his head and his arms tied up says, "MMFFGHMNGNFH!*"
Above the image, that is translated with: * "How good is the market!"