Missing large

locklear93 Free

Recent Comments

  1. 3 months ago on Non Sequitur

    Modern tech workers miss our cubes. Cramped, yes, but unless your boss was a real jerk, you could hang things on the wall, decorate a bit, and it shut out a fair bit of distraction. Modern open office layouts are a million times worse. RIP, my cubicle, 2006-2017.

  2. 6 months ago on Thatababy

    I can’t speak for Texas Road House, but Outback is a slightly different offering. Bonanza does of course have entrees, but they kind of live and die by their buffet, which isn’t a thing at Outback, or wasn’t last time I was at one, though that was 20 years ago. I’ve always felt it was more a matter of changes in American dining. Family restaurant with buffet just doesn’t seem to be much of a thing anymore.

  3. 6 months ago on Thatababy

    Their locator is prone to leaving closed locations up for quite a while, or at least used to be. The one in Carlisle, PA showed as temporarily closed for many months when it was not coming back. So, it may be that the extra Bonanza locations aren’t actually there, or it may be that Paul Trap wasn’t aware of some of them.

  4. 6 months ago on Thatababy

    Man. Bonanza was the closest thing to a nice restaurant my parents ever took us to as a kid, and the source of a lot of nostalgia for me as an adult. I don’t have a family of my own, but much like this strip I DO occasionally drive 100 miles (round trip) just to eat at the Bonanza in Chambersburg, PA. There are SORT OF more than three left though—at some point, Bonanza and Ponderosa steakhouses merged, and their food is the same.

  5. 7 months ago on Thatababy

    It’s relative to which piece you’re talking about, and thus a matter of what’s missing. The head is missing the body (disembodied), the body is missing the head (decapitated). The head isn’t missing itself, so it can’t be decapitated.

  6. 8 months ago on Phoebe and Her Unicorn

    Parents like that are one of several reasons I didn’t finish my degree in education. At 44 now, and seeing what’s happening with parents presuming to instruct educators on EVERYTHING, regardless of their level of expertise or competency, I cannot regret my decision.

  7. about 2 years ago on Phoebe and Her Unicorn

    Nameless King held me up WAY less than Midir from the DLC or even Alberich from the base game. The thing about Souls games seems to be that which bosses are hardest depend strongly on your build…

  8. over 2 years ago on Pearls Before Swine

    Jokes aside, often. I’ve commented here a small handful of times and deleted my comments unposted dozens of times because I looked at them and realized they had no value. A lot of commenters (and I’m not directing this at you or anyone in particular) would do well to consider whether they’re saying anything worth adding vertical scroll to a page.

  9. about 3 years ago on Phoebe and Her Unicorn

    “Play” is different for different people. I know plenty of people who enjoy the Dark Souls series of video games, which are viciously hard. They enjoy the challenge.

    That isn’t how I play. I play to see things. Stories, places, characters, setting concepts, and so on. I do like enough challenge to have to make an effort, but not enough to spend days on one boss. Cheats in video games allow me to bypass someone else’s “fun” that’s in the way of mine. Dark Souls has no real cheats. A friend who wanted to play something with me carried me through the third entry, and it still tested my patience, but I got something of value anyway: I love the series’ architecture, and I finally, finally got to see it. I could’ve seen it literal years earlier with a cheat code.

  10. over 3 years ago on Pearls Before Swine

    A very great many humans do without as well, and still remain more or less intelligent. I’m not convinced a soul is a prerequisite.