tmack99


























  1. No. I’m not 100% certain about anything. But on the bell curve of his potential outcomes, him getting the same workload as Swift is on the far left, probability wise.

  2. If one or two people can’t make it do it over face time. With so much time in advance to plan imo it’s dumb to sacrifice the quality of the league by doing it way too early

  3. I’ll happily trade a random preseason injury to get to see my friends for maybe the only time all year

  4. Is everyone a Wendy’s manager and the only day they can get off is august 1st? If they have all year to figure this stuff out why not just plan this 25-28 more days in advance? I mean hey I agree with the sentiment I just don’t get why it seems like half the world is available early august, no one late august.

  5. We planned it in like February. Labor Day weekend is usually out cause people have family plans. The weekend before interfered with some people’s work schedules. So we’re doing it Aug 17-20. Shit happens.

  6. The golf is great and I love the weather most of the year. It’s also really pretty, although I don’t get out to hike as much as I’d like. And the Mexican food is awesome. That’s about it, though. Miss the east coast.

  7. This is the answer. We need to stop making excuses for these people. The solution isn’t to have specific seats for obese people, and that’s never going to happen anyway. Bigger seats means less passengers, so unless the larger seats cost more, we all end up paying more for our seats to accommodate the large people. And if those seats do cost more, all that will happen is a bunch of people will try to get them who don’t really need them but can afford it/have status, and a bunch of obese people will try to book regular seats to avoid paying more.

  8. It’s ridiculous. If you’re too fat to sit in a seat, either buy two seats or lose weight. I have tons of sympathy for people who just happen to be built like O-linemen, flying must be a miserable experience for them. But being so morbidly obese that you can’t fit in a seat when you’re a normal height is beyond the typical scope of obesity. At that point, you need to lose weight if you want to do a lot of the things regularly sized people do. Otherwise, it’s on you and accept the consequences (like paying more).

  9. It’s fine if they don’t wanna lose weight. But accept that will impact your life in certain ways and require you to do things that most people don’t need to do.

  10. Hard disagree. I’d argue Boston or San Francisco is closest. I also work with European visitors as part of my job and none of them have made a comment like this.

  11. SF has the bones to be like that but the homeless problem is awful. And it’s not as dense as DC outside the core, hence the crazy cost of living (which is obviously connected to the homeless problem).

  12. If I’m just off the green with a decent lie, I can put it within five feet at least 2/3 of the time. Now will I make that five foot putt? Unlikely. But it definitely saves me a few shots per round.

  13. I'm not a fan of sodas of any kind but I have yet to see any peer-reviewed scientific evidence that says aspartame is bad for you or worse than sugar in any meaningful way. Most often it's just something someone heard once and repeated.

  14. You don’t need a doctorate to look at a pitch black liquid with zero natural ingredients and conclude that it’s not the healthiest

  15. I get this argument for exclusive country clubs but public golf courses are a public good open to everyone. How does that not benefit a city?

  16. They don’t bring in enough tax revenue to pay for services because those services (roads, sewage, electricity, etc.) are more expensive when housing is super spread out

  17. Started playing golf when I was three, started consistently making good contact when I was 21. 24 now and still shanked a chip off the hosel and topped a driver into the bushes yesterday.

  18. DC is awesome and Atlanta sucks so take that for what it’s worth

  19. I'll take ATL over IAD any day. ATL is big, but a clusterfuck it's not. Easily one of the most organized and efficient airports out there. 15 minutes to get from one side to the other in ATL to make a connection? You can make it. IAD? LOL you're waiting 30 just to get on the stupid moving lounge.

  20. So the best thing about Atlanta is leaving?

  21. Well he sucked last year so I’m not sure what he thinks proper compensation should be

  22. Play golf (with lots of water), exercise (indoors) and get out of town as much as possible

  23. The Wharfs an awesome area, what’s exactly wrong with it? Genuinely wondering as someone relatively new to DC

  24. It sucked before cause there was nothing to do (tho Cantina Marina was my favorite restaurant when I was seven, loved that place). It sucks now cause it’s sterile and lacks soul. Nice place to get a gelato and walk along the waterfront but I can’t think of a single interesting restaurant or bar down there, especially for the price. Even Navy Yard is more interesting IMO.

  25. It was so exciting when the very first things were being built. Even just Five Guys and Subway in that office building in like 2006, I want to say. Then a few years later, we started seeing plans for Yards Park and the Harris Teeter and some apartment buildings and getting excited for that. Even then, couldn’t have imagined it looking like it does now.

  26. …how? What do you do at a restaurant with QR code menus? How do you decide where to eat? What do you do when a concert/game only has e-tickets? Obviously we all got around without smartphones before 2007 but the way the world works has changed so much, I can’t imagine not having a smartphone. Even homeless people and my 87 year old grandparents have them. I’m not trying to be a dick, I’m just amazed.

  27. I did and she stared at me like I was speaking Japanese. She suggested that I close the app and re-try, which then led to it saying I couldn’t use a code for 15 minutes.

  28. Paul Mescal says in interviews that very little information is outright conveyed to the viewer. Upon first viewing, I didn't immediately come to the conclusion that Callum commits suicide. The longer I thought about it, the more I came to realize that Callum's suicide would make sense and that Sophie would be going back and watching old DV tapes because of the fact that her father was no longer alive and that their vacation held particular significance. Very subtle and it helps to rewatch the film to really understand more of what's happening

  29. Just watched it so late on this but agreed. I didn’t come to that conclusion on my own either. To me, the point of the movie was the innocence and joy of youth and the way kids can be unaware of the chaos in their parents’ lives. And by showing Sophie as a disheveled adult with a crying kid, we see that coming full circle.

  30. It’s an organizational problem with being stuck behind the times and not investing properly in R&D and player dev. Rockies are similar.

  31. Very, very rarely. I’d rather see them prove it and pay .2 million more to bring them in after a few weeks. Of course there are exceptions like Haaland.

  32. Yeah but I’m sure all the highways in DC make money! What a joke

  33. Writers have 25% of the vote in the NBA and fuck it up just as much. It's always going to be flawed

  34. Baseball is so easy though. Basketball is hard for players on teams you don’t pay attention to. Baseball you just have to look at baseball reference for a few minutes.

  35. Knowing Rubio, Cruz, and Hawley are doing this in reaction to pride nights and not the A's makes me not as ecstatic.

  36. I saw that, but I'm confused what antitrust has to do with pride nights. What's the logic there?

  37. Then why do you average 19,000 fans

  38. 1000 less than Washington with about 30% of the population

  39. Yeah DC is not a baseball town

  40. Idk if there’s a word for it but this acute feeling of humanity in one subway car. The feeling of sitting in a subway car with poor people, rich people, white collar, blue collar, tall, short, old, young, black, white, Asian, hispanic, Latin, people carrying briefcases, people carrying groceries, people carrying children, people carrying dogs, people carrying work tools, people reading books, people on phones, people reading books on phones. You can look them in the eyes, see what they’re wearing, what they’re reading, what they’re carrying. It humanizes basically every possible demographic.

  41. Not from NY but one of my favorite things about visiting (same w/ London) is how many languages you hear and how many cultures you interact with just going about your day.

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