Timbaland knows the way to reach the top of the charts

Maybe if I work with him I can perfect the art

Well, he can handle his liquor at the office.

Except that one time. And that other time.

loquacious706
149
Warriors
10dLink

As s Warriors fan, it's disrespectful for him to show his face as a commentator when if not for his actions, his team might have had a chance to still be playing.

loquacious706
14
Warriors
11dLink

I started watching the Pacers game last night. Three minutes in the ESPN broadcast was sooo awful I just had to turn to something else. Decided to flip back and forth after halftime, but had to watch it on mute.

Everything about ESPN is truly unwatchable. (Except for Legler and Scott Van Pelt)

I know right? I'm so here for people doing this kind of stuff.

Never in my life would I have come up with a skit about arguing with my tapeworm about my gut health.

Get these guys writing on a tv show.

loquacious706
2
Warriors
13dLink

"Faded" is also slang for getting knocked out. So it has double meaning.

Right? Like why is mans connected to anyone's hotspot?

loquacious706
135
Warriors
18dLink

I would personally rather see Draymond take on a show like Kobe's Detail where he's just breaking down basketball plays and players for us.

There are a lot of things I could learn from Draymond, but personality ain't one of them.

No, I think it was more that they invited him on, planned on asking him leading questions in the hopes of getting some juicy sound bites that they could edit in to the doc in very misleading intervals.

They knew millennials would trust his voice because he's basically our dad.

Thought I was in the Disneyland sub at first. Great work!

Actually, as a teacher it's a great way to get people to discover if their reasoning is or isn't sound.

"I see that you said [this is how thing works] even after a hundred other people have explained to you that it isn't. Could you come up with an example that shows us [how thing works] so we can see where you're coming from?"

When someone tries, whether they succeed or fail, it can be a learning experience for all. In fact, when people realize there isn't an example of what they're saying, it's a sign of intelligence that they can accept that there might be something new to learn. When someone simply refuses or resorts to saying that it's everyone else's fault for not believing a claim that the person themselves admit they can't prove, it only shows that they're not ready to move on with the rest of the class.

So it's ok. Maybe some other comments on this thread will help you understand, though I doubt it because you've admitted that you can't actually prove your point so it doesn't seem like it's based on logic or reasoning. But it's fine because the rest of us on this post have agreed and can move on.

You don't need to, or you can't?

Because that's kind of the whole point of this post. You can't because it doesn't work like that.

It's ok to admit that the same way the rest of us have.

Only the “well-built” and “second floor” are the building analogy. Not every single piece of the analogy needs to be aligned.

Still doing everything you can to avoid giving an example of an analogy that works like that?

Actually, It's Always Sunny was referencing the classic movie Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo