Boomers these days go to political events all hopped up on Zim zams and popplers to listen to the politician they love talk about how all politicians are gross and politics is dumb.
Not to disagree with you, but I also see a lot of younger folks and many people who are surely sober. So I'm always wondering, are they going in expecting to hear all this bullshit? Because if I were them I would never want to attend again.
Yeah, my last job involved working with lots of small business owners- people who sold things through Etsy for example- so many of them sent me artwork via an AOL account. It was so bizarre.
My favorite part is that he was saying that it's so amazing because you can play back video more than once as if that wasn't possible throughout the entire 1980s with a VCR.
It's what Rick Peck - the best agent on planet earth - moved heaven and earth to deliver to Tugg Speedman. Truly a beautiful & inspirational documentary
I genuinely had to look it up to learn that the company and its service still existed, that they hadn't filed Chapter 11 and ended service a decade ago. Apart from the repair shop waiting room earlier this year, I don't remember the last time I watched any television station. The last time I recorded a program, I think, was on our Time Warner Cable DVR the month before my then-wife and I canceled service and switched to streaming in 2007.
Trump is an out-of-touch fossil-fuckin' yutz, and those in his base are a bunch of jamokes.
I was around long before TiVo and I'm not sure what it says about me that the only thing of substance I know about it is that the GPL3 (GNU Public License v3) was largely referred to as the "anti-tivoization" license because it addressed loopholes being exploited in GPL2 by TiVo hardware manufacturers to use copy left software opaquely.