Cruise ship. They’re basically very sad apartment buildings on water and with more pollution.
Cruise ship. They’re basically very sad apartment buildings on water and with more pollution.
But when the lot starts to fill up (which “usually happens at 4AM or so,” according to Tung) what looks like a maddening ballet of autonomous parking — and honking — begins. The noise goes for as much as an hour at a time before it settles down, she said.
Did you read the article? Because that sounds really egregious.
It’s something you have to worry about in basically all apartments (in the US–despite thin walls and no insulation, I never had loud and inconsiderate neighbors when I lived in Japan). You might get lucky and get a place with good soundproofing, but the odds are slim.
This is so badly needed. I hope they get good traction. Not only do renters get stiffed all the time by outrageous rents/rent increases and illegal non-return of security deposits (and more!), there are also people who sincerely believe that renters shouldn’t even be allowed to vote because they’re “not invested in the community”.
Makes me livid.
Just watch a koala documentary and it may well be in there.
I’ve seen enough videos of rapey koalas to know that they sure as hell do pursue females.
Being female is just a nightmare on so many levels.
That lion has clearly been sedated.
I, too, wanna be sedated.
It’s also eaten in Japan, especially its liver. I’ve only ever seen monkfish sold in Japanese grocery stores.
Somewhere in the middle. Think like Wild Turkey.
The texture is much softer than that. Maybe closer to a grape that’s soft but not rotten.
The flavor was kind of porky, actually. I’ll have to eat some other eyes to see if they taste like the animals they come from.
As a bonus, the restaurant I got the pig’s head at gave out complimentary shots of whiskey to whoever would eat the eye.
It’s edible. Not bad but weird texture.
I’m not sure that reminding us that Doge died is really helpful or relevant…
Growing up in New Jersey, where we had Wawa everywhere, 7-Eleven was the “dirt convenience store” like how some towns back then had the good mall and the dirt mall. I was shocked when I moved to another state and found out that 7-Eleven was considered the good convenience store.
I spent a bit of time living in Japan, and to this day, years later, I still frequently dream of visiting Japan and one of my top priorities being going to kombini (convenience stores). They’re amazing. I hope 7-Eleven is able to transform the convenience store experience in the US into a kombini experience.
Horror tends to be “slow” because you need to build an immersive experience for the audience in order for the horror elements to have their intended effect.
I find it a bit amusing that you chose two horror films which I have always found to be not remotely scary as your go-to horror examples. I enjoyed them growing up, but I think they were only scary to older generations (I am an older Millennial).
A llama spat in my general direction at a zoo once when I was a kid, so I have known never to trust them since.
Your link is not working for me. I click and nothing happens. (Firefox mobile)