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SLICK GOKU BABY
Jun 12, 2001

Hey Hey Let's Go! 喧嘩する
大切な物を protect my balls


There's this girl that is a waitress in the sandwich shop I go to. I'll call her 'Sandwich Shop Girl' for reasons which should be fairly clear. Anyway, she's a waitress there, and I go there quite often (as the shop is directly next to the building I work in, which makes it extremely convienent for my lunching pleasure).

Now, I've worked at this job since Janurary 2001, and I've been going to this sandwich shop at least three times a week since then. At first, I ordered items from all over the menu, trying nearly every sandwich that they offer. I learned, for example, that the Cobb is incredibly nasty, and that there's another sandwich which is nearly impossible to eat without having it fall apart and make a large mess.

The thing is, I prefer regularity over variety in the long term -- I like McDonald's because I know exactly the quality of the food, and I know that one side of the burger is going to be the same tempature and consistency as the other side of the burger. So what I wound up doing is falling into a regular pattern of ordering sandwiches.

At first I just alternated with ham and cheese sandwiches and some sandwich that has turkey, salami, ham, and cheese. But then I just wound up ordering the same thing every day. Which brings us back to Sandwich Shop Girl, who I will now refer to as SSG.

SSG, as one might expect from a waitress who has a customer that comes in every day, started to recognise me. Further she started to memorize my order. When I realized that she recognized me and had my order memorized I was flattered and bought her a card to thank her for her service. She was flattered, I was happy.

Once I'd given her the card, she also knew my name, and started addressing me using it. Soon after that, she started to give me my order as soon as she saw me. For example, I would walk in at the end of a line of six to eight people, and she would scribble my order onto a ticket, walk to the end of the line, give it to me, smile, wink, and walk back to the front of the line.

This screams of preferential treatment, obviously, and so I thought: "she likes me! I'll ask her out." So I bought her a book (Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid On Earth, available from Amazon), and came in really early one day. I handed her the book (wrapped), and asked her if she'd like to go out and get coffee sometime.

She said yes! I was estatic. I gave her my phone number at work and told her to call me. She called later that day and said she couldn't do anything that evening. The next day she didn't mention it at all, and so on, until I finally brought it up and she said she was kind of seeing someone else.

Ok, I thought, no problem. She's obviously not interested, so I backed off. I still go to the sandwich shop for lunch, she still takes my order as soon as she sees me, and everything's happy. Sometimes, when it's slow, she strikes up conversation.

The book I got her was pretty depressing, though, and I'm afraid that she might take it the wrong way. In it, there is a guy named Jimmy Corrigan who has a lot of trouble relating to other people. A good way to describe him is 'a man paralyzed by the fear of being disliked.' That's also a pretty good way to describe me, which probably explains why I liked the book.

I was talking to a friend of mine about this and he said that she probably doesn't make the connection at all, that it's all just in my head. She said herself yesterday (unprovoked) that she likes the book and that she has it sitting on her coffeetable. So it's not like I'm some three headed monster who should pray for death.

Anyway, while all this was going on, I bought a Super Nintendo. Now, I have some pretty fond memories of playing this system from when I was younger, so I figured it would be a pretty good investment seeing as how I can't afford a PS2, and the GameCube and Xbox (which I also can't afford) weren't out at the time. I think I bought Super Metroid with it, because it was the one game in the store whose box was in decent condition.

I have this thing about boxes, see. They all have to be in absolute mint condition, and I have to have the box if I buy a game. I don't want just the cart itself, or even just the cart and manual. I've got to have the box. I managed to find a decent number of games in mint condition on ebay (including Final Fantasy III, whose manual actually wasn't in mint condition but close enough).

In total, I think I bought ten games over the course of a month, with an average price of around $40. Yes, you read that correctly, I actually spent $400 on Super Nintendo games after distinctly not buying a PS2 because it would have been too expensive. And the thing was, I actually didn't have the money to spend.

So I wound up being about $200 overdrawn that month. Luckily I get paid on the last day of the month, so I was able to float a check to pay rent. I live in Seattle (Capitol Hill), and I pay a ridiculous sum of money for a pretty nice apartment. If anyone knows of a cheaper place to live that has a bus route I can take to work, let me know.

Anyway, I digress. I was $200 overdrawn, so I floated a check to cover the rent. Except I accidentally put it in the mailbox instead of the dropbox for my landlord. I taped a note to the mailbox asking the mailman to please transfer the envelope that had my unit's number on it into the dropbox, but it was raining so the note wouldn't stick to the box.

Now, bear in mind, this all happened months ago. I had to stick around in the rain waiting for the postman to arrive so that I could explain the mishap and recover the note. Except the postman NEVER CAME. I used my cell phone to call into work sick around 2:00, and I waited by the postbox until 6pm. No postman. The mailbox said that the last pickup was at 6pm, so I go home (now with about $6.35 from begging change from people) and go to write my landlord another check.

Except I'm out of checks. gently caress!

I'm wet and tired, but I remember that I had some starter checks in the back seat of my car, from when I started the bank account. I really needed to pay rent, so I went back outside. I was halfway down the block, walking away from the mailbox, when something made me look over my shoulder.

There was the mailman, happily yanking the mail out of the box I had put my last check in.

Like a madman I run down the street (my car was parked uphill; the mailbox is at the bottom of the hill) to try and catch him before he finishes the job. Mailmen here aren't usually known for their efficiency, but this particular specimen was obviously lightning fast, probably because he was hopped up on goofballs.

Anyway, I get to about thirty feet away when three thoughts occur to me simultaneously: one, I'm travelling a lot faster than my feet are technically able to carry me; two, stopping will take a lot longer than thirty feet; and three, I could have ridden on the back of a turtle down here, because the postman is an old man who is moving about as fast as molasses in January.

Actually, these thoughts would have occured to me, but what happened instead is I just ran into the guy headlong.

I'm sure many of you are familiar with the comic strip 'Blondie', which comes from a long line of unfunny (or subtly genius-level humor, whichever you prefer) comic strips such as Peanuts, Beetle Bailey, and Brenda Starr. Actually Brenda Starr is in a different class; it's more of a drama strip than a comic strip.

Anyway, in Blondie, the husband of the title character is constantly late for work and he's constantly rushing out the door and running into the mailman. This happens quite often, as he is late a lot and the mailman is always standing directly outside his door and he doesn't look where he's going. For some reason this is hilarious and can be made into a joke over and over again.

It wasn't so funny when I hit the mailman though, because it knocked us both unconscious. I came to first, and the mailbox was still open, so I grabbed my rent check and took off, hoping nobody had seen me. I was wrong.

Turns out that I was only out for about two seconds, if I was out at all, and that someone who lived across the street from me saw me. The cops came over around 7:15 after the postman filed a report. My neighbor had gone out and helped him, and he knew that I had taken something that appeared to not be mine and made a run for it.

Turns out that the postman was mysteriously missing $80 and his watch, both of which I didn't take. I explained this to the police, who didn't believe me because I look like a punk kid who would mug an old postman for $80 and a watch, so they arrested me. I had to go down to the station and tell them the story.

Except we didn't get quite that far. As we were pulling away from my apartment complex, they got a call on their radio, something about gunfire in another part of the city. Gunfire == cooler than mugged postmen, so the three of us (there were two cops) head off to the scene.

The excitement was already over by the time we got there. It was actually more than just gunfire, there was an accident involving an SUV, a Jetta, a police cruiser, and a fire hydrant as well. Water was all over the place. The car I was in was the second on the scene.

I sat in the back of the police car looking at all of this for a while, until one of the cops came over and let me out. He explained that there were other witnesses that saw my neighbor lift the money and watch from the postman, and they believed my story about the check, and that I'd still have to come down and give a statement but there's not a whole lot of point of me sticking around, since it would be a while before they were done here.

Which is great and all, but now I'm halfway across Seattle and I don't have enough money for the bus. (I had forgotten about the $6.35.) Further, I wasn't familiar with this section of town, and my sense of direction is horrible, and Seattle is overcast anyhow, so I had no idea what direction my apartment was in.

So I start walking in the way the police car isn't pointing, and I figure I'll eventually run into someone who knows where the hell I am and how I can get back to where I needed to be. I ask a few random people, most of whom ask if I have any change before telling me to perform various sexual acts on myself.

I finally find a bookstore, and I duck in to ask directions. As I'm making my way up to the counter, though, I notice something odd about all the books. They all have .. pictures of men on the covers. In various stages of dress, of the un- variety. The title of one, for instance, was "Boy Toy" (which you can also purchase at Amazon if that's your thing).

I remember this book's name, incidentially, because I had it in my hands when someone behind me said my name, almost with a squeal of surprise. With shock and horror I instantly recognized the voice as that of SSG, and I turned around, trying to think of the best way to summarize the situation in as few words as possible.

To be honest I don't even remember what we said to each other that day. I think I tried lamely to come up with a cover story about how I was looking for a gift for a friend of mine, or something like that, and I remember her winking at me when I said it.

I also remember her introducing me to a large, stocky, 6'4", muscular guy wearing a black wifebeater. She introduced this man as 'my friend', and he went out of his way to convey to me that he wasn't gay (by busing himself with lesbian novels and saying too-loudly things like "wow, that's a nice rack!"). I can only assume, therefore, that this is 'the friend' who she mentioned she was seeing earlier.

Eventually I try to extract myself from what is quickly becoming an extremely awkward situation, and move toward the counter to ask for directions. Except I'm still carrying the book, and SSG (who has evidently completed her shopping) is coming with me. gently caress.

So I get up to the counter, and wince as I put the book down, knowing I have no money to buy it, and not really wanting to buy it in the first place. The guy behind the register compliments me on my excellent choice (wince) and tells me that this particular book is part of a series (wince), all of which is fantastically well written (wince). My total is $24 something. I reach into my pocket...

And find a $20 that I'd forgotten about. gently caress. Fortunately it's not enough to complete the transaction. I halfheartedly pat my other pocket, the words "I'm sorry, I seem to be a few dollars short" on my tongue. Clink, says the change I had begged earlier in the day. gently caress.

To make a short story even longer, I eventually count out the remaining $4 something in nickels and dimes, while SSG and the cashier talk about the series of books that I was evidently just getting into (my protestations of "it's for a friend" have by this time largely been discarded). After a few agonizing minutes, I complete the transaction, ask for directions to a road I know is near my place (which turns out to be "go out the door, take a left, and walk a block), bid SSG a good evening (it's getting close to 9:00 at this point), and walk out of the store.

Clearly, SSG thinks I AM OBSESSED WITH MY SEXUALITY; that's the problem, but not in the way you'd think. It's actually helped ease the friction between the two of us which had been there since I gave her a depressing book and asked her out. She talks to me a lot more these days and we've gone out for coffee a few times (as friends, since there's obviously no way that I'm interested in her). Since she wasn't interested in me beforehand, at least we're pretty good friends now.

The problem is that she keeps trying to hook me up with 'nice boys' who would be good for me. Occasionally she'll bring these boys along when we go out for coffee, in the hopes that we'll hit it off. Every one of them, without fail, three minutes into the conversation, says "You're not gay." Which is good, but SSG somehow takes that as "I'm not interested" from the guy who said it, and it doesn't alter her perception of me as gay.

So that brings us to a week ago. SSG once again brought along a boy, except this one wasn't disinterested. In fact, he was so interested that he somehow convinced SSG to leave early so that we could be alone. My mind is racing, trying to come up with ways to extract myself from this situation while still retaining the respect of SSG, but I've got nothing. She leaves us to it, in the middle of a Starbucks.

Literally the first words out of my mouth, as soon as she's out of earshot, are "I'm not gay." I explain the entire situation to the guy, how I have a crush on SSG, how I was arrested for running into a mailman, how I went into a bookstore to ask for directions ("You went into a bookstore named 'Beyond The Closet' and didn't realize it was a gay / lesbian bookstore?") and everything else that led up to this point in the story.

His response was something along the lines of "You know, it's okay to be gay. You don't have to hide it." gently caress.

I finish my coffee as quickly as I can and stand up to leave. He stands up too. We look at each other. I sit down. He sits down. We both stand up again, and then sit down again. I say "I'd like to leave."

He says "Okay, we can go for a walk."

I say "No, you're not quite understanding me, I intend to leave on my own." This causes him to launch into his PLUR speech again, which causes me to launch into my "I'm seriously not gay" speech again. I stand up. He stands up. I eventually say "gently caress it" and let him come with me.

The plan is, I'll let him walk with me for just one or two blocks, claim I have a headache, get his number (groan) and then never call him. This plan works flawlessly, except.

Within those two blocks, by some perverse twist of fate, SSG has found a park bench for herself and her large boyfriend who could rip me apart like a paper towel. I don't realize it's them until we're right next to them, and my "date" (wince) is giving her the thumbs up, and she's winking at me. gently caress.

We walk another block, and then I stop and face the guy. I tell him, in no uncertain terms, that I'm not gay and I'll never be gay, that I'm not interested in him, that even if I were gay I think he's pretty ugly, and a thousand other things. By the end of my monologue I'm practally screaming at him. It's not totally his fault, but at this point he is solely responsible for the fact that I will never be able to get into SSG's pants.

I use my headache line for no apparent good reason, but don't bother to ask for his number. Two days later SSG and I go out for coffee again, thankfully sans the dense gay dipshit (DGD). She asks if I had a good time, mentionting that DGD said he had a great time and wants to do it again sometime.

Now, if I was going to tell her that I'm not gay, and that I in fact have several gig's worth of porn, all of which features women in various stages of undress, this would probably be the time to do it. Except I don't. I tell her that he's really not my type (maybe because he's a guy) and that I'm not really interested in a relationship right now.

That was two or three days ago, bringing us to earlier today / last night, when SSG handed me an note from DGD along with my order. God, I swear I feel exactly like I'm in high school, except this is some weird parallel dimension nightmare high school where no one pays any attention to what I say, and the course of my life is chosen for me.

The note says, in its entirety: "Hey, I had a great time last week. I forgot to give you my number -- it's xxx-xxxx. Why don't you give me a call sometime? xxox, DGD." (Except the note actually has his name and number, instead of DGD and xxx-xxxx.) Thankfully, he doesn't have my number, and I'm not listed, so he won't be getting it any time soon.

Okay, and because these things typically end with a question that blithely sums up the entire post for those of you who don't bother to read it all: How can I tell DGD that I'm seriously not interested for reasons of he being of the wrong gender? Similarly, how can I tell SSG that I seriously am interested for reasons of her being hot as hell? And how can I convince her brawny, ripped boyfriend that he shouldn't goatse me when I get it on with SSG?

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SLICK GOKU BABY
Jun 12, 2001

Hey Hey Let's Go! 喧嘩する
大切な物を protect my balls


The first really big thing that happened is that about two days after the girl (SSG) handed me the note from the dense gay dipshit, she pulled me aside and told me that she was moving to another store. Evidently one of the other stores in this chain recently had a management position open up, and she was offered the job and accepted. Her last day at the store was just after new year's day.

This didn't seem like such a big deal at the time, since I was busy at work and such. We were having coffee at least twice a week, so I felt reasonably sure that she liked me as a friend, and that she wouldn't lose contact with me. She didn't have my number, and I didn't have hers, but that was just a formality that we hadn't finished.

The first part of this story says that she thought I was gay, and was trying to hook me up with her gay friends. I kind of exaggerated that point to make it a funnier story; in reality it was only two guys: the dense gay dipshit and the other guy (who happens to be dense gay dipshit's ex-boyfriend).

It turns out, and she told me this a few days after the dense gay dipshit incident, that she knew I wasn't gay all along. She had promised both the dipshit and his ex-boy that she would try to get them hooked up with other people, but she really didn't want to expend too much effort on it. When "Frank" (we'll call the ex-boy Frank) heard the story of me in the gay bookstore, he expressed interest in meeting me.

Frank actually heard the story from "Joe", though, who was the large muscular man that was in the gay bookstore professing his heterosexuality. Guess what? Joe's an extremely closeted, flaming homosexual! So Joe relates this story to Frank, and assures Frank that I'm charming and cute and extremely gay. Frank agreed to waive SSG's promise if she hooks him up with me, so she did, only to have him realize two minutes in that I was nowhere approaching gay.

SSG told Frank I was straight only after I'd gone back to work. Frank was terribly amused by this, and they schemed to take it one step further. (Bear in mind, I know nothing of this.) They told "Alvin" (the dense gay dipshit) that I wasn't Frank's type, but that I'd probably hit things off with Alvin. They warned Alvin that I was deeply closeted, though, and that I probably would have difficulty coming out, even to a gay man.

(A note about Alvin: he and Joe had been dating for something like four months, and Alvin was really developing a really unhealthy attachment to Joe, so Joe basically told him to go gently caress himself. Alvin is "on the rebound", as it were.)

Anyway, I'm getting sidetracked. SSG tells me all of this over coffee that evening, and promises she'll talk to Alvin and tell him that she was just messing with his head. I took that opportunity to ask about Joe, who I had assumed was her boyfriend. It turns out that Joe is just some random guy she went to high school with. So, like an idiot, I press her for information about the guy she was 'kind of seeing'. It turns out -- and this should really have failed to shock me -- she's a lesbian.

Well, her exact words were something along the lines of "I do want to go out for dinner with you sometime, but Lizzie gets jealous." Ah, Lizzie's your dog? "Er, no, Lizzie's the girl I've been kind of seeing."

Continued in next post...

Edit: hosed up pseudonyms.

dad gay. so what
Feb 18, 2003

by FactsAreUseless
nice try :rolleyes:

Enfield
May 30, 2011

by Nyc_Tattoo
gently caress you retard

Blue Train
Jun 17, 2012

always sunny stopped being funny a while ago except season 10

BIG BIC SQUAD
Jan 24, 2015
It's too long someone please summarize the posts so I can know what's going on. Thank you and God bless!

Dave_Indeed
Feb 22, 2004

by FactsAreUseless

Enfield posted:

gently caress you retard

I hope OP chokes on his estrogen blocker pills tonight.

vyst
Aug 25, 2009



Lol you bitch no fuckin way I'm reading all that

Adar
Jul 27, 2001
this is some old goon post from a million years ago isn't it

Nolan Arenado
May 8, 2009

Someone actually sat down and wrote that.

poverty goat
Feb 15, 2004



someone make a word butt please so i know which of those words are worth reading

Chinatown
Sep 11, 2001

by Fluffdaddy
Fun Shoe
im not reading that op

suck my balls

SLICK GOKU BABY
Jun 12, 2001

Hey Hey Let's Go! 喧嘩する
大切な物を protect my balls


Adar posted:

this is some old goon post from a million years ago isn't it

It might be.

HerraS
Apr 15, 2012

Looking professional when committing genocide is essential. This is mostly achieved by using a beret.

Olive drab colour ensures the genocider will remain hidden from his prey until it's too late for them to do anything.



this story doesn't even have a punchline op suicide bomb your family tia

Mumpy Puffinz
Aug 11, 2008
Nap Ghost

SLICK GOKU BABY posted:

There's this girl that is a waitress in the sandwich shop I go to. I'll call her 'Sandwich Shop Girl' for reasons which should be fairly clear. Anyway, she's a waitress there, and I go there quite often (as the shop is directly next to the building I work in, which makes it extremely convienent for my lunching pleasure).

Now, I've worked at this job since Janurary 2001, and I've been going to this sandwich shop at least three times a week since then. At first, I ordered items from all over the menu, trying nearly every sandwich that they offer. I learned, for example, that the Cobb is incredibly nasty, and that there's another sandwich which is nearly impossible to eat without having it fall apart and make a large mess.

The thing is, I prefer regularity over variety in the long term -- I like McDonald's because I know exactly the quality of the food, and I know that one side of the burger is going to be the same tempature and consistency as the other side of the burger. So what I wound up doing is falling into a regular pattern of ordering sandwiches.

At first I just alternated with ham and cheese sandwiches and some sandwich that has turkey, salami, ham, and cheese. But then I just wound up ordering the same thing every day. Which brings us back to Sandwich Shop Girl, who I will now refer to as SSG.

SSG, as one might expect from a waitress who has a customer that comes in every day, started to recognise me. Further she started to memorize my order. When I realized that she recognized me and had my order memorized I was flattered and bought her a card to thank her for her service. She was flattered, I was happy.

Once I'd given her the card, she also knew my name, and started addressing me using it. Soon after that, she started to give me my order as soon as she saw me. For example, I would walk in at the end of a line of six to eight people, and she would scribble my order onto a ticket, walk to the end of the line, give it to me, smile, wink, and walk back to the front of the line.

This screams of preferential treatment, obviously, and so I thought: "she likes me! I'll ask her out." So I bought her a book (Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid On Earth, available from Amazon), and came in really early one day. I handed her the book (wrapped), and asked her if she'd like to go out and get coffee sometime.

She said yes! I was estatic. I gave her my phone number at work and told her to call me. She called later that day and said she couldn't do anything that evening. The next day she didn't mention it at all, and so on, until I finally brought it up and she said she was kind of seeing someone else.

Ok, I thought, no problem. She's obviously not interested, so I backed off. I still go to the sandwich shop for lunch, she still takes my order as soon as she sees me, and everything's happy. Sometimes, when it's slow, she strikes up conversation.

The book I got her was pretty depressing, though, and I'm afraid that she might take it the wrong way. In it, there is a guy named Jimmy Corrigan who has a lot of trouble relating to other people. A good way to describe him is 'a man paralyzed by the fear of being disliked.' That's also a pretty good way to describe me, which probably explains why I liked the book.

I was talking to a friend of mine about this and he said that she probably doesn't make the connection at all, that it's all just in my head. She said herself yesterday (unprovoked) that she likes the book and that she has it sitting on her coffeetable. So it's not like I'm some three headed monster who should pray for death.

Anyway, while all this was going on, I bought a Super Nintendo. Now, I have some pretty fond memories of playing this system from when I was younger, so I figured it would be a pretty good investment seeing as how I can't afford a PS2, and the GameCube and Xbox (which I also can't afford) weren't out at the time. I think I bought Super Metroid with it, because it was the one game in the store whose box was in decent condition.

I have this thing about boxes, see. They all have to be in absolute mint condition, and I have to have the box if I buy a game. I don't want just the cart itself, or even just the cart and manual. I've got to have the box. I managed to find a decent number of games in mint condition on ebay (including Final Fantasy III, whose manual actually wasn't in mint condition but close enough).

In total, I think I bought ten games over the course of a month, with an average price of around $40. Yes, you read that correctly, I actually spent $400 on Super Nintendo games after distinctly not buying a PS2 because it would have been too expensive. And the thing was, I actually didn't have the money to spend.

So I wound up being about $200 overdrawn that month. Luckily I get paid on the last day of the month, so I was able to float a check to pay rent. I live in Seattle (Capitol Hill), and I pay a ridiculous sum of money for a pretty nice apartment. If anyone knows of a cheaper place to live that has a bus route I can take to work, let me know.

Anyway, I digress. I was $200 overdrawn, so I floated a check to cover the rent. Except I accidentally put it in the mailbox instead of the dropbox for my landlord. I taped a note to the mailbox asking the mailman to please transfer the envelope that had my unit's number on it into the dropbox, but it was raining so the note wouldn't stick to the box.

Now, bear in mind, this all happened months ago. I had to stick around in the rain waiting for the postman to arrive so that I could explain the mishap and recover the note. Except the postman NEVER CAME. I used my cell phone to call into work sick around 2:00, and I waited by the postbox until 6pm. No postman. The mailbox said that the last pickup was at 6pm, so I go home (now with about $6.35 from begging change from people) and go to write my landlord another check.

Except I'm out of checks. gently caress!

I'm wet and tired, but I remember that I had some starter checks in the back seat of my car, from when I started the bank account. I really needed to pay rent, so I went back outside. I was halfway down the block, walking away from the mailbox, when something made me look over my shoulder.

There was the mailman, happily yanking the mail out of the box I had put my last check in.

Like a madman I run down the street (my car was parked uphill; the mailbox is at the bottom of the hill) to try and catch him before he finishes the job. Mailmen here aren't usually known for their efficiency, but this particular specimen was obviously lightning fast, probably because he was hopped up on goofballs.

Anyway, I get to about thirty feet away when three thoughts occur to me simultaneously: one, I'm travelling a lot faster than my feet are technically able to carry me; two, stopping will take a lot longer than thirty feet; and three, I could have ridden on the back of a turtle down here, because the postman is an old man who is moving about as fast as molasses in January.

Actually, these thoughts would have occured to me, but what happened instead is I just ran into the guy headlong.

I'm sure many of you are familiar with the comic strip 'Blondie', which comes from a long line of unfunny (or subtly genius-level humor, whichever you prefer) comic strips such as Peanuts, Beetle Bailey, and Brenda Starr. Actually Brenda Starr is in a different class; it's more of a drama strip than a comic strip.

Anyway, in Blondie, the husband of the title character is constantly late for work and he's constantly rushing out the door and running into the mailman. This happens quite often, as he is late a lot and the mailman is always standing directly outside his door and he doesn't look where he's going. For some reason this is hilarious and can be made into a joke over and over again.

It wasn't so funny when I hit the mailman though, because it knocked us both unconscious. I came to first, and the mailbox was still open, so I grabbed my rent check and took off, hoping nobody had seen me. I was wrong.

Turns out that I was only out for about two seconds, if I was out at all, and that someone who lived across the street from me saw me. The cops came over around 7:15 after the postman filed a report. My neighbor had gone out and helped him, and he knew that I had taken something that appeared to not be mine and made a run for it.

Turns out that the postman was mysteriously missing $80 and his watch, both of which I didn't take. I explained this to the police, who didn't believe me because I look like a punk kid who would mug an old postman for $80 and a watch, so they arrested me. I had to go down to the station and tell them the story.

Except we didn't get quite that far. As we were pulling away from my apartment complex, they got a call on their radio, something about gunfire in another part of the city. Gunfire == cooler than mugged postmen, so the three of us (there were two cops) head off to the scene.

The excitement was already over by the time we got there. It was actually more than just gunfire, there was an accident involving an SUV, a Jetta, a police cruiser, and a fire hydrant as well. Water was all over the place. The car I was in was the second on the scene.

I sat in the back of the police car looking at all of this for a while, until one of the cops came over and let me out. He explained that there were other witnesses that saw my neighbor lift the money and watch from the postman, and they believed my story about the check, and that I'd still have to come down and give a statement but there's not a whole lot of point of me sticking around, since it would be a while before they were done here.

Which is great and all, but now I'm halfway across Seattle and I don't have enough money for the bus. (I had forgotten about the $6.35.) Further, I wasn't familiar with this section of town, and my sense of direction is horrible, and Seattle is overcast anyhow, so I had no idea what direction my apartment was in.

So I start walking in the way the police car isn't pointing, and I figure I'll eventually run into someone who knows where the hell I am and how I can get back to where I needed to be. I ask a few random people, most of whom ask if I have any change before telling me to perform various sexual acts on myself.

I finally find a bookstore, and I duck in to ask directions. As I'm making my way up to the counter, though, I notice something odd about all the books. They all have .. pictures of men on the covers. In various stages of dress, of the un- variety. The title of one, for instance, was "Boy Toy" (which you can also purchase at Amazon if that's your thing).

I remember this book's name, incidentially, because I had it in my hands when someone behind me said my name, almost with a squeal of surprise. With shock and horror I instantly recognized the voice as that of SSG, and I turned around, trying to think of the best way to summarize the situation in as few words as possible.

To be honest I don't even remember what we said to each other that day. I think I tried lamely to come up with a cover story about how I was looking for a gift for a friend of mine, or something like that, and I remember her winking at me when I said it.

I also remember her introducing me to a large, stocky, 6'4", muscular guy wearing a black wifebeater. She introduced this man as 'my friend', and he went out of his way to convey to me that he wasn't gay (by busing himself with lesbian novels and saying too-loudly things like "wow, that's a nice rack!"). I can only assume, therefore, that this is 'the friend' who she mentioned she was seeing earlier.

Eventually I try to extract myself from what is quickly becoming an extremely awkward situation, and move toward the counter to ask for directions. Except I'm still carrying the book, and SSG (who has evidently completed her shopping) is coming with me. gently caress.

So I get up to the counter, and wince as I put the book down, knowing I have no money to buy it, and not really wanting to buy it in the first place. The guy behind the register compliments me on my excellent choice (wince) and tells me that this particular book is part of a series (wince), all of which is fantastically well written (wince). My total is $24 something. I reach into my pocket...

And find a $20 that I'd forgotten about. gently caress. Fortunately it's not enough to complete the transaction. I halfheartedly pat my other pocket, the words "I'm sorry, I seem to be a few dollars short" on my tongue. Clink, says the change I had begged earlier in the day. gently caress.

To make a short story even longer, I eventually count out the remaining $4 something in nickels and dimes, while SSG and the cashier talk about the series of books that I was evidently just getting into (my protestations of "it's for a friend" have by this time largely been discarded). After a few agonizing minutes, I complete the transaction, ask for directions to a road I know is near my place (which turns out to be "go out the door, take a left, and walk a block), bid SSG a good evening (it's getting close to 9:00 at this point), and walk out of the store.

Clearly, SSG thinks I AM OBSESSED WITH MY SEXUALITY; that's the problem, but not in the way you'd think. It's actually helped ease the friction between the two of us which had been there since I gave her a depressing book and asked her out. She talks to me a lot more these days and we've gone out for coffee a few times (as friends, since there's obviously no way that I'm interested in her). Since she wasn't interested in me beforehand, at least we're pretty good friends now.

The problem is that she keeps trying to hook me up with 'nice boys' who would be good for me. Occasionally she'll bring these boys along when we go out for coffee, in the hopes that we'll hit it off. Every one of them, without fail, three minutes into the conversation, says "You're not gay." Which is good, but SSG somehow takes that as "I'm not interested" from the guy who said it, and it doesn't alter her perception of me as gay.

So that brings us to a week ago. SSG once again brought along a boy, except this one wasn't disinterested. In fact, he was so interested that he somehow convinced SSG to leave early so that we could be alone. My mind is racing, trying to come up with ways to extract myself from this situation while still retaining the respect of SSG, but I've got nothing. She leaves us to it, in the middle of a Starbucks.

Literally the first words out of my mouth, as soon as she's out of earshot, are "I'm not gay." I explain the entire situation to the guy, how I have a crush on SSG, how I was arrested for running into a mailman, how I went into a bookstore to ask for directions ("You went into a bookstore named 'Beyond The Closet' and didn't realize it was a gay / lesbian bookstore?") and everything else that led up to this point in the story.

His response was something along the lines of "You know, it's okay to be gay. You don't have to hide it." gently caress.

I finish my coffee as quickly as I can and stand up to leave. He stands up too. We look at each other. I sit down. He sits down. We both stand up again, and then sit down again. I say "I'd like to leave."

He says "Okay, we can go for a walk."

I say "No, you're not quite understanding me, I intend to leave on my own." This causes him to launch into his PLUR speech again, which causes me to launch into my "I'm seriously not gay" speech again. I stand up. He stands up. I eventually say "gently caress it" and let him come with me.

The plan is, I'll let him walk with me for just one or two blocks, claim I have a headache, get his number (groan) and then never call him. This plan works flawlessly, except.

Within those two blocks, by some perverse twist of fate, SSG has found a park bench for herself and her large boyfriend who could rip me apart like a paper towel. I don't realize it's them until we're right next to them, and my "date" (wince) is giving her the thumbs up, and she's winking at me. gently caress.

We walk another block, and then I stop and face the guy. I tell him, in no uncertain terms, that I'm not gay and I'll never be gay, that I'm not interested in him, that even if I were gay I think he's pretty ugly, and a thousand other things. By the end of my monologue I'm practally screaming at him. It's not totally his fault, but at this point he is solely responsible for the fact that I will never be able to get into SSG's pants.

I use my headache line for no apparent good reason, but don't bother to ask for his number. Two days later SSG and I go out for coffee again, thankfully sans the dense gay dipshit (DGD). She asks if I had a good time, mentionting that DGD said he had a great time and wants to do it again sometime.

Now, if I was going to tell her that I'm not gay, and that I in fact have several gig's worth of porn, all of which features women in various stages of undress, this would probably be the time to do it. Except I don't. I tell her that he's really not my type (maybe because he's a guy) and that I'm not really interested in a relationship right now.

That was two or three days ago, bringing us to earlier today / last night, when SSG handed me an note from DGD along with my order. God, I swear I feel exactly like I'm in high school, except this is some weird parallel dimension nightmare high school where no one pays any attention to what I say, and the course of my life is chosen for me.

The note says, in its entirety: "Hey, I had a great time last week. I forgot to give you my number -- it's xxx-xxxx. Why don't you give me a call sometime? xxox, DGD." (Except the note actually has his name and number, instead of DGD and xxx-xxxx.) Thankfully, he doesn't have my number, and I'm not listed, so he won't be getting it any time soon.

Okay, and because these things typically end with a question that blithely sums up the entire post for those of you who don't bother to read it all: How can I tell DGD that I'm seriously not interested for reasons of he being of the wrong gender? Similarly, how can I tell SSG that I seriously am interested for reasons of her being hot as hell? And how can I convince her brawny, ripped boyfriend that he shouldn't goatse me when I get it on with SSG?

i didnt read that

Blue Train
Jun 17, 2012

OctoberBlues posted:

Someone actually sat down and wrote that.

take solace in the fact they've prolly killed themselves by now

Rudeboy Detective
Apr 28, 2011


Okay Charlie.

Hell Yeah
Dec 25, 2012

i actually read both of these posts in their entirety. owned, everyone who did not read them. what, are you illiterate or something?

Mumpy Puffinz
Aug 11, 2008
Nap Ghost

My Man Shran posted:

Okay Charlie.

Trump.mp4
Feb 5, 2013

by FactsAreUseless

Hell Yeah posted:

i actually read both of these posts in their entirety. owned, everyone who did not read them. what, are you illiterate or something?

I hate myself and am extremely lonely too.

King of Bees
Dec 28, 2012
Gravy Boat 2k

SLICK GOKU BABY posted:

There's this girl that is a waitress in the sandwich shop I go to. I'll call her 'Sandwich Shop Girl' for reasons which should be fairly clear. Anyway, she's a waitress there, and I go there quite often (as the shop is directly next to the building I work in, which makes it extremely convienent for my lunching pleasure).

Now, I've worked at this job since Janurary 2001, and I've been going to this sandwich shop at least three times a week since then. At first, I ordered items from all over the menu, trying nearly every sandwich that they offer. I learned, for example, that the Cobb is incredibly nasty, and that there's another sandwich which is nearly impossible to eat without having it fall apart and make a large mess.

The thing is, I prefer regularity over variety in the long term -- I like McDonald's because I know exactly the quality of the food, and I know that one side of the burger is going to be the same tempature and consistency as the other side of the burger. So what I wound up doing is falling into a regular pattern of ordering sandwiches.

At first I just alternated with ham and cheese sandwiches and some sandwich that has turkey, salami, ham, and cheese. But then I just wound up ordering the same thing every day. Which brings us back to Sandwich Shop Girl, who I will now refer to as SSG.

SSG, as one might expect from a waitress who has a customer that comes in every day, started to recognise me. Further she started to memorize my order. When I realized that she recognized me and had my order memorized I was flattered and bought her a card to thank her for her service. She was flattered, I was happy.

Once I'd given her the card, she also knew my name, and started addressing me using it. Soon after that, she started to give me my order as soon as she saw me. For example, I would walk in at the end of a line of six to eight people, and she would scribble my order onto a ticket, walk to the end of the line, give it to me, smile, wink, and walk back to the front of the line.

This screams of preferential treatment, obviously, and so I thought: "she likes me! I'll ask her out." So I bought her a book (Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid On Earth, available from Amazon), and came in really early one day. I handed her the book (wrapped), and asked her if she'd like to go out and get coffee sometime.

She said yes! I was estatic. I gave her my phone number at work and told her to call me. She called later that day and said she couldn't do anything that evening. The next day she didn't mention it at all, and so on, until I finally brought it up and she said she was kind of seeing someone else.

Ok, I thought, no problem. She's obviously not interested, so I backed off. I still go to the sandwich shop for lunch, she still takes my order as soon as she sees me, and everything's happy. Sometimes, when it's slow, she strikes up conversation.

The book I got her was pretty depressing, though, and I'm afraid that she might take it the wrong way. In it, there is a guy named Jimmy Corrigan who has a lot of trouble relating to other people. A good way to describe him is 'a man paralyzed by the fear of being disliked.' That's also a pretty good way to describe me, which probably explains why I liked the book.

I was talking to a friend of mine about this and he said that she probably doesn't make the connection at all, that it's all just in my head. She said herself yesterday (unprovoked) that she likes the book and that she has it sitting on her coffeetable. So it's not like I'm some three headed monster who should pray for death.

Anyway, while all this was going on, I bought a Super Nintendo. Now, I have some pretty fond memories of playing this system from when I was younger, so I figured it would be a pretty good investment seeing as how I can't afford a PS2, and the GameCube and Xbox (which I also can't afford) weren't out at the time. I think I bought Super Metroid with it, because it was the one game in the store whose box was in decent condition.

I have this thing about boxes, see. They all have to be in absolute mint condition, and I have to have the box if I buy a game. I don't want just the cart itself, or even just the cart and manual. I've got to have the box. I managed to find a decent number of games in mint condition on ebay (including Final Fantasy III, whose manual actually wasn't in mint condition but close enough).

In total, I think I bought ten games over the course of a month, with an average price of around $40. Yes, you read that correctly, I actually spent $400 on Super Nintendo games after distinctly not buying a PS2 because it would have been too expensive. And the thing was, I actually didn't have the money to spend.

So I wound up being about $200 overdrawn that month. Luckily I get paid on the last day of the month, so I was able to float a check to pay rent. I live in Seattle (Capitol Hill), and I pay a ridiculous sum of money for a pretty nice apartment. If anyone knows of a cheaper place to live that has a bus route I can take to work, let me know.

Anyway, I digress. I was $200 overdrawn, so I floated a check to cover the rent. Except I accidentally put it in the mailbox instead of the dropbox for my landlord. I taped a note to the mailbox asking the mailman to please transfer the envelope that had my unit's number on it into the dropbox, but it was raining so the note wouldn't stick to the box.

Now, bear in mind, this all happened months ago. I had to stick around in the rain waiting for the postman to arrive so that I could explain the mishap and recover the note. Except the postman NEVER CAME. I used my cell phone to call into work sick around 2:00, and I waited by the postbox until 6pm. No postman. The mailbox said that the last pickup was at 6pm, so I go home (now with about $6.35 from begging change from people) and go to write my landlord another check.

Except I'm out of checks. gently caress!

I'm wet and tired, but I remember that I had some starter checks in the back seat of my car, from when I started the bank account. I really needed to pay rent, so I went back outside. I was halfway down the block, walking away from the mailbox, when something made me look over my shoulder.

There was the mailman, happily yanking the mail out of the box I had put my last check in.

Like a madman I run down the street (my car was parked uphill; the mailbox is at the bottom of the hill) to try and catch him before he finishes the job. Mailmen here aren't usually known for their efficiency, but this particular specimen was obviously lightning fast, probably because he was hopped up on goofballs.

Anyway, I get to about thirty feet away when three thoughts occur to me simultaneously: one, I'm travelling a lot faster than my feet are technically able to carry me; two, stopping will take a lot longer than thirty feet; and three, I could have ridden on the back of a turtle down here, because the postman is an old man who is moving about as fast as molasses in January.

Actually, these thoughts would have occured to me, but what happened instead is I just ran into the guy headlong.

I'm sure many of you are familiar with the comic strip 'Blondie', which comes from a long line of unfunny (or subtly genius-level humor, whichever you prefer) comic strips such as Peanuts, Beetle Bailey, and Brenda Starr. Actually Brenda Starr is in a different class; it's more of a drama strip than a comic strip.

Anyway, in Blondie, the husband of the title character is constantly late for work and he's constantly rushing out the door and running into the mailman. This happens quite often, as he is late a lot and the mailman is always standing directly outside his door and he doesn't look where he's going. For some reason this is hilarious and can be made into a joke over and over again.

It wasn't so funny when I hit the mailman though, because it knocked us both unconscious. I came to first, and the mailbox was still open, so I grabbed my rent check and took off, hoping nobody had seen me. I was wrong.

Turns out that I was only out for about two seconds, if I was out at all, and that someone who lived across the street from me saw me. The cops came over around 7:15 after the postman filed a report. My neighbor had gone out and helped him, and he knew that I had taken something that appeared to not be mine and made a run for it.

Turns out that the postman was mysteriously missing $80 and his watch, both of which I didn't take. I explained this to the police, who didn't believe me because I look like a punk kid who would mug an old postman for $80 and a watch, so they arrested me. I had to go down to the station and tell them the story.

Except we didn't get quite that far. As we were pulling away from my apartment complex, they got a call on their radio, something about gunfire in another part of the city. Gunfire == cooler than mugged postmen, so the three of us (there were two cops) head off to the scene.

The excitement was already over by the time we got there. It was actually more than just gunfire, there was an accident involving an SUV, a Jetta, a police cruiser, and a fire hydrant as well. Water was all over the place. The car I was in was the second on the scene.

I sat in the back of the police car looking at all of this for a while, until one of the cops came over and let me out. He explained that there were other witnesses that saw my neighbor lift the money and watch from the postman, and they believed my story about the check, and that I'd still have to come down and give a statement but there's not a whole lot of point of me sticking around, since it would be a while before they were done here.

Which is great and all, but now I'm halfway across Seattle and I don't have enough money for the bus. (I had forgotten about the $6.35.) Further, I wasn't familiar with this section of town, and my sense of direction is horrible, and Seattle is overcast anyhow, so I had no idea what direction my apartment was in.

So I start walking in the way the police car isn't pointing, and I figure I'll eventually run into someone who knows where the hell I am and how I can get back to where I needed to be. I ask a few random people, most of whom ask if I have any change before telling me to perform various sexual acts on myself.

I finally find a bookstore, and I duck in to ask directions. As I'm making my way up to the counter, though, I notice something odd about all the books. They all have .. pictures of men on the covers. In various stages of dress, of the un- variety. The title of one, for instance, was "Boy Toy" (which you can also purchase at Amazon if that's your thing).

I remember this book's name, incidentially, because I had it in my hands when someone behind me said my name, almost with a squeal of surprise. With shock and horror I instantly recognized the voice as that of SSG, and I turned around, trying to think of the best way to summarize the situation in as few words as possible.

To be honest I don't even remember what we said to each other that day. I think I tried lamely to come up with a cover story about how I was looking for a gift for a friend of mine, or something like that, and I remember her winking at me when I said it.

I also remember her introducing me to a large, stocky, 6'4", muscular guy wearing a black wifebeater. She introduced this man as 'my friend', and he went out of his way to convey to me that he wasn't gay (by busing himself with lesbian novels and saying too-loudly things like "wow, that's a nice rack!"). I can only assume, therefore, that this is 'the friend' who she mentioned she was seeing earlier.

Eventually I try to extract myself from what is quickly becoming an extremely awkward situation, and move toward the counter to ask for directions. Except I'm still carrying the book, and SSG (who has evidently completed her shopping) is coming with me. gently caress.

So I get up to the counter, and wince as I put the book down, knowing I have no money to buy it, and not really wanting to buy it in the first place. The guy behind the register compliments me on my excellent choice (wince) and tells me that this particular book is part of a series (wince), all of which is fantastically well written (wince). My total is $24 something. I reach into my pocket...

And find a $20 that I'd forgotten about. gently caress. Fortunately it's not enough to complete the transaction. I halfheartedly pat my other pocket, the words "I'm sorry, I seem to be a few dollars short" on my tongue. Clink, says the change I had begged earlier in the day. gently caress.

To make a short story even longer, I eventually count out the remaining $4 something in nickels and dimes, while SSG and the cashier talk about the series of books that I was evidently just getting into (my protestations of "it's for a friend" have by this time largely been discarded). After a few agonizing minutes, I complete the transaction, ask for directions to a road I know is near my place (which turns out to be "go out the door, take a left, and walk a block), bid SSG a good evening (it's getting close to 9:00 at this point), and walk out of the store.

Clearly, SSG thinks I AM OBSESSED WITH MY SEXUALITY; that's the problem, but not in the way you'd think. It's actually helped ease the friction between the two of us which had been there since I gave her a depressing book and asked her out. She talks to me a lot more these days and we've gone out for coffee a few times (as friends, since there's obviously no way that I'm interested in her). Since she wasn't interested in me beforehand, at least we're pretty good friends now.

The problem is that she keeps trying to hook me up with 'nice boys' who would be good for me. Occasionally she'll bring these boys along when we go out for coffee, in the hopes that we'll hit it off. Every one of them, without fail, three minutes into the conversation, says "You're not gay." Which is good, but SSG somehow takes that as "I'm not interested" from the guy who said it, and it doesn't alter her perception of me as gay.

So that brings us to a week ago. SSG once again brought along a boy, except this one wasn't disinterested. In fact, he was so interested that he somehow convinced SSG to leave early so that we could be alone. My mind is racing, trying to come up with ways to extract myself from this situation while still retaining the respect of SSG, but I've got nothing. She leaves us to it, in the middle of a Starbucks.

Literally the first words out of my mouth, as soon as she's out of earshot, are "I'm not gay." I explain the entire situation to the guy, how I have a crush on SSG, how I was arrested for running into a mailman, how I went into a bookstore to ask for directions ("You went into a bookstore named 'Beyond The Closet' and didn't realize it was a gay / lesbian bookstore?") and everything else that led up to this point in the story.

His response was something along the lines of "You know, it's okay to be gay. You don't have to hide it." gently caress.

I finish my coffee as quickly as I can and stand up to leave. He stands up too. We look at each other. I sit down. He sits down. We both stand up again, and then sit down again. I say "I'd like to leave."

He says "Okay, we can go for a walk."

I say "No, you're not quite understanding me, I intend to leave on my own." This causes him to launch into his PLUR speech again, which causes me to launch into my "I'm seriously not gay" speech again. I stand up. He stands up. I eventually say "gently caress it" and let him come with me.

The plan is, I'll let him walk with me for just one or two blocks, claim I have a headache, get his number (groan) and then never call him. This plan works flawlessly, except.

Within those two blocks, by some perverse twist of fate, SSG has found a park bench for herself and her large boyfriend who could rip me apart like a paper towel. I don't realize it's them until we're right next to them, and my "date" (wince) is giving her the thumbs up, and she's winking at me. gently caress.

We walk another block, and then I stop and face the guy. I tell him, in no uncertain terms, that I'm not gay and I'll never be gay, that I'm not interested in him, that even if I were gay I think he's pretty ugly, and a thousand other things. By the end of my monologue I'm practally screaming at him. It's not totally his fault, but at this point he is solely responsible for the fact that I will never be able to get into SSG's pants.

I use my headache line for no apparent good reason, but don't bother to ask for his number. Two days later SSG and I go out for coffee again, thankfully sans the dense gay dipshit (DGD). She asks if I had a good time, mentionting that DGD said he had a great time and wants to do it again sometime.

Now, if I was going to tell her that I'm not gay, and that I in fact have several gig's worth of porn, all of which features women in various stages of undress, this would probably be the time to do it. Except I don't. I tell her that he's really not my type (maybe because he's a guy) and that I'm not really interested in a relationship right now.

That was two or three days ago, bringing us to earlier today / last night, when SSG handed me an note from DGD along with my order. God, I swear I feel exactly like I'm in high school, except this is some weird parallel dimension nightmare high school where no one pays any attention to what I say, and the course of my life is chosen for me.

The note says, in its entirety: "Hey, I had a great time last week. I forgot to give you my number -- it's xxx-xxxx. Why don't you give me a call sometime? xxox, DGD." (Except the note actually has his name and number, instead of DGD and xxx-xxxx.) Thankfully, he doesn't have my number, and I'm not listed, so he won't be getting it any time soon.

Okay, and because these things typically end with a question that blithely sums up the entire post for those of you who don't bother to read it all: How can I tell DGD that I'm seriously not interested for reasons of he being of the wrong gender? Similarly, how can I tell SSG that I seriously am interested for reasons of her being hot as hell? And how can I convince her brawny, ripped boyfriend that he shouldn't goatse me when I get it on with SSG?

Same

ChairmanMeow
Mar 1, 2008

Fire up the grill everyone eats tonight!
Lipstick Apathy

Hell Yeah posted:

i actually read both of these posts in their entirety.

me too. I don't even know what I hoped for

Blue Train
Jun 17, 2012

it's bad enough to be on gbs on a friday night but if you read those posts I don't even know what to say

SLICK GOKU BABY
Jun 12, 2001

Hey Hey Let's Go! 喧嘩する
大切な物を protect my balls


My Man Shran posted:

Okay Charlie.

This story predates It's Always Sunny my friend.

Hell Yeah
Dec 25, 2012

ps2 era lesbian sandwich girl story

Rudeboy Detective
Apr 28, 2011


Please explain, learned pinkskins.

Mariana Horchata
Jun 30, 2008

College Slice
He was a boy, she was a girl
Can I make it anymore obvious?
He was a punk, she did ballet
What more can I say?
He wanted her, she'd never tell
But secretly she wanted him as well
But all of her friends, stuck up their nose
They had a problem with his baggy clothes

He was a skater boy
She said see you later boy
He wasn't good enough for her

let it mellow
Jun 1, 2000

Dinosaur Gum
yeah not reading any of that poo poo

General Dog
Apr 26, 2008

Everybody's working for the weekend
somebody quote the funniest 50 words please

crotchgobbler
Jul 25, 2007

im an 07 lol
This is the weirdest episode of It's Always Sunny I've ever heard of. They must really be scraping the bottom of the barrel now.

let it mellow
Jun 1, 2000

Dinosaur Gum

Frackie Robinson posted:

somebody quote the funniest 50 words please

Nolan Arenado
May 8, 2009

Frackie Robinson posted:

somebody quote the funniest 50 words please

waitress Cobb variety salami
Girl scribble wrapped Corrigan paralyzed
coffeetable Nintendo Metroid mint cart $400
Seattle postman landlord gently caress!
shoulder lightning molasses Blondie
hilarious arrested Gunfire Jetta statement
overcast Boy Toy stocky wifebeater
Clink agonizing SEXUALITY gay perception
lesbian bookstore winking screaming
God gender exaggerated Frank
deeply closeted idiot dog

fishing with the fam
Feb 29, 2008

Durr

Frackie Robinson posted:

somebody quote the funniest 50 words please

She's obviously not interested
She's obviously not interested
She's obviously not interested
She's obviously not interested
She's obviously not interested
She's obviously not interested
She's obviously not interested
She's obviously not interested
She's obviously not interested
She's obviously not interested
She's obviously not interested
She's obviously not interested

dad gay. so what
Feb 18, 2003

by FactsAreUseless

Frackie Robinson posted:

somebody quote the funniest 50 words please

SLICK GOKU BABY posted:


*wind howls* so i twisted her pussy up like an old rubber band and moved on to greener pastures. in my day the boxcars are the camels of the future. imagine a pair of balls on cliff i often wonder, however slightly, i try and imagine the balls working towards some goal something that will sustain their existence but its all this left wing bull poo poo. a boner appears.

ClamdestineBoyster
Aug 15, 2015
Probation
Can't post for 10 years!
What was his name, op?

a hole-y ghost
May 10, 2010

thanks

MiracleWhale
Jun 30, 2015


Blue Train posted:

it's bad enough to be on gbs on a friday night but if you read those posts I don't even know what to say

i'm trying to find that elusive thing that will finally push me over the edge into the warm, loving arms of death

OP FAILED TO DELIVER

Lawrence Gilchrist
Mar 31, 2010

careful op if she goes SSJ SSG only a laser gun can stop her

dad gay. so what
Feb 18, 2003

by FactsAreUseless
sweet lovely death, just waiting for your breath. come sweet death one last caress... :allears:

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Luvcow
Jul 1, 2007

One day nearer spring
I'm pretty sure "that girl" is now a desiccated corpse chained to the wall of the OPs basement

what was his name OP?

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