Yeah, I was thinking that regular Italian seasoned pizza sauce would be an issue, but the sauce seems flexible for the modern pizza youths of today. Like maybe a garlicky white sauce, crispy, browned spam and kimchi as toppings, then finished with some sriracha or something.
You would have to have a pretty big salad with that, though.
Photoshopping a meme is easy. But hunting through thrift stores, finding the perfect action figure to Frankenstein with another toy, designing and packaging it into a slightly off but believable product, and sneaking it onto a store shelf takes a little bit more work. Both have the potential to go viral, but memes are lost to the unforgiving sands of internet time, while the bizarre, bespoke toys can live on as a story for the next person who stumbles upon them.
__________________
Peering from the top of Mount Stupid
ORPINGTON (Dec 22-Jan 20) Some may call you "nosy" but really you're just curious. You love to figure out how things work & enjoy tinkering with whatever is available. You're always asking questions, always hungry for more information. You love learning
__________________
The flash of light you saw in the sky was not a UFO. Swamp gas from a weather balloon was trapped in a thermal pocket and reflected the light from Venus.
-- Official Bunny Hero
ORPINGTON (Dec 22-Jan 20) Some may call you "nosy" but really you're just curious. You love to figure out how things work & enjoy tinkering with whatever is available. You're always asking questions, always hungry for more information. You love learning
I think both Americans and Canadians use "eh" sincerely a decent amount.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wiktionary
Interjection
1. (informal, Britain, Australia, Canada, US) Used as a tag question, to emphasise what goes before or to request that the listener express an opinion about what has been said. These hot dogs are pretty good, eh?
2. In isolation, a request for repetition or clarification of what has just been said. Compare what, pardon.
3. (Canada) An interjection used to ascertain the continued attention of an individual addressed by the speaker I went to the restaurant, eh, but my friends didn't show up.
4. Expressing apathy or lack of enthusiasm; meh. —Do you feel like going out tonight?
—Eh, I don't know.
A multi-agency rescue operation has taken place in the town of Bensheim in Germany after a tubby rat became stuck in a manhole cover.
The rat, still plump with winterspeck – which translates literally as winter bacon and refers to extra pounds piled on in the colder months – became stuck after it tried to squeeze through a small gap in the sewer cover.
("Extra pounds" would indeed make an enormous rat.)
Photos of the rat showed its head and rotund torso poking out of the hole, with its bottom half obscured by the sewer cover. In one image it seemed to almost be calling for hilfe.
I think both Americans and Canadians use "eh" sincerely a decent amount.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wiktionary
Interjection
1. (informal, Britain, Australia, Canada, US) Used as a tag question, to emphasise what goes before or to request that the listener express an opinion about what has been said. These hot dogs are pretty good, eh?
2. In isolation, a request for repetition or clarification of what has just been said. Compare what, pardon.
3. (Canada) An interjection used to ascertain the continued attention of an individual addressed by the speaker I went to the restaurant, eh, but my friends didn't show up.
4. Expressing apathy or lack of enthusiasm; meh. —Do you feel like going out tonight?
—Eh, I don't know.