Dear Readers,
I had the 16-oz. Kansas City Strip in Kansas City. Good stuff.
I also got to see A-rod smack one of his many home runs at KC’s Kaufmann Stadium as I went up to the City of Fountains with my dad and saw the Yanks beat the Royals.
Come to find out, only Rome has more fountains than Kansas City, so there’s a photo op around every corner?even in the stadium.
It’s really about time to let the original Pulsemobile go.
Being the Honda man I am, I’d like to grab one of the nice Accords from Reddell Honda, so the offer is still on the table, John. Call me. It can be valuable for you.
If we can not come to terms I will be seeking another offer for a fine automobile?will finance with ad space.
It seems as if nearly all of the great wrestlers of our generation are dead. Big Boss Man, Yokozuna, Haystack Calhoun, Earthquake?all deceased.
How can this be? These were the most finely tuned athletes in the world.
Um . . .
Well, even Rick Rude, Eddie Guerrero and Mr. Perfect are dead.
I’d slap a Perfect-plex if we were to square off now.
Goes to show, just say no to steroids, pain pills and moonsaults.
And just say no to adjustable rate mortgages. It just seems like a bad idea to put your name next to something stating you owe an amount of money subject to change.
It’s one thing to take debt upon yourself, but it’s another to have it forced upon you.
I hope you realize all this spending being voted upon by Congress is your money and your future consumption levels. Our federal government has driven the country into so much debt, the amount each American citizen owes is quickly approaching $30,000. That’s more than the yearly earnings of many Americans.
Consuming more than you produce, again, does not seems like a bright idea in the long term, but what do I know, I’m no banker.
I couple of random things I hate: when you can not breathe and go to the bathroom to blow your nose, only to find it smells so horrible you wish you could go back to not breathing.
Another: when a film is set in some exotic foreign-speaking culture like Sparta or Africa centuries ago, but the characters speak with British accents. We realize their conversations wouldn’t have been in English, but the setting is no more Olde England than Middle Tennessee.
Peace
Bracken Mayo, Editor in Chief