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I'm a Scorpio and if you know anything about Scorpio's they're very sexual beings.. I'm no exception. I believe it's every man's mission in life to see as many different pairs of tits as he can before he dies. That being said: I've been married to my beautiful wife for about 11 years and we have been posting pics for a little while now. She loves sucking my cock as much as I love her sucking it. If you want to see pics of me/us they will most likely be on her profile Sexybitch76. If you want to reach either one of us or both you can here: sexybiatchnhubby076@hotmail.com, she loves the dirty talk and I love watching her get turned on by it. :) BTW ladies any pictures of you in polka dots just set me off. I love Polka dots.. :)
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Saturday, November 24, 2012, 8:52:59 PM- Are you hungry? | ||||||
The real thing Two all beef patties Have it your way filet o fish and one more.. I hanker for a hunk a cheese | ||||||
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Saturday, November 24, 2012, 7:58:50 PM- Let the good times roll | ||||||
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Friday, November 23, 2012, 11:28:37 PM- Science Fiction Double feature.. | ||||||
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Friday, November 23, 2012, 3:00:42 AM- A different set of jaws... | ||||||
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Thursday, November 22, 2012, 2:18:46 AM- Ball of confusion.. | ||
Love and Rockets Rock and This is an awesome video for their cover of this song.. | ||
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Thursday, November 22, 2012, 2:15:11 AM- Hmmm.. I wonder if some hillbilly girl I know would like this? | ||||||
Although it may not be badass enough for her. lol. | ||||||
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Wednesday, November 21, 2012, 1:15:24 AM- Was it a turkey terrorist or dumb luck. | ||||||
Turkey causes power outage in southeastern Sheboygan County [url]http://www.sheboyganpress.com/article/20121117/SHE0101/311170253/?nclick_check=1[/url] About 1,500 people in southeastern Sheboygan County lost power for about an hour this morning after a turkey flew into a power line near Sauk Trail and Amsterdam roads, according to We Energies.. The outage was reported just before 8 a.m. and power was restored to all but a handful of homes and businesses by about 9 a.m., said We Energies spokeswoman Cathy Schulze. The outage affected homes and businesses in and around Cedar Grove in an area bordered by county Highway A to the north, county Highway D to the south, county Highway CC to the west and Lake Michigan to the east. *from the cheboygan press | ||||||
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Sunday, November 18, 2012, 2:21:23 AM- Food for thought given Thanksgiving is rapidly approaching. | ||||||
With all the hand sanitizer America bought this year ($190 million worth, to be exact), you'd think that our germ phobia might have made us safer cooks. But as a Health.com poll of some 400 readers and 100 professional chefs reveals, our counter intelligence is still somewhat ... medieval. With parties, potlucks, and outings galore, the holidays are ripe for food faux pas. Here's how to make sure the only thing you spread—and get!—is good cheer. 73% of you lick the spoon while cooking Yucky? Yep. Illness-inducing? Could be. "If it's batter that will get baked or something on the stove that's simmering, like sauce, that's hot enough to kill mouth bacteria," says O. Peter Snyder, PhD, a food-safety expert at the Hospitality Institute of Technology and Management in St. Paul, Minnesota. But if it's salad fixings or frosting on a cake you're preparing, you could introduce strep or the flu into the bowl and infect people. Even if you don't feel sick, trouble could be brewing, especially during wintertime when germs run rampant, says Philip Tierno, PhD, director of clinical microbiology and immunology at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City. To avoid making Germ Chocolate Cake (or horrifying your guests), keep a bowl and a teaspoon by the pot or dish and ladle in food to taste. 76% of you double-dip It's a party foul, all right: Researchers at Clemson University in South Carolina found that dips gained 100,000 bacteria after testers dug in. "Double-dipping is the bacterial equivalent of French kissing everyone in the room," says study author and food scientist Paul Dawson, PhD. Even if guests don't double-dip, fingers in bowls still germ up food. One study found that about 10 percent of a random sampling of people had E. coli on their mitts—an indication of fecal contamination (yikes!). Per records from the CDC, salsa, guacamole, and Mexican dip account for 4 percent of outbreaks of restaurant food poisoning. In 20 percent of those cases, food workers' fingers contaminated the dip. Bottom line: It's best to steer clear of ye olde communal dip, Tierno says. If you're hosting, serve dip with a spoon, or pull a Martha and portion into individual mini cups and stand sliced veggies or pretzel sticks inside. 54% of you serve food dropped on the floor Yet more risky kitchen business. In another study from Dawson, fallen food picked up salmonella from the floor almost immediately (so much for that five-second rule). And while more bacteria stuck to moist foods like fruit and meat than dry ones like nuts, no food escaped unscathed. "I wouldn't eat anything off my kitchen floor," Dawson says. "Even if you have many times without a problem, one day it will probably catch up to you." Safe options for resuscitating fallen food: Slice off the part that touched the floor Reheat food to 165° F Turn crudité into a stir-fry or sliced fruit into a warm compote. 52% of you dish out food past the expiration date Spoiler alert: There's no harm done. In fact, the other 48 percent of poll-takers are probably wasting perfectly good food. "Dates on food have more to do with quality than safety," says Joan Salge Blake, RD, a spokesperson with the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. Per the United States Department of Agriculture, dried goods such as crackers or chips that are past their "use-by" date aren't usually a problem. Ditto for milk, cheese, or yogurt that are dated by a few days and don't smell foul or have mold (the blue-green stuff can cause gastric distress). Eggs are typically fine for as long as three to five weeks past the day you bought them. However, avoid fresh meat, chicken, turkey, or fish that's more than a few days past its use-by date—or you risk food poisoning. 31% of you don't toss food with bugs With many of us buying organic these days, it's more likely that you'll spot an aphid or earthworm on your produce. Screech if you must, then remove it and keep eating—it's harmless, says Sarah Klein, a food safety expert with the Center for Science in the Public Interest. Ditto for a random ant or spider on food. One exception: If you see a cockroach in a food, it hitched a ride from the kitchen, not the farm. Since these creepy crawlies can transmit organisms like salmonella that cause food-borne illness, dump the dish. This article originally appeared on Health.com: America's Grossest Food Habits, Revealed | ||||||
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Friday, November 16, 2012, 2:58:50 AM- Daryl is one bad motherfucker! | ||||||
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Wednesday, November 14, 2012, 1:24:41 AM- It's inconceivable how many Princess Bride References ESPN got in this edition.. :D | ||||||
[url]http://www.buzzfeed.com/jpmoore/an-espn-nfl-show-cant-stop-talking-about-the-pri[/url] | ||||||
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