Murray won in Munich and was given a pair of lederhosen...don't think he had to play in them. Scots will wear kilts, so looking strange wouldn't phase him
Nobody had, until some human rights lawyer type had a benny about it. That new TG lineup sounds decent.
Wahoo..! Sidecars on Eurosport 2. Rare treat. Phooey..! It's a procession. Mind you, they change direction like no other vehicle.
So my bet for Parasite** didn't come through again. Never mind, there'll be another along in a minute. ** I'm joking, royalists..! [Only slightly though]
Umm...lots of people had. It's a relatively common racial insult. I actually don't mind Clarkson, but it was staggering that they let that creep into the show.
http://news.sky.com/video/1477353/man-trapped-on-basketball-hoop Question: How many men does it take to get someone down from a basketball hoop. Over 20 by the look of it.
No doubt a single Swedish copper would have solved his problem. And calmed him down at the same time.
I'm on a mini Roxy Music appreciation at the moment. The other week I couldn't stop listening to my For Your Pleasure LP [still am, tbh] and this week it is Manifesto. I can't say that Roxy Music ever really did huge things for me, but I enjoyed them on a different level. They were fun and were certainly ahead of their time. However, this isn't about Roxy Music but the modulation effect called flanging. Normally, I wouldn't associate the effect with a Pop-Rock band like Roxy, but more the sort of thing the Small Faces might do [Itchycoo Park is an excellent example] or Jimi Hendrix. Basically, it sounds a bit psychedelic [man] and should be taken with 20-30 psilocybin mushrooms: So it came as a bit of a surprise when Cry, Cry, Cry off Manifesto popped up to hear a great bit of flanging going on [yeah, stop giggling]: Got any tracks you like where that effect occurs..? Not to be confused with phasing, which is a similar effect, but not so good, in my opinion.
Ferry was one of the reasons why I couldn't quite take to them. Such a douche-bag, in my opinion and yes, that is an US expression, but I think an appropriate one.