Try Uniqlo, Japanese brand. Actually decent clothes for the cost. About as good as “cheap” clothes come. They’re simple but they literally have anything you want in any color you like.
Bar tipping is simple: a minimum of $1 every time you get served, unless the following happens: A) you get 5 or more drinks and/or B) you order something complex and obnoxious. However You are okay to tip $1 for up to 7 drinks if you are buying only bottled beer. Also, try to tip in cash if you can. Employers have to report tips on their staffs earnings, but cash can go right to o your bartender.
I think this method is entirely fair, especially considering you’re likely to make multiple trips to the bar.
I’ve had friends with addiction problems and it can be a tough spot. I’m generally of the camp that most people can be self aware enough to reel it in at some point, but i also believe that addiction can be like a disease: something that can have a lasting and devastating affect on friends and family. It can affect everyone around a person, so it sometimes goes beyond “adults need to make their own choices” because the affects can be more far reaching than the individual. I’d say to tell them how you feel, that you’re there for them as a friend if they need you, and that you care holistically about what happens to them. That’s usually a reality check for most people, and you can know you did the right thing.
I went to ambar with the lady for restaurant week last week. Still cost $140 with the tip…
Eric handled pretty well. And props to him for not judging the ex – it’s just a classless move.
I use the yeti but i gotta be honest water just tastes better out of a paper Dixie cup.
That’s just pure spite coming from a childish management system. “Oh you’re quitting? Well you suck anyway.”
Try Uniqlo, Japanese brand. Actually decent clothes for the cost. About as good as “cheap” clothes come. They’re simple but they literally have anything you want in any color you like.
Woah. That was heavy. A+.
Here’s an easy tip for saving. Never spend your $5 bills. Every time you get one, save it. You’ll be surprised how much it adds up.
5 years in and we’re both still avoiding the M word. Why muck up a good thing right now? Talk to me in my 30s about it I say.
Don’t forget us when you sell the rights to produce this into a mini series like Sharp Objects. Hold out for HBO, you can do better than Netflix!
1000%
45 min of back and shoulders??? Somebody hit the lunk alarm!
I mean she went to the dudes wedding man
“Cram it up your cram-hole LaFleur!”
There’s a “breakfast before 9/8am staff meeting” joke in here somewhere but i just can’t put it together…
I just can’t read Timothee without thinking of the Key and Peele substitute teacher skit…
“Timothee?”
“Pre-sent.”
Bar tipping is simple: a minimum of $1 every time you get served, unless the following happens: A) you get 5 or more drinks and/or B) you order something complex and obnoxious. However You are okay to tip $1 for up to 7 drinks if you are buying only bottled beer. Also, try to tip in cash if you can. Employers have to report tips on their staffs earnings, but cash can go right to o your bartender.
I think this method is entirely fair, especially considering you’re likely to make multiple trips to the bar.
As long as it’s not busboys and poets. That place is so transparently pandering to hipsters it’s unreal and the food is just.. average.
Sounds like you made it about 2 weeks before your first shitty day. Nowadays i feel most are luck if they get 1 good one a every 2 weeks…
I’ll probably still panic and ask it though…
I’ve had friends with addiction problems and it can be a tough spot. I’m generally of the camp that most people can be self aware enough to reel it in at some point, but i also believe that addiction can be like a disease: something that can have a lasting and devastating affect on friends and family. It can affect everyone around a person, so it sometimes goes beyond “adults need to make their own choices” because the affects can be more far reaching than the individual. I’d say to tell them how you feel, that you’re there for them as a friend if they need you, and that you care holistically about what happens to them. That’s usually a reality check for most people, and you can know you did the right thing.