You can login if you already have an account or register by clicking the button below.
Registering is free and all you need is a username and password. We never ask you for your e-mail.
[–]TheBuddha0 points
0 points
0 points
(+0|-0)
ago
Update: I am having steak burritos for dinner and dinner will be later than normal.
I learned this with my superior detective skills. That is, I was asked to turn on the grill and so I asked what was for dinner. There will be no guacamole on them - and that's a good thing.
[–]TheBuddha0 points
0 points
0 points
(+0|-0)
ago
Yup. The steaks are fresh, too. They hadn't yet made it into the freezer.
Avocado didn't hurt me, it's just not a tasty food. I've tried to enjoy it, but I just can't do it.
Curiously, there are some mangoes in the fridge. I can only assume EH bought them. I have no idea what the plans are for the mangoes. My hunch is that they're going into yogurt with granola topping it. I'm pretty sure they didn't come from the grocery store in the village. The odds of them having mango are pretty low, especially now that the summer tourist season has passed.
This features Tommy Shannon on bass, who went on the be in Double Trouble backing Stevie Ray Vaughan.
Shannon had the first of two important meetings at The Fog in Dallas in the late 1960s. There he first saw Johnny Winter. Shannon ended up backing Winter, and they formed a project known as The Progressive Blues Experiment in 1968.
Shannon moved between Dallas and Austin, and saw Stevie Ray Vaughan at The Fog with Vaughan's group Blackbird. Vaughan later formed a group called Double Trouble, and in 1980 Shannon wound up taking the place of the bass player, Jackie Newhouse, after seeing Double Trouble at Rockefellers in Houston. The group could have been short-lived—Vaughan was tapped to do some guitar tracks for David Bowie (the haunting guitar on "Let's Dance", for instance), and was then offered the chance to tour with Bowie. Ultimately, Vaughan's manager turned down the offer. Vaughan, Shannon and drummer Chris Layton would stay together as Stevie Ray Vaughan & Double Trouble—and become one of the most famous blues bands of all time.
Sort: Top
[–] TheBuddha ago
Update: I am having steak burritos for dinner and dinner will be later than normal.
I learned this with my superior detective skills. That is, I was asked to turn on the grill and so I asked what was for dinner. There will be no guacamole on them - and that's a good thing.
[–] cynicaloldfart [S] 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
Sounds delicious. Beef from your own cows, I presume.
Show me on the avocado where they hurt you.
[–] TheBuddha ago
Yup. The steaks are fresh, too. They hadn't yet made it into the freezer.
Avocado didn't hurt me, it's just not a tasty food. I've tried to enjoy it, but I just can't do it.
Curiously, there are some mangoes in the fridge. I can only assume EH bought them. I have no idea what the plans are for the mangoes. My hunch is that they're going into yogurt with granola topping it. I'm pretty sure they didn't come from the grocery store in the village. The odds of them having mango are pretty low, especially now that the summer tourist season has passed.
[–] BitChuteArchive ago
https://www.bitchute.com/video/a6CX3J5qS12s
[–] cynicaloldfart [S] ago
This features Tommy Shannon on bass, who went on the be in Double Trouble backing Stevie Ray Vaughan.
Shannon had the first of two important meetings at The Fog in Dallas in the late 1960s. There he first saw Johnny Winter. Shannon ended up backing Winter, and they formed a project known as The Progressive Blues Experiment in 1968.
Shannon moved between Dallas and Austin, and saw Stevie Ray Vaughan at The Fog with Vaughan's group Blackbird. Vaughan later formed a group called Double Trouble, and in 1980 Shannon wound up taking the place of the bass player, Jackie Newhouse, after seeing Double Trouble at Rockefellers in Houston. The group could have been short-lived—Vaughan was tapped to do some guitar tracks for David Bowie (the haunting guitar on "Let's Dance", for instance), and was then offered the chance to tour with Bowie. Ultimately, Vaughan's manager turned down the offer. Vaughan, Shannon and drummer Chris Layton would stay together as Stevie Ray Vaughan & Double Trouble—and become one of the most famous blues bands of all time.