LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,998
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Only bullion I got --
These vending machines were on campus when I was a kid. Disgusting. Chicken bouillon coming out of the same nozzle as coffee and hot chocolate. As I recall, it tasted just like the seasoning packet from instant noodles.
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Oh, but that's exactly how they're served--it all comes down to interpretation. "Fresh cracked egg" could just as easily be short order grill slang for a plastic bottle filled with imitation egg goop that was just opened by the person whose responsibility it is to pour it onto that grease-covered hot plate. It's like ordering "Adam and Eve on a raft"--you're going to get two eggs on toast, not a guy named Adam and a woman named Eve cooked and served on a floatation device.I never realized how annoying I find the phrase "fresh cracked egg" until I heard a bunch of fast-food-breakfast commercials. Given how much of a messy and unsanitary job it can be to "fresh crack eggs," I'd just as soon, if I am going to be served my eggs thru a window, that they be prepared from pre-beaten processed liquid poured out of a sealed plastic bottle.
"fresh cracked egg"
The inevitable question rises as to whether Alistair Sim or George C Scott is the real
Ebeneezer Scrooge.![]()
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Did you ever see Alistair Sim as the headmistress in the St. Trinians films? Absolute classic! Sim is also known for famously refusing a knighthood.
Is there anything else I can help you with? That question ranks alongside: "You're call is important to us," when you've been hanging on for an eternity. Another classic is: "Thank you for the feedback."
Have you noticed how your age can go against you? The implication being that you're a doddering old fogey, who doesn't have a clue.
Who composes these puke inducing remarks? Some marketing graduate who has charged a ransom for what is perceived as a few words of wisdom. Spare me from imbeciles.
"Thank you for your feedback" is perhaps the most passive-aggressive phrase in the English language, a whey-faced middle-manager's way of telling you to STFU in a manner fully in keeping with the HR policy manual.