A fan is apparently enraged over her husband's inability to understand what she loves about the Disney blockbuster.
How do you feel about 'Frozen'?
>> It's the best movie ever.
>> I enjoyed it.
>> It was OK.
>> I'm not a fan.
>> I've never seen it.
Sunday, 22 June 2014
Saturday, 21 June 2014
Starbucks brewing higher prices
The Seattle-based chain will boost the cost of some of its drinks & bagged coffee sold in supermarkets starting next week.
Are Starbucks drinks worth the price?
>> Yes; bring on the java.
>> No; they are overpriced.
>> It depends on the drink.
>> I'm not sure.
Are Starbucks drinks worth the price?
>> Yes; bring on the java.
>> No; they are overpriced.
>> It depends on the drink.
>> I'm not sure.
Tuesday, 17 June 2014
Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline Proposal
A cargo ship sits docked at Rio Tinto Alcan's Kitimat Smelter on Douglas Channel, the proposed termination point for an oil pipeline in the Enbridge Northern Gateway Project, in Kitimat, B.C., on Jan. 10, 2012.
Enbridge workers are seen at a job site in this file image. The estimated cost of Northern Gateway is $7 billion and rising.
This Jan. 10, 2012 photo shows the Douglas Channel, the proposed termination point for an oil pipeline in the Enbridge Northern Gateway Project at Kitimat, B.C. The Rio Tinto smelter is at left and the town of Kitimat at upper right.
A sign opposing the Enbridge pipeline is shown in downtown Kitimat, B.C. June, 17, 2014.
Opponents to the Enbridge pipeline hold signs in downtown Kitimat, B.C. June, 17, 2014.
RCMP officers keep an eye on an event with B.C. Premier Christy Clark to celebrate a recent land sale to the Haisla in Kitimat, B.C. on June 17, 2014. Protesters to the Enbridge Northern Gateway project are seen in the background.
A sign against Enbridge hangs on a house in Kitimat, B.C. Tuesday, June, 17, 2014.
A worker, left, uses a small boat to move logs on the Douglas Channel at dusk in Kitimat, B.C., on January 11, 2012. The Kitimat Marine Terminal would include two ship berths and 19 tanks to store oil and condensate. The facility would have the capacity to serve around 220 tankers per year.
The Douglas Channel is the proposed shipping route for oil tanker ships in the Enbridge Northern Gateway Project, just south of Kitimat, B.C.
A joint federal review panel recommended approval of the pipeline in December 2013 with 209 conditions.
Enbridge workers are seen at a job site in this file image. The company says Northern Gateway would result in 3,000 new construction jobs in B.C. and 560 long-term jobs.
A Kermode bear, better know as the Spirit Bear is seen fishing in the Riordan River on Gribbell Island in the Great Bear Rainforest, B.C. on Sept, 18, 2013. Pipeline opponents fear the Enbridge project will endanger wildlife along the project's route.
The proposed shipping route for the Enbridge Northern Gateway Project would cross many bodies of water and pristine areas in northern B.C.
Enbridge workers are seen at a job site in this file image. The Northern Gateway pipeline would be worth an estimated $300 billion in additional gross domestic product over 30 years.
Enbridge workers are seen at a job site in this file image.
The 1,177-kilometre twin pipelines would run from Bruderheim, just outside Edmonton, to a tanker port in Kitimat, on the northern coast of B.C.
The proposed tanker route leaving from Kitimat, B.C. is shown on a map. The 1,177-kilometre twin pipelines would run from Bruderheim, just outside Edmonton, to a tanker port on the northern coast of B.C.
Enbridge workers are seen at a job site in this file image. The estimated cost of Northern Gateway is $7 billion and rising.
This Jan. 10, 2012 photo shows the Douglas Channel, the proposed termination point for an oil pipeline in the Enbridge Northern Gateway Project at Kitimat, B.C. The Rio Tinto smelter is at left and the town of Kitimat at upper right.
A sign opposing the Enbridge pipeline is shown in downtown Kitimat, B.C. June, 17, 2014.
Opponents to the Enbridge pipeline hold signs in downtown Kitimat, B.C. June, 17, 2014.
RCMP officers keep an eye on an event with B.C. Premier Christy Clark to celebrate a recent land sale to the Haisla in Kitimat, B.C. on June 17, 2014. Protesters to the Enbridge Northern Gateway project are seen in the background.
A sign against Enbridge hangs on a house in Kitimat, B.C. Tuesday, June, 17, 2014.
A worker, left, uses a small boat to move logs on the Douglas Channel at dusk in Kitimat, B.C., on January 11, 2012. The Kitimat Marine Terminal would include two ship berths and 19 tanks to store oil and condensate. The facility would have the capacity to serve around 220 tankers per year.
The Douglas Channel is the proposed shipping route for oil tanker ships in the Enbridge Northern Gateway Project, just south of Kitimat, B.C.
A joint federal review panel recommended approval of the pipeline in December 2013 with 209 conditions.
Enbridge workers are seen at a job site in this file image. The company says Northern Gateway would result in 3,000 new construction jobs in B.C. and 560 long-term jobs.
A Kermode bear, better know as the Spirit Bear is seen fishing in the Riordan River on Gribbell Island in the Great Bear Rainforest, B.C. on Sept, 18, 2013. Pipeline opponents fear the Enbridge project will endanger wildlife along the project's route.
The proposed shipping route for the Enbridge Northern Gateway Project would cross many bodies of water and pristine areas in northern B.C.
Enbridge workers are seen at a job site in this file image. The Northern Gateway pipeline would be worth an estimated $300 billion in additional gross domestic product over 30 years.
Enbridge workers are seen at a job site in this file image.
The 1,177-kilometre twin pipelines would run from Bruderheim, just outside Edmonton, to a tanker port in Kitimat, on the northern coast of B.C.
Wednesday, 11 June 2014
Japanese Clothing FATYO
What is FAT to you?
Fat, in other words, COOL.
'Being FAT. Wanting to be FAT.
Striving to be FAT.
That's the answer. The question is ...
'What is FAT to you?'
FATYO
Would You Buy Clothing Labeled "Fat", or "Jumbo"?
>> Yes; it's honest.
>> No; it's disrespectful.
>> It depends on the item.
>> I'm not sure.
I'm not sure how the company expects to drum up sales by calling out its larger customers in the least delicate way!?
Brand Fatyo offers its products in just four sizes - titch, skinny, fat and jumbo.
Fat, in other words, COOL.
'Being FAT. Wanting to be FAT.
Striving to be FAT.
That's the answer. The question is ...
'What is FAT to you?'
FATYO
Would You Buy Clothing Labeled "Fat", or "Jumbo"?
>> Yes; it's honest.
>> No; it's disrespectful.
>> It depends on the item.
>> I'm not sure.
I'm not sure how the company expects to drum up sales by calling out its larger customers in the least delicate way!?
Brand Fatyo offers its products in just four sizes - titch, skinny, fat and jumbo.
Tuesday, 3 June 2014
Silliest Questions Tourists Ask In Alberta?
Have you heard any crazy questions from tourists visiting Alberta?
Everyone asks crazy questions when they travel. We do, we may not to admit it.
Please post anything you've heard
Here are some crazy questions from tourists:
Q: How do you get the water so blue?
Q: What time of the year do they drain the lake and paint the bottom?
Q: Which one is the Rocky Mountain?
Q: Where do you put the animals at night?
Q: How do the elk know they're supposed to cross at the "Elk Crossing" signs?
Q: Are the bears with collars tame?
Q: I saw an animal on the way to Banff today - could you tell me what it was?
Q: Where does Alberta end and Canada begin?
Q: How far is Banff from Canada?
Q: Do they search you at the B.C. border?
Q: Is that two kilometers by foot or by car?
Q: Can we drive our car onto a glacier anywhere?
Q: Do we need snow tires or chains to drive to Lake Louise in July?
Q: Where are the igloos and the Eskimos?
Q: Can you see polar bears at the Columbia Icefield?
Q: What's the best trail to take a bike on to see a cougar?
Everyone asks crazy questions when they travel. We do, we may not to admit it.
Please post anything you've heard
Here are some crazy questions from tourists:
Q: How do you get the water so blue?
Q: What time of the year do they drain the lake and paint the bottom?
Q: At what elevation does an elk become a moose?
Q: How much does that mountain weigh?
Q: Which one is the Rocky Mountain?
Q: Where do you put the animals at night?
Q: How do the elk know they're supposed to cross at the "Elk Crossing" signs?
Q: Are the bears with collars tame?
Q: I saw an animal on the way to Banff today - could you tell me what it was?
Q: Did I miss the turnoff for Canada?
Q: Where does Alberta end and Canada begin?
Q: How far is Banff from Canada?
Q: Do they search you at the B.C. border?
Q: Is that two kilometers by foot or by car?
Q: Can we drive our car onto a glacier anywhere?
Q: Do we need snow tires or chains to drive to Lake Louise in July?
Q: Where are the igloos and the Eskimos?
Q: Can you see polar bears at the Columbia Icefield?
Q: What's the best trail to take a bike on to see a cougar?
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