A list of puns related to "Big Town"
Aren't those put up by the same people who just got hacked and lost a bunch of "money?"
I might be biased as a Timberwolves fan, but I think in terms of 3-point shooting he's 100% the best one and the only argument is that Dirk was more dominant in mid-range, but that's an era thing, now they shoot more 3-pointers, back then they shot more mid-ranges. And obviously that is only true if we don't include KD in the conversation
> And considering the pain Towns has endured since the dΠ΅ath of his mother last year, being happy on the hardwood has helped him become happier in his life. > > βI got a lot to be happy about in life,β Towns told The Undefeated after earning 28 points and 10 rebounds during a 110-96 win over the Pelicans on Nov 22. βThere are a lot of things that can go wrong, but Iβm just worried about the good that can come out. I donβt think itβs fully back. > > βItβs waves. Itβs a bunch of waves. I am on a good wave right now where I am feeling positive. The team is winning. A winning streak [helped] a lot. But, I feel really good.β > > Townsβ smile and positive outlook are a welcome sign now for the Timberwolves after he endured his motherβs death on April 13, 2020. Jacqueline Cruz-Towns died due to COVID-19 complications that lasted for about a month. She was 58 years old, and the vaccine was months away from being readily available at that time. > > Towns told The Undefeated he forgot about his 26th birthdaΡ on Nov. 15 until he was reminded about it by his girlfriend, Jordyn Woods, who celebrated it with him. The reason why it slipped his mind was because it was his mother who always made his βbirthday special.β Towns said he still has a big piece of his last birthday cake that his mother gave him in 2019 in his freezer that means the world to him. > > βI know itβs not good to eat, but itβs a memento as one of the last things she gave me,β Towns said. βBirthdaΡs and stuff like that havenβt been really special to me, because she was the one who made it really special for me. She was the one who got me amped to have a birthdaΡ or to have that moment. But my girl did an amazing job of filling her shoes in and making it special.β > > Towns also told The Undefeated that holidays donβt feel the same without his mother and she always made Thanksgiving special. The 2015-2016 NBA Rookie of the Year said last week he was planning to spend a relaxing Thanksgiving alone, with space to reflect on his mother. > > βIβm going to spend some time with myself, realign, have a spiritual day and pray a lot, have some spiritual moments with my mom, hopefully,β Towns said. βAnd just really chill. Have some leftovers, maybe, whatever it be.β
> What will keep Towns happy and smiling after enduring so much pain o
... keep reading on reddit β‘> As it turns out, Whiteside, the 32-year-old 7-footer, is the Jazzβs biggest child. And, as such, Whiteside has the Jazzβs biggest toy. > > Meet Big Shirley. > > A 2020 Jeep Wrangler Sahara modded into a truck with six massive wheels, Big Shirley is a passion project for the Jazzβs new backup center. Whiteside bought the car in 2019 when he first joined the Portland Trail Blazers and finally finished work on the behemoth just a couple of months ago. It has 9,000 miles on it now. > > βIβm like a big Jeep enthusiast,β Whiteside says. βIβve got two more Jeeps, but theyβre not like this.β
> It was created by, in Whitesideβs words, βa mixture of a bunch of crazy people that did a great job.β Whiteside said four car modding shops worked on different aspects of the project, among them SoFloJeeps and Apocalypse Manufacturing in Florida. Americaβs Most Wanted put a Hellcat engine into the 6x6. > > In the end, Whiteside estimated that the crews spent 1,800 hours of labor working on his creation. > > The all-new Hellcat engine can put out 900 horsepower, Whiteside says β but also has two cooling mods added under the hood. Six massive 40-inch tires touch the pavement, along with a Dana 80 axle up front. Stabilizer bars have been added on either side, and obviously, the suspension system has been upgraded.
> Whiteside customized the interior as well, including to lower the seat β βall the way to the floorβ to get himself a bit more headroom in the comparatively small Jeep interior. > > So what does this all cost? Whiteside estimated that he spent about $330K on the project from start to finish. He said he felt it was all worthwhile when it snowed in Salt Lake City last week. > > βAh man, thatβs when you get your moneyβs worth right there.β > βIt looks like it would be harder to drive, but itβs actually pretty e
... keep reading on reddit β‘Hi Westchestarians (is that right?)
My family is thinking of relocating to Westchester, possibly one of the River Towns. I just did some driving around the area and noticed how close together those villages are. So my question is, in terms of restaurants/cafes/shopping, how much does it really matter which village we end up in? For example, I noticed Irvington's main street seemed to be the quietest (too quiet for me), but it's an awfully short drive to Dobbs Ferry from there. My partner imagines that it all will feel like one big town if we live there. How much truth is there to that attitude?
Any info? Happened about 5 minutes ago
Because youβre not a model citizen.
Hello everyone, I'm a doctor from the Middle East, with a very Arab name and face, currently living in a medium sized city in the NRW.
Next year I will get my Approbation so I'm looking for a place to work and live, and I'm wondering where should I go.
I have no family nor friends here and I'm almost totally alone, so a place where I can find people to make relationships with is very important to me, but to be honest I heard a lot about racism and how it is very hard to form relationships with Germans, especially for Arabs, so I thought I might ask you here first and hear your opinion.
Are Germans from like Berlin, Munich, Cologne and other big cities more welcoming and accepting of people from the Middle East? and if yes which city do you recommend?
btw I'm not religious and I don't want to 'force my culture' on others, I just want to work, meet new people, and start a new life here like any normal human being.
My home resort of big sky has in recent years gotten a little full of themselves, the whole βbiggest skiing in Americaβ thing, from what Iβve seen, theyβre trying to cater to the rest of the world. Really just leaving the locals behind, raising prices through the roof, really just going for a lux feel. I want to ask the ski bums and locals all around, how you feel about stuff like this, after all, the locals are what began it all. So, thoughts on this sort of behavior? Are you seeing it where your from? Is there any benefit? Thoughts on big sky? Is it really as big and great as they talk it up to be? Thanks!
So I've decided to use this map as a base for my current low-level campaign.
I really like the big eye-catching well/fountain in the middle of it. Which is obviously magical or something.
I also really like the idea that the town was constructed by some evil guy to serve as a giant transmutation circle to transform all of it's citizens into...whatever.
Former evil guy got defeated and now the town is being reconstructed by a good guy.
So what interesting plot points could I get from this well/fountain-thing?
All I could think of is that obviously this well was used as power source for transmutation circle...Okay, this well is a source of a raw magic power... But now what?
Does it just spawns some magical creatures randomly that wreak havoc to the town? Is it just a big ass bomb which could send the town flying at any moment?
I can't come up with anything that could interestingly affect the current campaign and present my players with some interesting situation to interact with.
Any ideas?
Early 2000s every regular Raiders game was on the news, almost like preparing Chargers fans that the crowd at Qualcomm could turn into a mosh pit at any second
Double the security as other regular season games
Alcohol was cut off at half time
The fights, weapons, etc. it was always a spectacle how the news framed the games
Donβt know if the times or changed or just the crowds but being a Raiders fan living in San Diego as a kid watching the regular season games were always as hyped as this one in the early 2000s. Really brings ba k memories
LFG RN4L
Does anyone feel like there's a cultural/philosophical challenge with moving to a big private single-family? I have some weird feelings I can't shake around the whole moving to my private box to get away from all of the city X, Y, Z - but is that really just a symptom of some other type of problem? And is it a kind of "giving up"? It just seems more complicated and I'd love to hear from people that really, really, thought about those trades and what they mean not just personally (yay no more upstairs neighbors) but on a deeper level.
Quick details - My wife and I are considering leaving the prime NYC area for upstate Hudson Valley. We lived in Lower manhattan for 8 years and then just outside the city in NJ for two years and that definitely felt like a little bit of a 'soulless' exchange.
I'm a full time tech worker who's interested in volunteering as an emt. I start my EMT 101 course at a local community college in a couple weeks. I really want to volunteer but I found that there are no volunteer opportunities in my area. In the city of Chicago, where I live, the Chicago Fire Department covers all 911 ems calls. They don't take volunteers. From the research that I've done my only option to use my EMT-B certification on an ambulance will be doing IFT for a private ambulance company part time. I have read that IFT is a good place to start getting experience. But what about after a while of doing that?
I have thought about moving to a small town in Ohio to be close to my family. Many small towns in Ohio have volunteer fire/ems. My day job in tech is fully remote.
My question is which would be more interesting: IFT in a big city or volunteer 911 in a small town?
I would love to read a book where the whole town is keeping a huge secret that unfolds over the course of the story. Like the TV shows Haven and Gravity Falls and other stuff like that.
I imagine the suggestions will probably lean more toward horror or mystery, but hey, if you know of any nonfiction books about weird and mysterious towns, Iβll take those too. If thereβs some town thatβs full of, I donβt know, former assassins or something or is maybe being kept secret by the government, I would totally read about it.
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