Domain: tiger-web1.srvr.media3.us User Profile: Frank Black | TigerDroppings.com
Favorite team:UNO 
Location:the dawn of the new millenium
Biography:I see the future. We all survive. Maybe.
Interests:The truth. Oh yeah, and chicks.
Occupation:truth seeker
Number of Posts:5351
Registered on:3/26/2004
Online Status:Not Online

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:usa: :lol:


He's also worried that if he doesn't renew his license on time he will end up in "men's prison"

:rotflmao:


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On February 27, 1827, a group of masked and costumed students dance through the streets of New Orleans, Louisiana, marking the beginning of the city’s famous Mardi Gras celebrations.

The celebration of Carnival—or the weeks between Twelfth Night on January 6 and Ash Wednesday, the beginning of the Christian period of Lent—spread from Rome across Europe and later to the Americas. Nowhere in the United States is Carnival celebrated as grandly as in New Orleans, famous for its over-the-top parades and parties for Mardi Gras (or Fat Tuesday), the last day of the Carnival season.

Early French settlers brought the tradition of Mardi Gras to the U.S. Gulf Coast at the end of the 17th century. In fact, Mobile, Alabama celebrated its first carnival in 1703. However, Spanish governors later banned the celebrations. After Louisiana Territory became part of the United States in 1803, New Orleanians managed to convince the city council to lift the ban on wearing masks and partying in the streets. The city’s new Mardi Gras tradition began in 1827 when the group of students, inspired by their experiences studying in Paris, donned masks and jester costumes and staged their own Fat Tuesday festivities.

The parties grew more and more popular, and in 1833 a rich plantation owner named Bernard Xavier de Marigny de Mandeville raised money to fund an official Mardi Gras celebration. After rowdy revelers began to get violent during the 1850s, a secret society called the Mistick Krewe of Comus staged the first large-scale, well-organized Mardi Gras parade in 1857.

Over time, hundreds of krewes formed, building elaborate and colorful floats for parades held over the two weeks leading up to Fat Tuesday. Riders on the floats are usually local citizens who toss “throws” at passersby, including metal coins, stuffed toys or those now-infamous strands of beads. Though many tourists mistakenly believe Bourbon Street and the historic French Quarter are the heart of Mardi Gras festivities, none of the major parades have been allowed to enter the area since 1979 because of its narrow streets.

In February 2006, New Orleans held its Mardi Gras celebrations despite the fact that Hurricane Katrina had devastated much of the city with massive flooding the previous August. Attendance was at only 60-70 percent of the 300,000-400,000 visitors who usually attend Mardi Gras, but the celebration marked an important step in the recovery of the city, which counts on hospitality and tourism as its single largest industry.

history.com


I got a hand job from a really hot girl in Mandeville once.

Would have been about 1983

I don't know if she's still there or not.
He sits down at the bar, turns to the Irish guy sitting next to him and says, "What's your name?"

The Irish guy says, "My name is Michael O'Brien."

The Spanish guys says, "So which is it? Michael o Brien?"
quote:

I'm a dark comedy guy and there's plenty of snippets from our favorite comedians that could be taken out of context. Not going to shite on a comedian for doing their job

There is no context in the universe where a making a joke about trannies killing kids is acceptable or funny. Your attempt to potentially normalize it makes me seriously concerned about you as a human being



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An online adult content creator from Atlanta stabbed a man in a shower in Miami Beach on Thursday

WTF was he doing in the shower with that thing?
There are more details in the link. Absolute evil

quote:

A Pennsylvania judge refused to suppress statements made by a 31-year-old Ph.D. student in which she allegedly admitted to inflicting fatal injuries on one of her best friend's newborn twins while babysitting.

Allegheny County Common Pleas Judge Jill E. Rangos on Monday rejected defendant Nicole Virzi's request to preclude jurors from hearing her tell investigators she intentionally shook and dropped the infant multiple times in 2024 until she heard a "crack."

Virzi is charged with criminal homicide in the death of 6-week-old Leon Katz, whom Virzi allegedly killed while babysitting as his parents were at the hospital with his twin brother. She is also facing multiple counts of aggravated assault and endangering the welfare of children, including allegations that she was responsible for injuring Leon's twin brother. Prosecutors have already said they will seek the death penalty.

law and crime


I just bought a TV and it says built in antenna