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A Spin Off of Keep a Word/Drop a Word and Music, Pics, and Whatnot

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Good Mornin Family:wave:
How's everyone's Sunday goin?
I hope everyone is stayin well and havin a great day

May be an image of text that says 'Good MORNING M RNING つanoん ነደ01 Happy Sunday'




May be an image of christmas tree and text that says 'Maybe this is not the Christmas to ask for everything we want, Linus. Maybe this year we just need to be thankful for all we have.'
 

2WhiteWolves

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
VU Patreon
Back in the 90s, there was a beer called Special Export. The beer was banned in KS. The reason being is, when doing a breathe test it wouldn't show up. So, the cops couldn't get the person for a dui. This beer is so good just like Little Kings. Both go down so smoothly. The Little Kings, lol, you gotta watch yourself, these beers are 6 point in little bottles and since they go down so smoothly it was very easy to drink more than needed.
There was a guy who drank so so so many Little Kings he was sick for several days. Felt so sorry for him, but he swore he would never drink them again.
Little Kings is an Ale Beer, so very tasty. I don't remember the taste of Special Export, but I do know they are very tasty as well.
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
May be an image of text


The Demon Who Stayed Sober The Real Reason Gene Simmons Never Touched Drugs or Alcohol
Behind the fire-breathing, blood-spitting stage persona of KISS frontman Gene Simmons, there’s a story few fans ever heard one that starts not in a stadium, but in a concentration camp.
Simmons’ mother, Flóra Klein, survived the Holocaust after losing most of her family to the Nazis.
She endured starvation, cruelty, and death and somehow, she lived.
When Gene was born years later, she gave him one rule: “Don’t ever waste the life I suffered to give you.”
And he never did.
No drugs.
No alcohol.
Not once.
“I’m her only child,” Gene said. “I had no right to hurt my mother. Life had already done enough to her.”
Even when fame hit the leather, the fire, the women, the chaos Gene stayed clean.
Because behind the mask of The Demon, there was still Chaim, the boy who promised his mother he’d never disappoint her.
He once recalled his first Rolling Stone interview:
He arrived in full rock-god mode spider rings, seven-inch boots, black nails when suddenly, the doorbell rang.
It was his mother, holding a mountain of homemade food.
“Eat, boys. You’re too skinny,” she told them.
The writer laughed.
The Demon blushed.
And that day, the world saw Gene Simmons for who he really was
not a rock monster,
but a mama’s boy who kept his promise.
 

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