Cops.

warrior queen

early bird snack pack
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I am watching this American show, and I have come to the conclusion that people in Altlanta don't like to wear clothes, and if they do it's more often than not men wearing womens underwear.
Is this a normal thing for Atlantians?
 
I am watching this American show, and I have come to the conclusion that people in Altlanta don't like to wear clothes, and if they do it's more often than not men wearing womens underwear.
Is this a normal thing for Atlantians?

People in both the northern and southern extremes of the continental United States like going shirtless whenever possible.
 
People in both the northern and southern extremes of the continental United States like going shirtless whenever possible.

Nonono!
These guys were wearing shirts.
It was the underwear, or lack of anything below the waist, that got me!
 
Atlanta is that very interesting southern city where everyone you meet is from somewhere else and every fucking street has the name peach in it, so once you're off the interstate you're lost and in the worst part of town in about 90 seconds...

;) ;)

... and you never see any cops there.

They must be filming somewhere else, on a set or something... ;) ;) :D
 
Nonono!
These guys were wearing shirts.
It was the underwear, or lack of anything below the waist, that got me!

I've been to Atlanta a few times, but most of the pedestrians were wearing trousers. It's weird, though, because there's hardly anyone on the sidewalk in the middle of the day. Most cities are really crowded, but Atlanta is sparse.
 


Bad boys,
bad boys,
whatcha gonna do,
when they come for you...


 
One of my kinsmen founded Atlanta, name was Lemuel Grant. Atlanta was the end of the line for his Georgia Central Railroad. He was from Darien GA; my crew of Grants lived across the river from Darien in Glynn County. Ancestor Charles Grant was a corporate officer of the Savannah & Western Railroad. But I digress.

Atlanta has never been a Southern town like Savannah or New Orleans or Charleston.
 
One of my kinsmen founded Atlanta, name was Lemuel Grant. Atlanta was the end of the line for his Georgia Central Railroad. He was from Darien GA; my crew of Grants lived across the river from Darien in Glynn County. Ancestor Charles Grant was a corporate officer of the Savannah & Western Railroad. But I digress.

Atlanta has never been a Southern town like Savannah or New Orleans or Charleston.

Well then. One of your founding kinsmen need to have their butts whipped for spawning punks who run around with their pants down to their knees. No small wonder the cops catch them so easily

Atlanta definitely seems to defy being cut from the same cloth as other southern metro areas.
 
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That is so totally the theme!
I can't get it out.
I am doomed.

LOL. There are worse things to have bouncing around your brain.

It's a spectacularly great and catchy tune. I first heard it on an advert for the programme. I liked it so much, I ran out and bought the "Bad Boys" CD by Inner Circle.

It works nicely in the cockpit on a downwind tradewind sleigh ride or when I need to get "pumped up" for a tennis match.


 
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LOL. There are worse things to have bouncing around your brain.


The hills are alive with the sound of music
With songs they have sung for a thousand years
The hills fill my heart with the sound of music
My heart wants to sing every song it hears

My heart wants to beat like the wings of the birds
that rise from the lake to the trees
My heart wants to sigh like a chime that flies
from a church on a breeze
To laugh like a brook when it trips and falls over
stones on its way
To sing through the night like a lark who is learning to pray

I go to the hills when my heart is lonely
I know I will hear what I've heard before
My heart will be blessed with the sound of music
And I'll sing once more
 

LOL. There are worse things to have bouncing around your brain.

It's a spectacularly great and catchy tune. I first heard it on an advert for the programme. I liked it so much, I ran out and bought the "Bad Boys" CD by Inner Circle.

It works nicely in the cockpit on a downwind trade wind sleigh ride or when I need to get "pumped up" for a tennis match.



Heh - we first played it when spiking swordfish!
 
Well then. One of your founding kinsmen need to have their butts whipped for spawning punks who run around with their pants down to their knees. No small wonder the cops catch them so easily

Atlanta definitely seems to defy being cut from the same cloth as other southern metro areas.

Got a newsflash for you punkster. It werent duh white mens dat made all dem yaller babies, it be duh Irish girls dat come to Ameriker as indentured servants. Dey like dat dark meat. Aint no white mens ever ben borned dat like dem field niggaz. Deh white mens prefer dem Quadroon and Octaroon New Orleans galz wiff jes a hint o chocklat.

Duh nigga be always easy to catch, unless deh nigga be on duh basketball court.
 
Got a newsflash for you punkster. It werent duh white mens dat made all dem yaller babies, it be duh Irish girls dat come to Ameriker as indentured servants. Dey like dat dark meat. Aint no white mens ever ben borned dat like dem field niggaz. Deh white mens prefer dem Quadroon and Octaroon New Orleans galz wiff jes a hint o chocklat.

Duh nigga be always easy to catch, unless deh nigga be on duh basketball court.

Deniable plausibility?
 
One of my kinsmen founded Atlanta, name was Lemuel Grant. Atlanta was the end of the line for his Georgia Central Railroad. He was from Darien GA; my crew of Grants lived across the river from Darien in Glynn County. Ancestor Charles Grant was a corporate officer of the Savannah & Western Railroad. But I digress.

Atlanta has never been a Southern town like Savannah or New Orleans or Charleston.

In 1836, the Georgia General Assembly voted to build a railroad to provide a trade route to the Midwestern United States. In 1837 engineers for that state-sponsored project, the Western and Atlantic Railroad, staked out a point on a ridge about seven miles east of the Chattahoochee River as the southern end of the rail line. Homes and a store were built there in 1839, and the settlement that subsequently developed was called Terminus, which literally means "end of the line." By 1842 the settlement had six buildings and 30 residents. In 1843 "Terminus" was incorporated as the city of Marthasville. Two years later, by act of the Georgia General Assembly, the small community was renamed Atlanta.[10] By 1854 rail lines had arrived from four different directions, making the young town the rail hub for the entire Southern United States.


You should wiki your tall tales before posting them, WarriorJohnsonKing.
 
lol A couple of days ago, here in Middle Tennessee, the police arrested a man for doing yard work in the nude. His neighbors said they've seen him out there, butt naked, several times doing yard work like it was nothing wrong with it. lol
 
I am watching this American show, and I have come to the conclusion that people in Altlanta don't like to wear clothes, and if they do it's more often than not men wearing womens underwear.
Is this a normal thing for Atlantians?

It depends on which part of Atlanta you're talking about. Most big cities have their trashy areas.
 
It's a small world afterall,
It's a small world aferall,
It's a small world afterall,
It's a small, small world!

The Geneva Conventions prohibit exactly this sort of thing.



Stop. Make it go away. Please. Dear god, puhlease make it stop! Gaaaaaaaaaaaaaa...........

 
Atlanta...

Stay away from downtown, except during the day. The nightlife is in Buckhead, halfway between downtown and Interstate 285 to the north on Peachtree. Of course you'll have to figure out which Peachtree...there are like a million of them.

Whatever you do, do not visit the underground at night or during the day for that matter.

Actually, just stay out of Atlanta all together. I lived there for...well forever...and in all the time I was there, never went inside the perimeter (Interstate 285) except on business.
 
Atlanta...

Stay away from downtown, except during the day. The nightlife is in Buckhead, halfway between downtown and Interstate 285 to the north on Peachtree. Of course you'll have to figure out which Peachtree...there are like a million of them.

Whatever you do, do not visit the underground at night or during the day for that matter.

Actually, just stay out of Atlanta all together. I lived there for...well forever...and in all the time I was there, never went inside the perimeter (Interstate 285) except on business.

Interesting. There are 71 streets in Atlanta with the name "Peachtree". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peachtree_Street


I discovered that just winding around through Atlanta on Peachtree Road is an excellent unguided tour of different parts of Atlanta. A road that is best traveled on a Sunday or middle of the night. Just keep the windows and doors of your car locked in some areas you pass through.
 
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In 1836, the Georgia General Assembly voted to build a railroad to provide a trade route to the Midwestern United States. In 1837 engineers for that state-sponsored project, the Western and Atlantic Railroad, staked out a point on a ridge about seven miles east of the Chattahoochee River as the southern end of the rail line. Homes and a store were built there in 1839, and the settlement that subsequently developed was called Terminus, which literally means "end of the line." By 1842 the settlement had six buildings and 30 residents. In 1843 "Terminus" was incorporated as the city of Marthasville. Two years later, by act of the Georgia General Assembly, the small community was renamed Atlanta.[10] By 1854 rail lines had arrived from four different directions, making the young town the rail hub for the entire Southern United States.


You should wiki your tall tales before posting them, WarriorJohnsonKing.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lemuel_Grant
 
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