When you're dropping off your luggage and the screener asks "is your bag locked?" the information that they wish to know is if the bag has a lock on it. A lock is a device which can only be opened with some specific knowledge or implement, such as a key or a combination. A twist tie is not a lock. A zip tie is not a lock. A peice of yarn is not a lock. The answer to "is your bag locked?" should be "yes" or "no." Not, "Well, as locked as it's going to be. I don't know who would want to steal my bowling balls." Especially not when I'm dashing to the front of the machine to collect your bag and I have something like eight seconds to get back behind the console before it starts to do it's thing once again.

Also... why would anyone pack a 2-liter of Pepsi? Afraid that they will arrive in their hotel room and not be able to get any Pepsi? That's a severe addiction.

Oh, but the best bag I opened today: A golf bag, and there's golf balls and golf shoes and such... but no golf clubs. Instead of clubs they had a couple of mops and some type of long handled scrubber. There are no mops where they're going, and they need to clean up the golf course?

So, while I can still remember them, here's some of the silly jokes I heard today (I have forgotten something key about the setup of the best one, so I'll leave that for now.):

Did you hear that a couple of little old ladies had some trouble at the airport? They had knitting needles, but that's okay if you also have yarn. The problems started when they said they were going to knit an Afghan.

Did you hear about the teacher who had trouble at theairport? He had a slide rule and textbooks and compasses. They arrested him for having Weapons of Maths Instruction. He was also suspected of having links to a terrorist group called Al Gebra.

I can't use the line, "these are the jokes, I don't dance," because I do dance. ;)

From: [identity profile] licking-suntan.livejournal.com


Also... why would anyone pack a 2-liter of Pepsi?

My friend's mom packed a whole bag full of junk food when she went to France. She was afraid she wouldn't find anything she liked to eat there.

I'm the world's pickiest eater, even before the celiac's, and I still found plenty to eat in France.

I must declare that I am drunk right now.
ext_14419: the mouse that wants Arthur's brain (Default)

From: [identity profile] derien.livejournal.com


hee - drunken replying, yay! :)

Oh those French, they're not known world-wide for the elegance of their cooking. In America their known for being the only first world country where they eat weird shit like frogs legs and snails.

From: [identity profile] mhw.livejournal.com


Then America is very foolish.

Name one - one - decent cheese that America is famed for. And if you say 'Monterey Jack' I shall just laugh at you.

As for eating snails: snails are molluscs. Clams are molluscs. Can you say 'New England clam chowder'? Good. Thought you could. Oysters? they're molluscs too. Chesapeake Bay oysters. American through and through. Now what's so different about snails?

those French, they're not known world-wide for the elegance of their cooking.

Consider the phrase haute cuisine. Know the language? French. Odd, that. Gastronomie. Gourmet. Cordon bleu.

*chuckle* You must have been really, really drunk to come out with that. Really.
ext_14419: the mouse that wants Arthur's brain (Default)

From: [identity profile] derien.livejournal.com


Heheh, my comment was actually meant as sarcastic, because [livejournal.com profile] licking_suntan's friend's mom was so silly as to think she wouldn't be able to find anything she would like to eat in France, so she took all kinds of junk food. I guess I needed to place the [sarcasm mode on] tag in there. I just found it incredibly appalling that someone would import junk food to eat when they're going to one of the countries best known for good food. (and [livejournal.com profile] licking_suntan was drunk, not me.;))

But, I like Monterey Jack cheese very much - I'll eat like a quarter of a stick with pepperonie and corn chips for my lunch.;)

From: [identity profile] mhw.livejournal.com


Ooops... *embarrassed blush* I hadn't considered sarcasm - just that with you having mentioned posting-while-drunk... oh dear. I should read more carfully, shouldn't I? *hides*

Monterey Jack's actually OK - it's not a bad cheese, at all, just that I find it a shade on the bland side for my preference. I went through terrible cheese deprivation when I was in the US, you know - I just could not believe how much one was expected to pay in Boston for a perfectly ordinary Camembert or English Cheddar. And as for Roquefort! you'd have thought it was made of gold...

The mournful explanation from the only really good cheese seller that I could find after a few days of searching: "You see, most Americans don't really like cheese very much. Not cheese that tastes of cheese, if you know what I mean."

I've really never understood that. All that good grazing land, you'd think that the US could have come up with just one really stunning indigenous cheese... *sigh*

But the English can be just as bad about not eating "all that nasty foreign stuff", though they do seem to have got a lot better at it in the past couple of decades. Just not fast enough for my tastes :D
.

Profile

derien: It's a cup of tea and a white mouse.  The mouse is offering to buy Arthur's brain and replace it with a simple computer. (Default)
Curried Goat in a paper cup

Most Popular Tags

Powered by Dreamwidth Studios

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags