Monday, March 28, 2011

Virtual Reality: Smugness is a State of Mind

As an anonymous blogger whose identity is a closely guarded secret, I endeavor to share as little personal information as possible on this blog. In fact, apart from the basics such as my social security number, my bank account numbers, and all my PINs and passwords (all of which you can see by clicking here), I make it something of a de facto policy not to bore you with the minutiae of my everyday life.

For this reason, you may not have picked up of the fact that for the past few months I've actually been living in Portland, OR. Yes, the truth is I've been "burnt out" on New York for quite some time and not too long ago I finally "hit the wall" as they say. The the ludicrous cost of living, the constant kvetching about bike lanes, and the wily talking raccoons who fleece you in games of three-card monty at every turn all conspired to precipitate my move.

To put it another way, I could no longer hack it in The Big Arple, and so I've finally been "spit out the back" like a Cat 5 on a group ride. (Or, if you prefer, I pulled a "Prolly.")

I should point out though that I haven't physically moved. Indeed, my body remains in Brooklyn, and as you know since you have access to all my banking information, I live in "hardcore luxury" in a million-dollar Williamsburg loft:

(That's actually me with the lady sideburns.)

However, given the stagnant real estate market, I've been having quite a difficult time finding a buyer who possesses just the right combination of douchiness, financial solvency, and general naïveté to meet my stratospherically high asking price for my smallish drywall box.

So instead, while my corporeal self still resides in "hardcore luxury," I've transported my consciousness to the soggy utopia that is Portland. I've done this by transcending the material plane and by realizing that physical existence is merely a state of mind--or by completely deluding myself, depending on how you look at it. It was surprisingly easy, too. First, I created an artificial Portland habitat in my home by purchasing a humidifier which I fill with Stumptown coffee instead of water. Then, I set all my clocks back by three and a half hours. (Portland is an additional half hour behind the rest of the western United States.) Finally, I completed my microenvironment by making Bikeportland my homepage and pretending it was the local news. So instead of waking up to stories about how restaurants are now using the bike lanes for valet parking, I now awake to delightful morsels of smugness like this:

"Yaaah, that's aaahsome!," I exclaim as I take another pull from the humidifier. "Another win for bikes...?" (People west of the Rockies seem to draw out their vowels and phrase statements as questions, and so I've adopted this manner of speech as well.)

Once I became acclimated to my Portland biodome, I then decided to "take it to the next level" by finding a full-time job. Sure, working can interfere with your process of self-discovery, but keep in mind a full Portland work week is only 15 hours long, which leaves us Portlanders plenty of free time for extracurricular smugness.

Obviously the most coveted employer in Portland is Chris King Precision Components, which is why they're widely referred to as the "G*ogle of the Willamette." However, when I told the Animatronic Chris Kingbot 9000 who conducts their interviews that I wanted to work on the "espresso tampon" line he showed me the door. (It was anodized pink, said "King" all over it, and had a 10-year warranty.) So I picked myself up off the floor, brushed the metal shavings off my Cane Creek t-shirt (which has a 110 year warranty), and resolved to press on.

Next, I went to Rapha, which is an even better place to work than Chris King since you don't have to operate any machinery--unless you consider riding a bicycle and being photographed in black and white to be "operating a machine." I was certain I'd nail this interview, and I even went so far as to don my bespoke cycling suit:

Unfortunately, I totally failed the "epic" portion of the interview when I finished dead last in the "Rapha Prospective Employee Gentleman's Soup Cook-Off." I also managed to catch a glimpse of their HR person's notes, and I distinctly saw the words "mustache not insouciant enough."

After Rapha, I headed over to Vanilla Bicycles to see if celebrity builder Sacha White could use an assistant, but it turns out there's even a five year wait list over there to clean the toilets--which, I might add, are absolutely filthy as a result.

Since it was clear I wasn't going to land an A-list Portland cycling job, I figured I'd have to dip my metaphorical ladle into the decidedly non-epic soup that is the Bikeportland job listings, and fortunately I was able to land something in short order:
This is Portland's equivalent of a "Midnight Cowboy" scenario, as bicycle food vending is the male prostitution of the Pacific Northwest, but it's still totally "aaahsome" since they observe Cross Crusade races as religious holidays and so I don't have to work on those days. (I do have to prove I raced though by presenting my boss with a pair of muddy "shants.")

Anyway, now that I was a real-life (in my imagination) Portland food vendor, I knew it was time to find "digs" befitting someone of my stature. So I turned to Craigslist, which is known as the "New York Times real estate section of the Willamette." Fortunately, it didn't take me long to find the perfect home:


A new home in an old house, on SE 52nd Ave north of Powell. Available in the beginning of April (officially), if you've contacted us before and are still interested, please email us again.

We're looking for someone or a couple that is interested in being part of a little start-up urban farm community. We don't own this house, but treat it as if we do, and are looking for someone that will do the same. We're looking for a housemate that is as interested in the "community" aspect of living here. We don't have to be best friends, but friendly conversation over a beer or tea on the porch is what we're after. A good candidate will be as into the gardening, helping with the fowl, building, and bettering our community as we are. We want this to be a light-hearted sanctuary. A place where you feel good about having a friend over, you feel good about coming home to, and feel good about taking care of. We sure do.

Neo-Hippies? Yes, probably.

(now if that didn't scare you)

It is about a 1,530 sq ft house, two stories plus dirt (not-so-dry) basement and attic. (A good amount of storage space in the attic, and bonus, it's dry)

A total of 3 bedrooms, all upstairs.

The room for rent looks east out over the back yard, and is 11'x13.5' About 148sqft which will rent for $450 or $550/month, depending if it's a single or couple. Room has average sized closet and large old double hung window. (It's the blue room pictured below, sorry for the low quality picture. The room is unfurnished. The rocking chair and dresser aren't included.

1 good sized bathroom (also upstairs) with full bath and shower with a great built-in for storage. Then the living room, dining room, entry way, small laundry/utility room (w/d included), and medium/large size walk-through kitchen with pantry are all down stairs.

It's a charming old farmhouse with front covered porch, back uncovered porch, old cherry tree in the back yard and a fenced garden with raised beds :) A somewhat wild yard (front and back) just waiting to be tamed into luscious Oregon gardens (which we hope to do). We have brought the farm back to the house in a sense. By raising chickens and ducks, building a coop and maintaining gardens, we're in the slow process of starting an urban farm. Hopefully we'll build a greenhouse by spring to start our years veggies, and the gardening potential is endless, really. We compost, have hopes to collect rainwater, and have dreams of solar panels.

Gas range/oven, gas furnace, and gas water heater. No dishwasher, so be comfortable doing them by hand.

Now you know about the house, here's some info on the house mates:

We're two active males who live a leisurely, but very busy, lifestyle (not to be confused with lazy) looking to share this SE house with a like minded individual or couple. We're into hiking, biking, camping and backpacking, road trips and day trips, cross country skiing, white water rafting and canoeing. We enjoy preparing home cooked meals and barbecues. We're friendly to people and animals, and sometimes find humor in their (and our) silly behavior. People watching entertains us; we enjoy spending time with friends, and making new ones. Thrift shopping excites us. Gardening, plants, and trees strengthen our collective spirit. We consider our selves open minded with the ability to empathize with others. Sunday conversations with a pot of coffee keep us grounded. One of us is self employed as a people and dog trainer. The other is a Cafe Manager at a popular eatery. We're queer, hetero, omnivore, and 420 friendly. We occasionally enjoy a cocktail after work, but rarely more than 2. We travel with an 11yo canine, who is often described by friends and strangers as a very good dog, a 2 year old canine who is clean, mostly well mannered, enjoyable to interact with and loves to play, and a 2 year old, very chill, indoor feline who manages the family. (additional animals considered on a case-by-case basis, though adding another dog to the house is pretty unlikely) We take great pride in the manners, habits, and cleanliness of our companions, as well as ourselves. Neither of us are neat freaks, but do appreciate a tidy household.

We're not into a scene; we enjoy DIY projects, occasional gatherings of friends, and generally a healthy well balanced enjoyment of life and its experiences.

Happy to enjoy interviews over a beer or tea.


Admittedly, as much as I ply him with artisanal craft ales and Stumptown coffee, the residual cynical New Yorker in me still pipes up now and again, and so a few items in this ad did give me pause. For example:

We compost, have hopes to collect rainwater...

How do you aspire to collect rainwater in Portland? This seems less like a goal than like something that's almost unavoidable. It's like saying you have hopes to collect mosquitos in summer, or you have hopes to acquire a bullet in your leg at a rap concert. Have they not managed to muster up the funds to purchase a bucket and leave it outside for a few days?

We're queer, hetero, omnivore, and 420 friendly.

Thank smugness I can seek refuge from the judgements of society in their idyllic urban farm community that has not yet "gotten it together" to stick a bucket outside. As soon as I move in I plan to take up permanent residence on the couch where I will proceed to test every limit of their politically correct tolerance by perusing heterosexual pornography, watching RuPaul's Drag Race on Logo, devouring spare ribs and vegan barley scones by the bucketful, and taking massive bong hits off of a 5 foot bong in the shape of a phallus while dressed in drag. (None of this behavior will seem odd to anybody who's attended a Cross Crusade race.)

Clearly, in Portland, tolerance has doubled over on itself like a sexually omnivorous yoga instructor performing oral sex on shimself.

I also enjoyed this:

We travel with an 11yo canine, who is often described by friends and strangers as a very good dog, a 2 year old canine who is clean, mostly well mannered, enjoyable to interact with and loves to play, and a 2 year old, very chill, indoor feline who manages the family.

I always enjoy prospective roommates who provide far too much information about their pets who, they don't seem to realize, are not people. Just say you have a couple of dogs and a cat, it's enough. Maybe specify the breed. Otherwise, most of us "get" how dogs and cats operate. Anyway, none of it matters, because if any of them bugs me while I'm "getting down" on the sofa with my ribs and my dong bong then they're going outside with the rainwater bucket.

By the way, notice that despite including a complete personality profile on both the dog and the cat they don't actually mention the sex. I suppose it would be very un-Portland to start assigning gender roles to them.

Finally though I managed to quell the knee-jerk sarcasm that they injected into me when I was born (standard practice in New York hospitals back in the 1940s when the stork "portaged" me into existence), and I'm pleased to say our urban farming community is coming along splendidly. I even procured a politically correct bamboo bucket which is collecting water (and possibly some urine) as I type this. I've also come to appreciate my roommates' painfully overbearing political correctness, which is much better than the sort of racial insensitivity you'll find up in Seattle:

I spotted this "ethnic care" section in a drugstore while I was there for the Bike Expo, and I must say I found it rather offensive--though their prices on "ethnic cleanser" were positively unbeatable.

But you know what they say: "You're not a real Portlander until you've had a case of beard lice gotten yourself a bicycle," and thanks to Craigslist I've picked up a real beaut:


Date: 2011-03-26, 8:57PM PDT
Reply to: [deleted]

Handmade Chopper bike
It is in overall ridable shape. It has back brakes (the kind that engage when you push back on the peddles)
I do not know the maker of this bike, so I cannot guarantee the structural integrity of it, but everything seems to be in good shape. Currently the tires need air and I don't have a pump to fill them up.

Selling for $50 (firm on the price). I live in North Portland near Lombard & I-5 (couple blocks from the MAX yellow line Kenton stop)

(503) 4 2 1 - [deleted]

I don't know about its integrity either, but as for my own, as a make-believe member of an urban farm community in the second-most bike friendly city in Canada's licey beard, I'm sure you'll agree its positively unimpeachable.

105 comments:

  1. Portland biodome - that made me laugh
    Is that wrong.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Fingerbang AssistantMarch 28, 2011 at 12:33 PM

    Outsmugged, no podium.

    ReplyDelete
  3. It's Lunch time !

    ReplyDelete
  4. That "ethnic cleanser" line was totally unexpected and brilliant. Off to a great start this week!

    ReplyDelete
  5. I should like to meet your sexually omnivorous yoga instructor.

    ReplyDelete
  6. missed the top ten again... I guess that means no Urine test!

    DetroitMac

    ReplyDelete
  7. "a sexually omnivorous yoga instructor performing oral sex on shimself."

    So you've discovered the left coast circle jerk of enlightment. Please share this with Ev Bogue so that he can find his nirvana.

    ReplyDelete
  8. "I must say I found it rather offensive--though their prices on "ethnic cleanser" were positively unbeatable."

    Gold Snobby, GOLD!

    ReplyDelete
  9. Quicksquirt McHurtMarch 28, 2011 at 1:02 PM

    I'd hit it.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Call me un-hip & un-cool, but WTF is 420 friendly?

    ReplyDelete
  11. marcel - it is a fondness for, or at least a tolerance of, the wednesday weed.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Incidentally 4/20 is also Hitler's birthday...

    ReplyDelete
  13. I think you're getting hosed by paying rent...after all, those two guys, their two dogs and the cat are all squatting. Figuratively, of course.

    ReplyDelete
  14. (It was anodized pink, said "King" all over it, and had a 10-year warranty.)- mwahahaha

    Snob FTW!

    ReplyDelete
  15. The only time all day I laugh out loud. It scares the dog.

    ReplyDelete
  16. It's 4:20 somewhere, right?

    Balls.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Does the BikePortland blog typically use 5 year old photos? Though I do like how they caught Mr. "Street troubador" in the act ogling "green sweater" lady's 'plumage'.

    I think that drugstore put that sign up just to piss off Bill O'Reilly though.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Puffy Peter PeckerpusherMarch 28, 2011 at 1:38 PM

    Savage, dude, savage. You wield words like blunt instruments of mass destruction. Awesome.

    The smugness culture needs a purge and you're its fucking enema. Go for it.

    ReplyDelete
  19. You must have gotten dressed for your interview at Chris King after spending quality time with your dong bong.

    Oh wait, that happened before you moved in with the neu-hippies. What were you thinking?

    ReplyDelete
  20. sorry to hear about your move. if you decide to move into the urban farm community, you may want to invest in a very strong padlock for your bedroom door. Your new roommates sounds a little scary.

    ReplyDelete
  21. I can see the self-employed people and dog trainer is already having a positive effect on your outlook. Embrace the serenity.
    OMMM MMMM

    ReplyDelete
  22. A friend of mine said, "If God was going to give the earth an enema, you know were he'd stick the tube (referring to New Jersey)."

    I guess there are better places to put the tube.

    cycle

    ReplyDelete
  23. What about the line:"..one of us is self employed as a people and dog trainer."

    New room mate RIP

    ReplyDelete
  24. hillbilly,
    Thanks, I must have nodded-off on my drug counselor, again.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Anyone know the over-under on how many wheel changes/ explosions Hushovd will experience in Paris Roubaix?

    ReplyDelete
  26. HAIL CSZR

    -P.P.

    ReplyDelete
  27. i think 'souciant' is my new word for the day. this soup is very souciant, my dear.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Please don't leave for your urban fungal farm shangri-la, your utopia of neo-hippiness, the pinnacle of smugness that is Portland.

    Besides, as its been said before, BikeSnob PDX is just redundant.

    ReplyDelete
  29. those bull moose bars on that chopper are worth more than $50 to the right collector.

    also, steve tilford always lets his readers know where he is, literally and metaphorically.

    ReplyDelete
  30. Steve Tilford does not have a dong bong, either.

    ReplyDelete
  31. "Besides, as its been said before, BikeSnob PDX is just redundant."

    But BikeSnobUSA is kind of catchy, isn't it?

    ReplyDelete
  32. I am all for copious amounts of PDX-bashing, however, the rest of the country stands in the wake of the Cross Crusade series. Don't say it too loudly...

    ReplyDelete
  33. Can your next book be about the guide to smugness? Thanks

    ReplyDelete
  34. I hope you haven't copyrighted "extracurricular smugness" (as a phrase or pursuit) because I'm going to try to use it in every conversation for the rest of my life.

    ReplyDelete
  35. I may not be better, but I'm longer.

    ReplyDelete
  36. Rocky Mountain ChuckMarch 28, 2011 at 3:48 PM

    Epic post today! Almost peed myself (Portland rain).

    Those folks looking for a roomie are actually pretty rebellious - "Beer or tea"? WTF, no coffee? Are you even allowed to not mention coffee in P-Town? Or is coffee "so Seattle"?

    p.s. It's three-card monte, not monty. This isn't "Let's Make A Deal", pal. Although Monty Hall's birth name was actually Monte Halperin so now I'm just confused and probably wrong too.

    P.p.s. there are naked people on the bikeportland site. Which is literally the tits.

    ReplyDelete
  37. anon 3:26 not to be disagreeable, but a legion of puritantical New England cyclocross'ers would disagree.

    ReplyDelete
  38. "I've done this by transcending the material plane and by realizing that physical existence is merely a state of mind--or by completely deluding myself, depending on how you look at it."

    Welcome to Portland! Indeed, the corporeal city was closed down shortly after receiving post-war Atomic Radiation.


    ...sadly, Seattle is not as progressive, as we would like to believe ourselves. Yes, we have "Ethnic Care" aisles in the drugstores, right down the street from the museum hosting unclaimed items from the Japanese internments. [sad] Thank you for exposing the disgusting irony this creates. Maybe now we can get this changed!

    If you'll excuse me, I have to go vacationing in Portland for the afternoon..

    ReplyDelete
  39. @ Rocky Mountain Chuck: "P-Town" is in Massachusetts, on Cape Cod. Provincetown, AKA, P'town.
    Get it straight!

    ReplyDelete
  40. Come on, Snob, can't you get the "Just Kidding" babe to take off her top? Or substitute the naked recumbent chic? I'll tell you, I was really disappointed. I was hoping to use one of your numbers to subscribe to a fixie porn site where the girls do things with their bikes that are illegal everywhere but California and New York.

    ReplyDelete
  41. Dad gum it. This was funny today.

    ReplyDelete
  42. If you see what looks like a giant lizard swimming in that bamboo bucket, it's actually the Smug Ness Monster.

    ReplyDelete
  43. Snob, you're slipping. You overlooked a tremendously make-fun-of-able sentence: "Hopefully we'll build a greenhouse by spring to start our years veggies"? Fortunately, the English (teacher) curmudgeon is happy to lend a hand. Not only does this pair apparently not have a clue what to do with their apostrophe's (apostrophes--ha!), but they don't know the word "hopefully" means "in a hopeful manner," as in "I clicked hopefully on the "just kidding" link in Snob's latest post, only to find that the girl is still not topless.

    ReplyDelete
  44. We don't own this house, but treat it as if we do, and are looking for someone that will do the same.

    That is gold.

    We once owned a duplex in pre-smug Austin. We had a tenant that was really pissed off we didn't want him back, since he had such big ideas for remodeling his rented unit. Still, it's not like he wanted to build a greenhouse and turn the yard into a farm, he just wanted to move a few walls.

    Balls.

    ReplyDelete
  45. Those hyper-sexed neo-hippies used "feel good" thrice in one sentence. They're looking for sex slaves.

    ReplyDelete
  46. No mention of how many strip clubs, more micro breweries per capita and forest park?
    This is why I live here.

    -angry dragon

    ReplyDelete
  47. Angry Dragon 'You're Fired!'

    ReplyDelete
  48. ...hmmm...i'm bettin' it's gonna have to read bikesmugpdx/rtms...

    ...what's to be snobbish about when we know everyone in pdx rides $6,000 town bikes ???...

    ...& whereas in nyc, where he's 'just another anon schlub on a bike', in portland, bsnyc/rtms will be deified under his new moniker & have to attend weekly 'cycling - we're like gods - awareness seminars' where the locals will hang on his every word...

    ...at least bsnyc/rtms can get all those friendly pdx "we move households by bike" folks to ride to nyc & help he n' ladysnob & the little bikesnobers to make the westward trek (whoops)...

    ...just sayin'...

    ReplyDelete
  49. Oh.. you'll get it in P-Town, but it won't be straight.

    ReplyDelete
  50. ...btw...that craigslist "roommate" posting was so complicated & involved, it's like having lived with them for a year already...

    ...aren't you ready to move on to new digs, bikesmugpdx ???...

    ReplyDelete
  51. Snobby, if you move to Portland, your blogs will become so insanely long from the abundance of material, most of us won't have time to read it anymore. Not to mention, that New York edginess will fade away into a week full of Wednesdays. It's a career killer.

    Oh, and Anon 1:11, premature invocation of Godwin's Law. -10 points.

    ReplyDelete
  52. New england (laugh track) cyclecross racers are wussie roadies.
    Some of these guys get dropped and let the air out of there tire and claim mishap.
    Wussies!

    -angry dragon

    ReplyDelete
  53. Portland is cool.
    Not often that you can hang around positive and progressive humans and girls that don't wear many clothes and guys that have fat beards and the best weed and like making breakfast anytime of day and like looking at the bloated rats and banana slugs while we are tripping on acid in the forest park.

    ReplyDelete
  54. ...angry dickhead...

    ..you're really stretchin' it to get responses, aren't you ???...

    ...are your friends impressed ???...

    ReplyDelete
  55. PDX is loaded with GGWB.
    Gay guys with beards.
    Be careful snob!

    ReplyDelete
  56. You can park your bike at my place.

    Angie at suicidegirls.com

    ReplyDelete
  57. Yoda{of Portlandia}March 28, 2011 at 7:09 PM

    Love 4:20, I do. Beer or tea? Down with that, I am.

    ReplyDelete
  58. BGW guy...recumbants are not bikes unless you can have a sixer holder on each side...sixers of PBR.
    After that I might let you join the club.

    -angry dragon

    ReplyDelete
  59. Snob-dex

    Are you stuck in that Love/Hate with New York, I mean Brooklyn?

    Don't worry you packfodder, we love you just the same. You are ours.

    ReplyDelete
  60. Ending a statement with a question mark? Its the passive aggressive tone the west coast likes to take cause they're so chiiiiillll? And yet another Canadian thing Americans have stolen? Except Canadians speak that way without the douchefuckery.

    PS Thank God for the Five-Boro-Born Sarcasm Vaccine

    ReplyDelete
  61. "Dragon Breath"
    Angry, I am
    I keep putting
    Foot in my mouth
    Burnin' toejam.

    ReplyDelete
  62. The only bad attention is the attention I don't get.

    -angry dragon

    ReplyDelete
  63. It's been a long week.

    ReplyDelete
  64. Uh, yeah. Hey, my lighter's not working.

    ReplyDelete
  65. ...angry douchedrag-on sez "bgw...blah, blah, blah...I might let you join the club."...

    ...son, i started any club you'll ever be in...fact...

    ...& all my bikes are way nicer than yours...way...

    ReplyDelete
  66. ...& btw, angry dildo ???...(see that ???...old canadian habit, ending statements with a question, ehhh)...

    ...all my bikes are equipped with 'selle italia - flites'...i don't sit in chairs to ride bikes...

    ...now, go wash yer mouth out w/ soap...

    ReplyDelete
  67. I'm just another ugly parasite with nothing to offer. Ignore me.

    -angry bongturd

    ReplyDelete
  68. You gotta admit the sincerity of these young folks is at least cute.
    I always felt Portland was a poor cousin to Tulsa, even after living hear all my adult life. Why anyone would want to come here escapes me. Its not that the bike scene here is so good,its just that its really abysmal in so many other places. Don't even think about moving to Portland.. we have too many attitude-cyclists, chiropractors and cooking school graduates. Cedar Rapids needs your love. New Orleans could use some fresh blood. Portland could use a dose of sanity, but i doubt we will get it anytime soon.
    Snob, if you really must come out, my old lady says you can have one of the kids old rooms, but you gotta clean up after yourself.
    You'd go nuts with them kids over off Powell, the gay boyz with the dogs. I would too.

    ReplyDelete
  69. btw, UPS is hiring package chuckers. You only get 4 hours a shift, but its early morning so it won't screw up your social life.. Dad.

    ReplyDelete
  70. I almost fell for that Portland house share listing.

    But then I remembered, one doesn't collect rainwater. One curates it with strategically placed containers under one's leaky roof that the landlord refuses to fix.

    ReplyDelete
  71. BikeSnobNYC: Il principe del snark

    ReplyDelete
  72. BSNYC: Il Principe del Snark. Bella.

    ReplyDelete
  73. Nice article, thanks for the information.

    ReplyDelete
  74. Finally, bikes, babes, beer and burlesque — all in one place
    http://www.brooklynpaper.com/stories/34/13/24_bikeburlesque_2011_4_1_bk.html

    ReplyDelete
  75. Yo snob, that should be lousy beard.

    ReplyDelete
  76. This is about the funniest sh*t I've ever read, man! Keep 'em coming!

    ReplyDelete
  77. I wonder how much Rapha had to pay that poor kid to dress up in the dork suit. I hope he got a big chunk o' change for his college fund. The wig looks like a prop from some hipster production of The Scarlet Pimpernel.

    ReplyDelete
  78. I am waiting for Portland to become as "cool" as punk, so that we can all get the [bleep] over it already.
    Maybe then people will stop moving here.

    ReplyDelete
  79. wow, everybody's wrists must be sore from jerking you off so much...

    I can smell your jealousy from here.

    ReplyDelete
  80. its true, its all true. the bikesnob is jealous and the majority of portlanders are either closeted or secretly junkies. yeah, I said it.

    ReplyDelete
  81. Animal-friendly omnivores. Uh-huh.

    ReplyDelete
  82. Not street smart, just smart smart.

    ReplyDelete
  83. It was surprisingly easy, too. First, I created an artificial Portland habitat in my home by purchasing a humidifier which I fill with Stumptown coffee instead of water. Then, I set all my clocks back by three and a half hours. (Portland is an additional half hour behind the rest of the western United States.) Reseller Hosting in Pakistan

    ReplyDelete
  84. Just say you have a couple of dogs and a cat, it's enough. Maybe specify the breed. Otherwise, most of us "get" how dogs and cats operate. Thanks a lot for shearing.Web hosting in Pakistan

    ReplyDelete
  85. That i originated onto your webpage despite the fact that highlighting basically just a bit submits. Fine strategy for after that, I am bookmarking at any one time take an individual's finished increases.
    advantanges of a virtual office

    ReplyDelete
  86. It was surprisingly easy, too. First, I created an artificial Portland habitat in my home by purchasing a humidifier which I fill with Stumptown coffee instead of water. Then, I set all my clocks back by three and a half hours.Web hosting in Pakistan

    ReplyDelete
  87. Virtual reality has always suffered from the perception that it's little more than a glorified arcade game..

    Virtual reality exhibit

    ReplyDelete
  88. I have traveled back in time from your post-link time travel device on 2 21 2018. I missed this one the first time around. very funny. Thanks for sharing, etc.

    ReplyDelete