Favorite team:
Location:
Biography:
Interests:
Occupation:
Number of Posts:87
Registered on:4/21/2026
Online Status:Not Online

Recent Posts

Message

re: QBs drafted since 2000

Posted by Crash Bandicoot on 4/27/26 at 11:30 am to
quote:

And?

The guys on that list won 3 national championships at LSU.
Big men around boys.

Average around other big men.

re: QBs drafted since 2000

Posted by Crash Bandicoot on 4/27/26 at 11:21 am to
quote:

2 LSU qb's are NFL starters right now.
...and have the same number of Super Bowls as the clipboard holders.

No LSU QB has ever started a Super Bowl and won. :lol:
quote:

Y'all, please don't derail a thread like this. Yell at each other in another thread.
When you actually know people who have lost their lives in a tornado. When you have actually had your property damaged or destroyed in one.

You aren't very tolerant of people that say, "That don't sound like it happned." :dunno:
quote:

Okay. What does any of that have to do with his exaggerations?
:rolleyes:

"Remember, when you are dead, you do not know you are dead. It is only painful for others. The same applies when you are stupid" - unknown
quote:

"We get a call from this lady who says she has storm damage and her house is destroyed. We plot her on this big map in our office and it's over a mile from the path of the storm. So we send someone out. And when they pull up they find a 45 foot steel beam has cut her house in two. It had been dangling from a construction crane at the new hospital renovation. And it flew basically over a mile and landed in this lady's house."

Also I remember later that summer flying from Jackson MS to Atlanta. And looking down over rural east Mississippi, and seeing the scar from the storm. It was perfectly straight. It looked like an interstate highway running at an odd angle over 100 miles right into downtown Tuscaloosa
quote:

This seems like some pretty wild exaggerations.

You don't have to show your stupidity in every thread. It's well documented by now. :rolleyes:

A tornado can bury a piece of straw in a brick. If you get caught in a tornado the wind doesn't kill you. Boards, bricks, cars, cows and everything else flying through the air and hitting you does the trick.

Unlike hurricanes where you get a month long notice a tonado is like, "We have a tornado warning...and there that MFer is..."
quote:

If that is near ringold ga those mountains/hills are 400 feet tall from where they tornado started.

How does elevation affect tornadoes?

The tornado that killed so many in DeKalb County, AL started on top of Sand Mountain. It walked right down the mountainside and wrecked Trenton, GA at the bottom.
quote:

Are their prostitutes/escorts that only service attractive men?

One of these men (far left) was a gay escort trading his mouth and arse for cocaine.

The guy next to the gay dude traded movie roles for arse to prostitutes. He is definitely unattractive. Now in prison as he was no longer beneficial to the two guys on each end.

Guy three id dead.

Guy on the far right is definitely not attractive. Name was featured prominently in Hollywood Madam, Heidi Fleiss', black book. He was a very regular customer.



Your answer is NO. They are there for the money not a husband.
quote:

1. American Flag
Damn proud to be an American
quote:

2. Confederate Flag
Damn proud to be the great-great grandson of one of Nathan Beford Forrest's cavalrymen. Forrest's cousin to be exact. He did not survive the War of Northern Aggression.
quote:

3. Tennessee Flag
Damn straight I am from the Volunteer State.


quote:

4. Gay Flag

quote:

5. Add a fith one

My neighbor who passed about 6 years ago, was a former Vietnam POW. He flew this flag 24/7/365. Some gave all.

quote:

15 years ago today on April 27, 2011 a tornado went through Tuscaloosa
Tornados went through everywhere.

We had three rounds in Tennessee. The DeKalb County area in N. Alabama lost 30+ people in round one. Ringgold GA/Apison TN lost 20+ in round three.

A friend of mine called his mother because he knew she was in the path in Cleveland, TN during round three. Her last words were, "it's on me", and the line went dead.
He and several family members jumped in their cars to head to her home. He walked past her three times. Some other rescuers lifted a door and some debris, and found her body. He says to this day, "God let me walk past her so I wouldn't see her like that."

Round one I was looking out my back door. Trees and telephone poles started laying down. I ran for cover. When it was over we all started coming out to survey damage. A neighbor who retired from the local electric utility took a look around and said, "week to ten days, folks...minimum". It was nine days before power was restored. Never was so glad to see a bunch of guys from Ohio as I was on day nine when the lineman showed up.

My wife and I rented a hotel room that afternoon. A few hours later round three came through and the EF4 tornado passed less than a half mile away. The entire hotel, guests and staff, were huddled in the lobby. Lights went out and you could hear debris striking the windows and building. Some were praying. Most of us just sat silently until it passed. When an EF4 is close by, you realize what an insignificant little nothing you are in the Earth's grand scheme.

One 9 year old in Apison was with his grandmother in a mobile home. She made him get into the bathtub and covered his body with hers. He survived, she did not. He said the last thing he remembered was beiing pushed along the ground like he was being dragged behind a car. It tore him all to hell, but he did recover.

quote:

In the evening hours of April 27, 2011, a violent and long-tracked multi-vortex tornado impacted several communities along a 54 miles (87 km) path through northern Georgia and southeast Tennessee, including Ringgold, Georgia, Apison, Tennessee and Cleveland, Tennessee. The tornado, which was on the ground for 52 minutes and became known as the Ringgold–Apison tornado or The Monster,killed over twenty people while having windspeeds that were estimated to have been as high as 190 miles per hour (310 km/h). The tornado was part of the largest outbreak of tornadoes in recorded history, and was the deadliest to hit Georgia during the outbreak.

The tornado touched down in rural Catoosa County, Georgia near Rock Spring, where it slowly intensified and damaged trees before crossing Jackson Lake and entering into Ringgold, where it damaged several commercial buildings and later residential homes. Nine people were killed in Ringgold as the tornado devastated the town at EF3 intensity, and hundreds of buildings were destroyed before the tornado crossed into Hamilton County, Tennessee before impacting Apison, where eight people were killed and EF4 damage was inflicted to several homes.




re: Good series LSU

Posted by Crash Bandicoot on 4/27/26 at 8:00 am to
quote:

Another douche bag. You realize that we took 2 of 3 from sad arse Vols this year when we played you in that kiddy field . Less then a month ago,

Folks, this is as bad of an attack of Little Dick Disease as you're ever gonna see. :rotflmao:

re: Diego Pavia

Posted by Crash Bandicoot on 4/26/26 at 1:08 am to
quote:

Ease up. Good grief lots of hate going on here. Last season Pavia and Vamdy knocked off 4 ranked opponents and won 10 games. Hats off for doing something I never thought I’d see in my life.
He is a cow college idiot. He doesn't know how to act in public, much less online.

re: Diego Pavia

Posted by Crash Bandicoot on 4/26/26 at 1:07 am to
quote:


We didn’t need an AI summary for a fricking joke, frickhead.
frick you, low IQ cow college pile of bullshite.

re: Diego Pavia

Posted by Crash Bandicoot on 4/26/26 at 12:43 am to
quote:

That was the word many years ago when Peabody had lower admissions requirements.

Peabody College (Vanderbilt) is not necessarily easier to get into; while its acceptance rates might be slightly higher than Vanderbilt’s College of Arts & Science, it is extremely competitive due to its top-ranked status and targeted, "angled" applicant pool. The Human and Organizational Development (HOD) major is particularly difficult, often rivaling other competitive schools.

Key Takeaways for Admission:

Highly Selective: Peabody is a top-10 graduate school of education and highly prestigious, making it difficult for undergraduate admission, according to insights shared on Forbes.

Angled Interests Matter: You must demonstrate specific interest in education or human development; general applicants may be rejected.

HOD Major Competition: The HOD major is one of the hardest to get into, with very low transfer rates in recent years.

Smaller Size: Peabody is smaller than the College of Arts & Science.

Alternative Programs: Other Peabody programs may be less difficult, but the high quality attracts strong applicants.

re: Diego Pavia

Posted by Crash Bandicoot on 4/25/26 at 10:59 pm to
quote:

Probably got admitted through Peabody!

You obviously don't know shite about Peabody.

re: Diego Pavia

Posted by Crash Bandicoot on 4/25/26 at 10:33 pm to
quote:

Greatest Heisman runner-up of all time...

Went undrafted due to hate and bigotry.... Just needed to get that off my chest...
SidewalkAssSniffer and some UGA idiot named Porter will be in here to argue with you about it.
Lota Cheek of Pavo, GA.

She won $1,000 which was about $18,000 in today’s spending money and went on to become a model and broadway actress.

She passed away in 1978 at the age of 79 in Tuscon, AZ.

"Learn to code."

Was there anything that Democrat POS was right about? :lol: