Trump wrote:
The Irishman wrote:
Snowflake
What does that mean?
Look in the mirror.
Trump wrote:
The Irishman wrote:
Snowflake
What does that mean?
Look in the mirror.
I just luv him wrote:
My president and I wish only bad things for liberals.
FAKE NEWS!
❌
CriminalTrump wrote:
Trump wrote:
What does that mean?
Look in the mirror.
?
Criminal Trump wrote:
CriminalTrump wrote:
Look in the mirror.
?
?
CriminalTrump wrote:
Trump wrote:
What does that mean?
Look in the mirror.
I’m sorry!
I’m a jagoff!
[bjamin wrote:
I’m a jagoff!
True
Where are you from in the US?
Greg wrote:
Where are you from in the US?
Not sure if you are asking me, but I reside in the grand metropolis of Houston. Home of the 7th wonder of the world (Astrodome) and not a great place to run in the summer.
Oh I was asking the other poster who it appears may be trolling themselves.
Houston, wow, I have a relative there. Hot and muggy as I understand.
I am from Edmonton which is the most northern city in north america with a metro population around 1 million. I have never been to Houston but I've been to New Orleans, Miami, Los Angeles, Seattle, Pocatello Idaho, and now NYC.
My dad was a big Randy Johnson fan, he played for the Astros I remember but they clunked in the playoffs that one year.
Greg wrote:
Oh I was asking the other poster who it appears may be trolling themselves.
Houston, wow, I have a relative there. Hot and muggy as I understand.
I am from Edmonton which is the most northern city in north america with a metro population around 1 million. I have never been to Houston but I've been to New Orleans, Miami, Los Angeles, Seattle, Pocatello Idaho, and now NYC.
My dad was a big Randy Johnson fan, he played for the Astros I remember but they clunked in the playoffs that one year.
Cool. Actually I was born in Brooklyn. Randy Johnson was a great acquisition that year - I think he was 11-1 with a microscopic ERA for the team.
Sally Vix wrote:
Greg wrote:
I haven't achieved noteworthy commercial success. Yet. To suggest I haven't done anything sounds silly, you haven't met me, can only guage from my posts or what you may believe about me.
But thank-you, I wish the best for you to. I wish the best for most people.
I have never said that you will never achieve success. I suggested that your career up to now has not included much success but, just like Van Gogh, don't count Greg out. People have success at various times in their lives.
Here are some people who achieved success later in their lives ...
1. Martha Stewart
Stewart had worked on Wall Street and owned a Connecticut catering firm, but her real success came after age 41 with the publication of her first book, Entertaining, and the launch of Martha Stewart Living seven years later. (Of course, she weathered some pitfalls later, before rebounding once more.)
2. Joy Behar
Known today as a former co-host on The View, Behar was a high school English teacher who didn't launch her show business career until after age 40.
3. Vera Wang
Wang was first known as an accomplished figure skater and a fashion editor before deciding before her 1989 wedding, at age 40, that she wanted to be a designer. She commissioned her own wedding dress for $10,000 and opened her first bridal boutique the following year.
4. Tim and Nina Zagat
This husband and wife team had each turned 42 before they gave up their legal careers to write their first restaurant guides. Their eponymous company is part of Google now.
5. Robin Chase
The founder and former CEO of Zipcar had left her 40th birthday in the rearview mirror and was taking time off from work to be with her children when she and a friend, Antje Danielson, came up with the idea for the car-sharing company in 2000.
6. Harland Sanders
Sanders was "a failure who got fired from a dozen jobs before starting his restaurant, and then failed at that when he went out of business and found himself broke at the age of 65," according to one account. But then things worked out when he sold the first Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise in 1952.
7. Rodney Dangerfield
The late, great comedic actor was best known for his roles in 1980s movies like Caddyshack and Back to School, but he was 46 before he got his first big break--on the Ed Sullivan Show.
8. Duncan Hines
At age 55, he wrote his first food and hotel guides (including one that mentioned Sanders Court and Caf, the original restaurant owned by Harlan Sanders, above). At age 73, licensed the right to use his name to the company that developed Duncan Hines cake mixes; unfortunately he died six years later.
9. Charles Darwin
He was 50 years old before he published On the Origin of the Species in 1859, the book that espoused the theory for which he best known today. (The Darwin Awards came much later.)
10. Samuel Jackson
Jackson 46 years old (and in recovery from addiction to cocaine and heroin) before he starred alongside John Travolta in Pulp Fiction.
11. Donald Fisher
At age 41, after a series of entrepreneurial ventures, Fisher and his wife Doris Fisher founded The Gap. It's now a $16 billion a year company with more than 3,200 locations worldwide.
12. Ray Kroc
Kroc had passed his 50th birthday before he bought the first McDonald's in 1961, which he ultimately expanded into a worldwide conglomerate.
13. Sam Walton
Although he'd owned a small chain of discount stores, Walton opened the first true Wal-Mart in 1962, when he was 44.
14. Julia Child
Her first cookbook was published when she was 39; she made her television debut in The French Chef at age 51.
Don't tell me you were not either nice to Greg or pretending to be nice. You compared his career to Van Gogh. That is praise. Now since I called you a Rhino you claim you were not being nice just being funny.
And here you are being nice again. You are not one of us.
^^^^^^^^^
Snowflake
Trump wrote:
I just luv him wrote:
My president and I wish only bad things for liberals.
FAKE NEWS!
❌
Are you a Rhino or are you pretending to be a nice person. Name one time our great president said something nice about liberals. When have you said something nice about liberals.
You and I don't do that. We make fun of them. That's who we are.
I am proud of the way our president attacks and ridicules those who don't support him.
I just luv him. wrote:
Sally Vix wrote:
I have never said that you will never achieve success. I suggested that your career up to now has not included much success but, just like Van Gogh, don't count Greg out. People have success at various times in their lives.
Here are some people who achieved success later in their lives ...
1. Martha Stewart
Stewart had worked on Wall Street and owned a Connecticut catering firm, but her real success came after age 41 with the publication of her first book, Entertaining, and the launch of Martha Stewart Living seven years later. (Of course, she weathered some pitfalls later, before rebounding once more.)
2. Joy Behar
Known today as a former co-host on The View, Behar was a high school English teacher who didn't launch her show business career until after age 40.
3. Vera Wang
Wang was first known as an accomplished figure skater and a fashion editor before deciding before her 1989 wedding, at age 40, that she wanted to be a designer. She commissioned her own wedding dress for $10,000 and opened her first bridal boutique the following year.
4. Tim and Nina Zagat
This husband and wife team had each turned 42 before they gave up their legal careers to write their first restaurant guides. Their eponymous company is part of Google now.
5. Robin Chase
The founder and former CEO of Zipcar had left her 40th birthday in the rearview mirror and was taking time off from work to be with her children when she and a friend, Antje Danielson, came up with the idea for the car-sharing company in 2000.
6. Harland Sanders
Sanders was "a failure who got fired from a dozen jobs before starting his restaurant, and then failed at that when he went out of business and found himself broke at the age of 65," according to one account. But then things worked out when he sold the first Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise in 1952.
7. Rodney Dangerfield
The late, great comedic actor was best known for his roles in 1980s movies like Caddyshack and Back to School, but he was 46 before he got his first big break--on the Ed Sullivan Show.
8. Duncan Hines
At age 55, he wrote his first food and hotel guides (including one that mentioned Sanders Court and Caf, the original restaurant owned by Harlan Sanders, above). At age 73, licensed the right to use his name to the company that developed Duncan Hines cake mixes; unfortunately he died six years later.
9. Charles Darwin
He was 50 years old before he published On the Origin of the Species in 1859, the book that espoused the theory for which he best known today. (The Darwin Awards came much later.)
10. Samuel Jackson
Jackson 46 years old (and in recovery from addiction to cocaine and heroin) before he starred alongside John Travolta in Pulp Fiction.
11. Donald Fisher
At age 41, after a series of entrepreneurial ventures, Fisher and his wife Doris Fisher founded The Gap. It's now a $16 billion a year company with more than 3,200 locations worldwide.
12. Ray Kroc
Kroc had passed his 50th birthday before he bought the first McDonald's in 1961, which he ultimately expanded into a worldwide conglomerate.
13. Sam Walton
Although he'd owned a small chain of discount stores, Walton opened the first true Wal-Mart in 1962, when he was 44.
14. Julia Child
Her first cookbook was published when she was 39; she made her television debut in The French Chef at age 51.
Don't tell me you were not either nice to Greg or pretending to be nice. You compared his career to Van Gogh. That is praise. Now since I called you a Rhino you claim you were not being nice just being funny.
And here you are being nice again. You are not one of us.
I never compared Greg's career to Van Gogh. Sheeessh. I never compared the two career-wise. Vincent Van Gogh had no commercial success while he was alive. He maybe sold 1 painting and he maybe sold ZERO paintings. Greg has not sold his manuscript yet. AGain,, I am not even sure what he is peddling. But I never compared his career success to Van Gogh. I am only saying that Van Gogh has pretty much no success until after his death and Greg's success might be later as well.
Sally Vix wrote:
Cool. Actually I was born in Brooklyn. Randy Johnson was a great acquisition that year - I think he was 11-1 with a microscopic ERA for the team.
Wierd how everything is connected. I have not gone to the borough of Brooklyn yet. One of the hotel security I talked with yesterday said Patrick Stewart is his neighbour and he lives in Brooklyn.
My relative in Houston, I won't say who they are but they are one of the reasons I got into track.
They were quite good at a young age.
As for New Orleans, that was for my 2nd cruise contract. A friend I met on the ship is now in NYC. I was going to meet him but guess what, he just returend from China and is not suppose to go out yet as a precaution.
As for Seattle, I first went there back in 1996 with my Dad because we wanted to see R. Johnson pitch (but he was injured).
Anyways, maybe that sounds like a lot of info, but I love to talk (sometimes) and this is one of those times. lol
Congratulations on mastering the piano, I am jealous.
Sally Vix wrote:
Greg wrote:
Where are you from in the US?
Not sure if you are asking me, but I reside in the grand metropolis of Houston. Home of the 7th wonder of the world (Astrodome) and not a great place to run in the summer.
That would be the 8th wonder of the world. I'm surprised it's still around. Without a pro team it can't possibly pay the bills.
That blight on mankind, Candlestick Park, has been razed. It was butt-ugly and was the coldest place in America during the Summer.
Haha, I haven't mastered it, you can always get better, but I did get bored of it. I literally have played maybe a few hours in the last several years. No gigs since 2012. 1 I think in 2013. None since.
Now after a long break I am eager to get back into it, I went to look at a piano on Tuesday.
SDSU Aztec wrote:
Sally Vix wrote:
Not sure if you are asking me, but I reside in the grand metropolis of Houston. Home of the 7th wonder of the world (Astrodome) and not a great place to run in the summer.
That would be the 8th wonder of the world. I'm surprised it's still around. Without a pro team it can't possibly pay the bills.
That blight on mankind, Candlestick Park, has been razed. It was butt-ugly and was the coldest place in America during the Summer.
My bad, Aztec. Nice catch on your part. We Houstonians have been wrestling with what to do with the Astrodome. They have had many proposals. The Astrodome sits right next to NRG stadium and is absolutely dwarfed by NRG. To demolish the Astrodome would cost so much - like $70 million - about the same as needed to demolish Yankee stadium because of the way it was built.
Greg wrote:
Haha, I haven't mastered it, you can always get better, but I did get bored of it. I literally have played maybe a few hours in the last several years. No gigs since 2012. 1 I think in 2013. None since.
Now after a long break I am eager to get back into it, I went to look at a piano on Tuesday.
Greg, I was a decent guitar player when I was younger and attempted to learn piano. But, if anyone is not playing for others like as a money-making venture, do you really want to spend 8 hours a day practicing just to be a great pianist just for your self? If you can't play for others, one will never have the desire to improve their playing ability.