Whether it's your first Bonnaroo or you’re a music festival veteran, we welcome you to Inforoo.
Here you'll find info about artists, rumors, camping tips, and the infamous Roo Clues. Have a look around then create an account and join in the fun. See you at Bonnaroo!!
Thanks. We all have gifts and my gifts is creating life-changing fantasy Phish setlists.
What are your favorite board/card games?
I've had more fun playing Balderdash than any other game. For those who don't know, I think the rules of Balderdash is you pick a card and the card has a real word on it with a real definition, but it's always a weird word. You read the word and everybody writes down a fake definition for the word, but the real definition is also written down. All the definitions are thrown in the basket. All the definitions are read, then you take turns deciding which definition is the real one. You earn a point if you guess the correct definition, and you get a point everytime somebody chooses your "balderdash" definition. But whenever we play the game always devolves into trying to make everyone laugh instead of trying to write a plausible definition. My most infamous moment was when the word was "puccoon" and my definition was "a racoon's pussy". I'm still very proud of that balderdash definition.
Did or do you play any sports?
Not since grade school. Played basketball and soccer. Once high school started I got into other extracurriculars so my parents finally let me off the sports hook. I did the school's literary magazine, theater, was class president, etc.
Favorite sci-Fi author? Books?
I think Neal Stephenson is my favorite. Reading his books, in addition to being wildly creative and thoroughly entertaining, is like watching a ridiculously talented musician play live, because when I'm reading his stuff I have no idea how he is getting all this information on the page. I love his most recent book Seveneves, and his Baroque Cycle of books are some of my favorites (but that's alt history). Big fan of Cryptonomicon and Reamde as well.
Jeff Vandermeer's "City of Saints and Madmen" is one of my all time favorites.
In recent years I've been loving James S.A. Corey's Expanse novels.
Iain Banks Culture novels are GOAT status in terms of sci-fi, IMO.
Who was your favorite K-12 teacher, and why?
A few favorites, but the one I always mention was actually the basketball coach at our school. He taught us AP literature, but all we did was talk about existential philosophy and murder. Turns out dude coached basketball but had the IQ of a genius, and left shortly thereafter to pursue his PhD. He was thoughtful, fascinating, and funny, and treated us like adults and cared about what we said. Better than most college classes I took.
What is your second favorite band?
Either Ween or Joy Divison/New Order. I'm a big song guy and I love their songwriting chops. Probably Ween though since I enjoy more of their songs.
How do you approach difficult decisions?
For some reason one of the most difficult things I had to learn to do was ask for help. Ask for other people's input, take suggestions. Not necessarily do what is suggested every time, but to ask and listen with an open mind. I try to keep a large amount of friends with a variety of experiences, so I can always reach out and try to learn from the experiences of others.
Beyond that I've made lots of pros and cons lists. Writing things down and seeing them in black and white has some power.
If the moon were made of barbecue spare ribs, would you eat it?
Unfortunately no, because if I took one spare rib and disrupted the structural integrity of the moon, it could break apart and start falling on the earth, then we'd have the spare rib apocalypse because spare ribs would block out the sun and life on earth would die. So I'd have to resist that temptation.
What is your favorite family tradition?
Watching Auburn football with my wife, mom, dad, sister, brother-in-law, and nieces. We grill something and make a bunch of awesome sides and my sister makes a dope cake of some kind. Always a ton of fun. This same group used to go to Disney World about once a year, but I think those days might be over, I think my parents have hit the age where they just don't want to deal with the walking and the crowds. Man we had great times in Disney though.
What nationality are your family, and do you celebrate those cultures in any way?
Norwegian. Zero celebration of the culture.
What is your least favorite household chore?
Not sure if I really have a least favorite? Not saying I love doing any chores, but there isn't one I can think of that I particularly despise. I used to hate folding clothes until I read the Magic of Tidying Up and started using her method, now I take a unusual amount of pleasure out of having my clothes neatly folded and stored.
Would you buy a robot to be your slave?
I don't think so. I've read too many sci fi books dealing with the topic of "artificial" consciousness to have a robot I could order around. I'd totally have like a robot buddy that didn't mind helping out around the house and chilling out and stuff. Like he wouldn't be my slave but if I was like "look robot buddy you live here for free, you plug into our wall for your electricity etc, how about you vacuum when Melody and I are at work?" and I'm sure if he was a down dude he'd be cool with that.
Did you see gwar at bonnaroo? I didn't, and I regret it.
Nah that was 2010, I wasn't at roo that year. I'm sure it was amazing. I have never seen Gwar live.
Favorite bonnaroo you've attended? Got any good non-music stories from bonnaroo?
Dunno if I can pick a favorite year, always seems like the most recent year is my fondest memory. Not saying 2016 was my favorite but it was a really really good time, helped greatly by the smaller crowd and the great headliners. I can say 2015 was definitely my least favorite year. I saw some great shows and had fun of course, but I was very aware that the magic was lacking. The scheduling really hurt that year in my opinion. 2012 was my first roo since 2004, it was pretty amazing being back after all that time.
I've told this story before, but at Bonnaroo 2013 I saw this young crunchy dude go up to a group of young girls and ask which tent John McLaughlin was playing in. They said sorry, they didn't know, and he launched into a tirade about how they probably didn't even know who John McLaughlin was, and he was the best artist playing at Roo this year and it was sad they didn't even know who he was, and they were probably going to see Passion Pit, and of course he said all of this with disgust in his voice like a total dick while these poor girls just stared at him (he didn't even let them get a word in edgewise, just started lecturing them).
So I approached him with my schedule and told him where McLaughlin was playing, and we talked for a while about how John McLaughlin is the best artist playing Bonnaroo this year, then he asked me if I was going to stick around Sunday. I said, "I dunno man I like Tom Petty and have seen him before but I'm usually pretty tired by Sunday night" and dude said "Nah man you gotta stick around for Panic!" I paused and said "dude widespread panic is not at bonnaroo this year" and he laughed and was like "man Panic closes out Bonnaroo EVERY year" and I looked at him and told him that was definitely not the case, that Panic does not always close out Bonnaroo and in fact hadn't even played at Bonnaroo for a few years, and that Tom Petty was closing Bonnaroo this year. I swear I blew this kids mind, and a look of total despondency came over his face, he was totally crushed that he wasn't going to see Widespread Panic this weekend.
I love that this guy decided to go to Bonnaroo, purchased a ticket to Bonnaroo, arrived at Bonnaroo where he was provided a schedule detailing the artists playing Bonnaroo, and somehow spent 1-2 days walking around Bonnaroo thinking Widespread Panic was playing. And he wants to look down his nose at someone else's musical preferences? Suck a dick dumb shit.
Does it have to be "iced coffee weather" to drink an iced coffee?
Definitely not, I love my cold brew anytime. But to be clear I'm not a big iced coffee guy, I drink my cold brew without ice. Melting ice takes away the flavor of coffee.
Shower in the morning or at night?
I shower before I sleep whenever possible, I hate being in bed with sticky or oily skin. I can't have sticky legs when I sleep. Rarely shower in the morning but every now and again I do.
What do you eat for breakfast?
Varies wildly. In the past several months I went on some unhealthy kicks, got into the Chick Fil Et thing for a bit, chicken minis and chicken burritos and what have you, but I don't like the way I feel after I eat there. Got into a doughnut thing too, because recently a good doughnut place opened up down the road. But lately I'm focusing more on eating at home, I love eggs and sausage or eggs and bacon. My favorite is to put some ghee in the pan (recently discovered ghee, I love this shit) and do some scrambled eggs with grilled onions and broccoli, with some raw green onions over the top. Crumble some bacon up in there and that is some good eatin! But then sometimes I'll just do fruit, had sliced banana with blueberries and almond butter bowl this morning, it was great.
What is the most important tangible object that you own?
Boring answer but my cell phone no doubt. I am an internet junkie, and am still amazed I can carry the internet in my pocket. Beyond that my speakers and my TV. I don't have many tangible objects with sentimental value. I have all my ticket stubs but they just sit in a drawer. My wedding ring cost me $12 on amazon.
OK just thought of something tangible with sentimental value, when Melody and I got married we had a totally secular ceremony and a good friend of ours got ordained and married us (again, this is the same friend who we went to birmingham to see last weekend, they are coming up a lot in this thread). Him and his wife wrote up the ceremony and had the notes for it in a book during the ceremony. We found out later it was a Big Book (AA text) and they had it redone in this beautiful abstract cover, and had everyone at our wedding sign it in lieu of a guest book. Kind of a culty story but it's a really cool thing to have, and makes me happy whenever I see it.
BUT if someone told me I had to choose between having that book or never having a cell phone again I'd throw that thing in the fire so fucking quick. I like that book but LOVE my cell phone.
Don't pay for TM. I'm an incredibly strong advocate for meditation (it was the thing that helped me the most with my own struggles with drug use) and it might be the #1 habit I would recommend for someone trying to improve their state of mind, but don't pay for someone telling you a specific way to breathe. Everything useful you could want to know can be found online or in books.
Thanks for your input, I do appreciate it. I've meditated quite a bit but similar to exercise its hard for me to get into a routine of it. I was considering TM because I thought the commitment would give me the discipline I need to meditate on the reg. I'd be interested in hearing more about your meditation practice, or if you have any good links handy you could throw my way.
I should disclaim that my personal distaste for TM is inherited from a few things I've read about them regarding their business practices and tendency to overstate the effects of TM in their advertising - but it can indeed be an effective meditation technique, and my grandparents both used to practice TM and say that it has benefited them immensely. From what you're saying though I'm getting that it's more that you're looking for something external to keep you committed and sticking to your practice - and in that sense paying for classes could probably help. For me, striking the balance between having little self-discipline and being over-regimented is hard, but when I'm able to integrate a new habit into my life so that it just becomes a thing I do instead of something I'm making myself do I find that it comes a lot easier. If you end up taking the classes though I would certainly be interested in hearing about your experiences.
Lately my practice hasn't been very regular but I try to get some sessions in here and there when I can. When I was in college I started a meditation group with some friends and we would meet every week to do some meditating and wax esoteric, but I imagine it's easier to get a group like that together when you're a hippie-dippie philosophy major. These days I mostly meditate before bed, or when I'm at work and particularly bored. My form of meditation isn't very formal, I just sit comfortable and focus on my breath without trying to control it. Then my mind wanders and I return my focus on my breath. Rinse, repeat ad infinitum. I also try to just practice mindfulness by bringing my attention to whatever I'm feeling in the body. I do it while walking or eating or sitting or doing just about anything. It helps me be more in tune with myself. Really I just gravitate towards simplicity when it comes to meditating - I don't really get into mantras or visualizations that much, though they have their applications too.
I like Adyashanti as well, though he has a more "no-mind" style of meditation that is so simple it actually is kinda hard. He's got a bunch of YouTube videos up on meditation but he can be pretty abstract and I know a lot of people that find him hard to "get". My background is Buddhism and esoteric bullshit though so he jibes with me.
5.5/four tet, daphni b2b floating points, avalon emerson 5.12/neil young 5.19/mannequin pussy 5.21/serpentwithfeet 5.25/hozier 6.12-16/bonnaroo 6.28/goose 6.29/goose 9.17/the national + the war on drugs 9.23/sigur ros 9.27-29/making time 10.17/air
Thanks. We all have gifts and my gifts is creating life-changing fantasy Phish setlists.
What are your favorite board/card games?
I've had more fun playing Balderdash than any other game. For those who don't know, I think the rules of Balderdash is you pick a card and the card has a real word on it with a real definition, but it's always a weird word. You read the word and everybody writes down a fake definition for the word, but the real definition is also written down. All the definitions are thrown in the basket. All the definitions are read, then you take turns deciding which definition is the real one. You earn a point if you guess the correct definition, and you get a point everytime somebody chooses your "balderdash" definition. But whenever we play the game always devolves into trying to make everyone laugh instead of trying to write a plausible definition. My most infamous moment was when the word was "puccoon" and my definition was "a racoon's pussy". I'm still very proud of that balderdash definition.
Balderdash is one of our favorite party games too. Check "beyond balderdash". Same gameplay, but in addition to words they give you dates, acronyms, persons name, and movie titles. Then the players make up what event happened, what acronym stands for, what the person did, or the basic movie plot. Lots of hilarity.
Post by snowmanomura on Aug 17, 2016 8:30:59 GMT -5
What's your favorite inforoo thread?
Have you met any inforooers?
If you judge posters based solely on their avatars, who wins the different high school superlatives?
Favorite album released this year?
Would you describe your work habits/ethic? Are you good at time management or prone to slacking off but busting ass on an overnighter to meet a deadline?
What is something mundane you would change about your day to day life that would make it infinitely (or at least modestly) better?
The Headliner Thread, no doubt. When things get busy and the whole thread falls to pieces. I love the chaos.
Have you met any inforooers?
longinus and @caddyshaq, fellow Mobilians. I think that's it. I did spend hours dancing with most of you at Lane 8 this year but had no idea the tent was 50% inforoo'ers.
If you judge posters based solely on their avatars, who wins the different high school superlatives?
Want to do this but its a pain in the ass without a mouse. More later.
Favorite album released this year?
Pablo. I've dug other records but nothing has captivated me quite like Kanye.
Would you describe your work habits/ethic? Are you good at time management or prone to slacking off but busting ass on an overnighter to meet a deadline?
I have good work habits, definitely pretty good at time management. Having said that I'm not nearly as hardcore as some of my coworkers, who seem more likely to put in extra hours than me. To me I just know that once I've been charging time for more than 8 hours my productivity starts to drop, and I start to feel guilty like I'm stealing time. Some days I'm in the zone and can push 10-11 hours, as long as I'm playing in the pocket and my brain is firing I can stay productive. Having said that I never end up in a position where I have to pull an all nighter to make things happen, I get my projects done on time, and my employer seems happy with my performance. So I guess I'm doing something right.
What is something mundane you would change about your day to day life that would make it infinitely (or at least modestly) better?
Modestly better: get a king size bed! We are working on it. We live in a 1200 sq ft 2/1 WWII era house, but we finally convinced ourselves to cram a king size bed in the bedroom. We'll have to push it up against a wall but we're doing it. For younger posters this is a really exciting thing when you are 34 (and I'll be 35 at the end of this month)
Infinitely better: regular exercise. Hate to keep talking about this but I feel great now and I know if I keep exercising regularly and drop some of this belly fat I'll be feeling amazing.
Working in Austin TX this week at a clients office so any questions will be a answered tonight when I'm back at the hotel.
Have you taken a dip in Barton Springs yet? If not, you should check it out before you leave ATX.
Unfortunately this is a all work no play kind of trip. Kind of a bummer because I've never been to Austin. And honestly I don't even need to be here, which makes it frustrating. We are at the manager's office, but the facility I'm auditing isn't even around here. I understand travelling when there is a facility I need to lay eyes on, because it makes sense to have a human being verify the assets still exist, but for this trip I'm literally sitting two cubicles away from our contact and emailing her requests and inquiries just like I would if I was in the office. So all in all it's just expensive and pointless for me to be here.
I've been trying to think of a polite way to mention things like this to my employer, like hey, you could save over a thousand dollars, and I could not be away from my wife and dogs for a week, and the exact same work will get done in the exact same amount of time in the exact same way.
I don't have a lot of complaints about my job, but travelling for work is such a bummer.
What is something mundane you would change about your day to day life that would make it infinitely (or at least modestly) better?
Modestly better: get a king size bed! We are working on it. We live in a 1200 sq ft 2/1 WWII era house, but we finally convinced ourselves to cram a king size bed in the bedroom. We'll have to push it up against a wall but we're doing it. For younger posters this is a really exciting thing when you are 34 (and I'll be 35 at the end of this month)
Oh, man. I can't imagine having anything less than a king size bed, but we regularly sleep with 2 to 3 dogs in the bed, so that's part of it.
Questions:
What was your favorite book as a kid? As a teenager? As an adult?
What was your favorite movie as a kid? As a teenager? As an adult?
What was your favorite food as a kid? As a teenager? As an adult?
I'm here! Hate excuses but work is kicking my ass this week. But I will answer your questions. Tomorrow is my birthday so I do what I want and what I want is to answer your questions.
What was your favorite book as a kid? As a teenager? As an adult?
As a kid: Dragon Wing, book one of the Death Gate Cycle. A random book my mom got me, first fantasy book I read. 4th grade I think. I thought it was the apex of literature.
As a teenager: On The Road. Of course. I thought it was the apex of literature.
As an adult: The Baroque Cycle by Neal Stephenson. I think Neal Stephenson is the best author alive today, and could really choose almost any of his books, but since this massive alt-history epic is his passion project, I'll choose it. Really need to do a reread.
What was your favorite movie as a kid? As a teenager? As an adult?
As a kid: Big. There are any number of movies I could choose here (Short Circuit, Ghostbusters, Planes Trains and Automobiles, Vacation, Christmas Vacation) but I remember watching this one over and over.
As a teenager: Pulp Fiction. I'd never seen anything like it, and was shocked that my Dad and me would watch it together. Regardless of how vulgar and crass and nasty the movie is, when something is just that good, I guess my Dad thought it was OK to let your kid watch it. Thanks Dad.
As an adult: Spinal Tap. Always close between this and the Big Lebowski, but Spinal Tap wins out, probably because its one of the earliest and still the best parody of popular music.
What was your favorite food as a kid? As a teenager? As an adult?
As a kid: Roast beef and mashed potatoes
As a teenager: Willie's Chicken Finger Sandwich with honey mustard and tater tots with cheese. This would be when I'm 19 and at Auburn. Could not find a picture. Willie's Wings N' Stuff is a delivery place in Auburn, AL open late night. When I first went to Auburn it was the only delivery place open LN (meaning after 1am). They take these shitty thin chicken fingers and put them on a steamed bun with some cheese. The honey mustard on the side is super sweet and delicious. Total garbage food but I ate the hell out of these. I also gained 50 pounds my freshman year of college.
As an adult: I feel like this is in flux right now, but for the past few years I've been obsessed with Pad Thai, Saag Paneer, Vegetable Korma, but I find myself eating less rice/breads and more meat and two/three type meals, always with potatoes as a side. Seems like rice/bread is unnecessary when it is so easy to get calories from other sources.
Crossing the range of grade school childhood: Double Dare, Headbanger's Ball (riki rachtman was my fucking HERO in 6th/7th/8th grade, Mr. Wizard, Star Trek: TNG, Unsolved Mysteries, Full House, SAVED BY THE MUTHAFUCKIN' BELL, Ren & Stimpy, Duck Tales, Animaniacs, Darkwing Duck, Fraggle Rock, Get Smart, Inspector Gadget, and so many more. I have always loved TV.
Any particular thing you hated as a young 4-7yo) child?
This will sound terrible, but spending any time whatsoever with my extended family. My dad is the youngest of 6, so I was in an age group in my family where all my cousins were either much older or babies. I never had anyone to talk to, and everyone talked about boring shit. The women talked about people I didn't know about, the men talked about business or hunting or sports. All my aunts, uncles, and cousins are good people, I just never made any connection with them. Don't really keep up with any of them. Doesn't help that there are only a handful of cousins in my family you could define as "liberal", and they all got the fuck out of the South as soon as they could. I visited one of these cousins and his wife when we went to the PACNW a couple summers back, and we had a great visit.
I love and absolutely love spending time with my nuclear family.
Anything you are particularly nostalgic about?
Man I reminisce about almost everything. The mid to late 90s is a time I'm nostalgic for, it's weird to think there was a time when an artist like Marilyn Manson could be the biggest rock star in the world, when industrial music was played on MTV on the reg. Overall the transition from hair metal to grunge and everything that followed is an interesting time. Picking a song, whenever I listen to STP's "Interstate Love Song" I can't help but think that song embodies exactly how I felt at that time in the 90s. Kind of sad, kind of rockin, kind of groovy, kind of high.
I also get nostalgic about my first few years of sobriety. It was such a terrifying and exciting time. Depression, anxiety, lots and lots of new friends, falling in love, rediscovering my joy of live music as a sober person. So many epiphanies, figuring out who I am and how to live. I never want to stop growing, and seek to constantly discover new things about existence, but nothing beats that rapid number of lessons I learned during that time.
Give a vignette of a time in your childhood that you look back on with wistfully.
Spending summers down at Gulf Shores. We had a condo down there we shared with another family and would go down sometimes (about an hour from Mobile). Swimming in the gulf, going out to eat at fried seafood restaurants, walking to the Tom Thumb and buying gobstoppers and x-men comics. This strong and pleasant memories are part of what mad Hangout Fest happening here so bizarre.
I also look wistfully back on playing PC games. The computer was such a wonderful device to me. Nintendo too.
This is hard, because I've had a lot of good birthdays. But I do remember one a few years back, Melody setup a surprise birthday party for me. She set it up quite awkwardly and it was really adorable, because it was so obvious she was throwing me a surprise party. She had to get me over to a friends house but never provided a convincing narrative for why we had to do so. I don't remember what lie she came up with and neither did she, but we went in and everybody was hiding around the corner and came out for the surprise. I was really touched everyone showed up for me, and this was a group of friends I was particularly fond of. We just hung out and ate pizza and cake and shit. Just being with my friends is one of the best things.
How many candles are on your cake today?
Technically zero. Birthday cake made by my mother in law. But it would be 35 if there were candles.
Other birthday treats:
Ice cream from the ice cream place down the road. I love ice cream!
and some cookies because why the fuck not? and if I want to eat after that melody is making taco salad later, per my request.
Today for my birthday I invited a few friends over who should be here any minute, all of whom are going to see some Phish shows with me this fall. One of the friends, a sponsee of mine, has never seen Phish before, so I wanted him to watch Bittersweet Motel, since IMO it's one of the better introductions to the band. So I am having friends over to watch a movie and we'll eat ice cream and cake and cookies. So I'm having a child's birthday party basically.
Melody refused to buy us party hats and noisemakers. It is possible she is a terrible person.
Did you watch phish at lockn livestream last night?
I only caught the jam out of Blaze On. I thought it was jazzy and interesting. setlists look fine on paper, I'm sure if I was there I would've had a blast.
With phish and ween being your favorite bands and lockn being your birthday weekend I'm surprised you aren't there.
I know right? Really it was a simple cost/benefit thing, either Lockn or Dicks. At Dicks I can see 6 sets of Phish, with at least one of those sets pretty much guaranteed to be ridiculous in some way, and I only have to take off one day of work. As a bonus I can take Melody and we can do vacation stuff in and outside of Denver during the day (we plan on doing Mt. Evans and Rocky Mountain National Park), then I truck off by myself to the shows at night. If I did Lockn I would definitely leave Melody at home, and would have to take 4 days off work (wednesday to travel, thurs/fri fest, Monday to travel). Not to mention I expected Phish to play standard festival sets at Lockn which is what they did. Not hating, just saying.
Would love to have seen Ween and MMJ and Phil, but logistically Lockn is a time consuming process. The only festival I dedicate that much vacation time to is Bonnaroo or a Phish festival.
What are some of your nicknames and why?
Jackson, Jackson Pollack, Jackson Brown. Just because.
When Phish came back in 2009 I started going to shows with two of my friends, it was pretty much just the three of us going for years, and we all were assigned names from The Wire. One friend was Avon, because he is always wide the fuck open and crazy, one friend is String because he is calm and methodical. And I am Bodie because in Charlottesville 2009 it was snowing and I had a hoodie on. So we all still call each other by those names.
My freshmen year of college I was with a bunch of my friends and we dosed, as 19 year olds do. Somebody brought a VHS tape called "Best of Backyard Wrestling" which was home videos of guys wrestling each other in the backyard. At the end of the video after the credits it said "Can't Get Enough!" to which the whole room would agree we couldn't get enough of "Best of Backyard Wrestling" and we would start the tape over. This is what we did all night, but one of my friends had a huge plastic pumpkin with a hole in it and he kept shouting my name into it because that is hilarious. So from there I got the nickname "jack o lantern", eventually shortened to "Lantern", pronounced more like "Lannern".
The first few years after I got sober one of my most oft shared sayings in meetings was "you are not a unique and beautiful snowflake", from the mouth of Tyler Durden to mine. It was intended to be an ego deflating and humbling statement. It stuck with a particular friend of mine who started calling me Snowflake and still does to this day.
I first used the handle "postjack" on a forum dedicated to headphone audio. For a few years I would go to headphone meets around the country (once somewhere in Florida, one in LA, one in Chicago). These are big trade shows but also hobbyist shows. Companies come and have setups but one of the cool thing is hobbyists bring their gear and set it up, usually in one or two big conference rooms, so you have these massive rooms with dozens of headphone rigs, some costing in the tens of thousands of dollars, and you can go and talk audio and listen to a lot of different headphones. It was a really cool grassroots scene, very welcoming, lots of friendly misfits as you would expect. At these shows I started meeting people I knew from forums, and everyone just started calling me "postie". So postie became my nickname to all of them.
My wife calls me Bearkins. Just because.
Instead of a question, I'm going to request you make all your inforoo posts as if you were Ron burgundy for the rest of the month.
Post by heyyitskait on Sept 6, 2016 19:35:56 GMT -5
If you were a hot dog, would you eat yourself?
What is your favorite house in Game of Thrones? Which region of Westeros would you want to live in? Did you read the books? If yes, then what's your favorite book of the series so far? Did I successfully peer pressure you into buying The World of Ice and Fire?