I live in Southern California, and while it's true we get very little rain, there's still such a thing as "dew" which will still ruin indoor furniture left outdoors.
Is Chesterfield a specifically Canadian furniture brand? I always lived within a stones-throw of Canada and have found out over the years things that are perfectly normal to me doesn't exist in the U.S. so I don't know. (:
hah! necroposting! On the internet, no question ever truly dies... It's more of a generic British term for "couch" or "sofa", also in use in many countries of the Commonwealth, including Canada. Here's one take on it: www.londongallery.net/en/content/8-history-of-chesterfield
I probably would've called it "Eddies Couch", but not many would get the reference. And that's one of the many reasons i couldn't do this for a living. Fun vid, as usual.
I really liked this one, very funny. Best sketch in a long time. :) Btw, was there some kind of symbolism behind it? Like how alcohol drives you out of your life or something?
I was talking about Kathleen's... downstairs modesty. Hope it's not but you might want to edit it out if it is. It's more visible when the seek bar disappears in fullscreen mode.
Oh, stop complaining about the heat, guys. As someone who alternatively lives in either Victoria or Hong Kong, I can say with 100% certainty that the temperature in the former has nothing on the latter. Seriously, though, loved the sketch and the LT for it. Great job!
Human beings are incapable of physiologically adapting quickly to sudden or unusual changes in their environment. In the UK temperatures this summer reached 35°C which gets laughed off by folks in places like California but killed a decent group of people here. It literally does not matter how hot it is in Hong Kong. It's not a contest, people are put at risk and discomforted by what they're not acclimatised to.
Does anyone else think that, at 8@05, Beej, looks like a stock photo? Probably entitled Semi-attractive-everyman-middle-manager-in-a-reasonably-priced-car-on-a-pleasent-summer-day.jpg Licensing cost: $9.99