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Celebrity Sell Out

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October 6th, 2009 - Geoff Woad

Retin a over the counter, [caption id="attachment_1960" align="alignleft" width="300" caption=""I know you wouldn't think so but I like Whoppers, yes really I do." "]"I know you wouldn't think so but I like Whoppers, yes really I do." [/caption]

Who in hell's teeth is Tony Stewart you might ask. Ordering retin a pills, He is a participant in that sport beloved of rednecks and other types who have the Confederate flag in their bedroom. Yes Tony Stewart is a Nascar driver and he's done a campaign for Burger King, retin a prescription. Köpa retin a online,

Now, no one can say BK is missing it's target audience, South Dakota SD . Delaware DE Del. , Stewart appears in the ads showing that he is sincere in his endorsements. The latest is set to show the driver taking a lie detector test to show how he really loves the Whopper, retin a over the counter. Not that you’d need a polygraph of course because Stewart, cheap retin a pills, Michigan MI Mich. , unlike F1-athletes like Jenson Button, Lewis Hamilton et al, ordering retin a from canada, Ostaa halvalla retin a, is ahem rathera big man.

Here’s a generalisation but all American motorsport participants are slightly rubbish, pharmacy retin a. Retin a cheap, Many of them are rather aged (most actually look like Compo out of Last of the Summer Wine) because most younger Americans don’t know how to drive a manual car.

But every cloud have a silver lining, retin a online kopen. Retin a no prescription, In amongst a bunch of appearances by various has-beens is the superb Eric Estrada, famous the world over as hairy policeman Poncherello in 80s cop show Chips, Nevada NV Nev. . Missouri MO Mo. , If only you could get a pair of those sunglasses.

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Comments

  • I think it’s a perfect sponsorship “fit”…..beer, burgers, chewing tobacco, pick-up trucks, Confederate flags…to an outsider Nascar is the embodiment of the deep South redneck stereotype. You don’t need to be a finely-honed athlete to drive Nascar because there aren’t any real corners so you don’t need to brake and you only need to be able to turn left. Easy life. No training necessary, relatively little skill needed (it’s probably like driving flat our round Marble Arch at rush-hour) and lots of time for eating more burgers and drinking more beer. Why don’t they have a “drive thru” lane when they come in for a pit-stop and the drivers could then eat the burger with one hand, hold a beer in the other whilst steering with their knees… now that’s what I call sport!

    Caveman on October 6, 2009
  • Yes indeed Caveman. More of what I put down was a rant against Nascar but that’s fair game in my view. It’s a dreadful excuse for a competition targeted squarely at the brain dead.

    Woaderello on October 7, 2009
  • Hey Jackass, I mean….caveman,
    Don’t be jealous that the largest spectator sport in America is NASCAR. Just because Tony Stewart is featured in a Burger King commercial doesn’t make him a redneck. If you want to find a redneck go to the trailer park around the corner from you …. Or do you live in one? FYI… Daytona is banked(which means angled)at 31 degrees in the turns, and 8 degrees in the straight away, as well as numerous other tracks. You have to be going at least 160 mph. or more to stay in the corners.(The flatest track is 11 degrees in the corners) NO CAVEMAN THE TRACKS ARE NOT FLAT…AND WHEN IS THE LAST TIME YOU WENT 160-205 MPH ANYWHERE IN TOWN??? NOT!!!

    Steve O on October 14, 2009
  • Well yeh hah and praise be to Jesus, CSO has just got it’s first redneck poster. Welcome Steve O and fair play for putting out some actual facts (not something we do often here). However I would still question whether Nascar requires any actual skill. As my driving instructor said, even a baby can push down the accelerator pedal which I’m not sure is entirely true but I get his point. However I must say Caveman does not believe in wimpy dwellings like campervans, for him you can’t beat a cavity set in a rock face - even in winter.

    Geoff Woad on October 15, 2009
  • Hey, Steve O… nice original name my friend. You obviously spend too much time glued to MTV trying to convince yourself that you really could be as interesting as Johnny Knoxville if only the world would give you a chance!

    FYI, I know about Daytona as, unlike you, I’ve actually raced there… on two wheels which requires a little more skill. Granted, we only use a small section of the banking but in our race it was necessary to use the brakes, turn left AND right whilst travelling at speeds of up to 200 mph.

    Let’s look at things a bit more rationally. Please name me one US driver (from NASCAR, CART or IRL) who has been able to step out of the US motorsport “bubble” and make any impression on a relevant World Championship…. NONE. They’ve all tried to make the jump and gone back very quickly with their tails between their legs. Conversely, look at how many European drivers have gone over there and made a very good living showing them how it’s done. These are facts Steve O… please now change your name to Wee Man…

    Caveman on October 19, 2009
  • Hey Steve O, forgot to thank you for explaining the term “banking” to me, I’d never have known that it meant “angled”…

    We in Europe have of course no experience of “banked” circuits, except that Brooklands was built in 1907 and Monza in 1922 (both of which originally featured high speed banking sections as well as other challenging features). The good old US of A got on the bandwagon in 1959 (when the Daytona International Speedway was opened) and the rest of the world had moved on to more exciting forms of the sport.

    FYI…. Budweiser Beer originally came from the Czech Republic (Budvar), pizza originated in Italy (that’s the country in Europe, not the town in Ellis County, Texas) but i think you can rightly claim to have invented the “Hamburger” (although it is likely that the inventors were immigrants from Hamburg in Germany), and since it does not appear to contain any ham (that comes from a pig, not a cow) it would seem to make sense….

    Please feel free to humiliate yourself further by trying to tell me about things that you clearly don’t understand. Two peoples divided by a common language!

    Caveman on October 19, 2009
  • Nice one Caveman - you’ve sorted him out good and proper, he won’t be coming back again.

    Stirling Woad on October 19, 2009
  • Sorry Stirling… did I go too far? He clearly doesn’t know that in the UK, we, the underclass, inhabit Barratt Starter Homes on 50/50 equity share deals, not trailer parks!

    Caveman on October 20, 2009
  • The Indianapolis Motor Speedway has been cambered since at least 1911 when bricks replaced the original crushed rock, though not as steeply as the typical circuit used in NASCAR or the ovals in Europe.

    The meat most commonly associated with Hamburger was invented, as such, by the Tartars in Russia but the sandwich itself was put together by Americans. Not that putting a mince disc inside a bun was that scientific. Hamburg in America btw, though as is often the case with US cities it was named after the previously named European location.

    A. N. Observer on October 20, 2009

Comments closed