I've never been fond of colorization, and this is a prime example of why. The colors are just so garish. In 100 years, I wonder what they'll do with movies like "Young Frankenstein"?
While BK isn't my favorite fast food chain, I would probably give it a whirl. We (I) do order pizza and Chinese for delivery; is there any substantial difference between those and BK? OTOH, I know some people who live in Malaysia and Singapore, and they get MCD delivery there, but they often complain about the service (slow, rude).
It's banned in other countries, and rightfully so. It's an extremely cruel operation to perform, and I'm talking about the actual procedure. I absolutely refused to get my cat declawed, and spent many months arguing with my mother over it, until I convinced her to actually research what they do.
Unlike spaying, which has a definite health benefit for the cat, declawing is something that only benefits the owner, not the cat.
It is one of the earliest TV remotes. Inside were four metal bars which would produce four different ultrasonic frequencies. When you pressed the button, it would actually trigger a mechanical striker. Since it was ultrasonic, you didn't need to be line-of-sight. And, since it was ultrasonic, you could often get "false positives" by ordinary household noises, like running a vacuum cleaner.
Cute story, but sounds like one of those stories fabricated to be published in a book marketed at "high power CEOs, start thinking outside the box!" and other such modern executive management drivel. I haven't looked at the source to see if there's a citation.
Tattoos are ok, in the right context: art, placement, etc This is just bad. Forget about how many thousand of dollars this must have cost, what will she do in 10 years, when Facebook is an irrelevant byword? In 20 years when the ink fades to a series of dull green non-distinguishable blobs, perhaps the regrets will be in full force. I doubt she'll get them refreshed as they fade, refreshing costs almost as much as the original work. Of course, tattoo removal is an option, but there will still be a large area of scarring.
I hope that double-door in the front is the only ingress/egress, otherwise someone enjoying a summer brunch on that "porch" might be in for a rude surprise...
In that spot of the body, they'll fade in a few months anyway. You can get them refreshed, but they'll be doing that often enough that in 5 years, they'll have exceeded the price of gold bands.
Unlike spaying, which has a definite health benefit for the cat, declawing is something that only benefits the owner, not the cat.