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Patton Oswalt



Last Updated: 11/24/2009

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Status: Married
City: BURBANK
State: CALIFORNIA
Country: US
Signup Date: 3/31/2006
Sunday, June 17, 2007 
My wife twisted her ankle late on a Monday evening, so we had to go to the emergency room.

We live in Burbank ("Where boredom goes to relax!") so we figured, how bad can the emergency room be? Did emergencies even occur in Burbank?

We envisioned, somewhere in downtown L.A., an apocalyptic ER filled with gunshot wounds, severed limbs, and people in the process of being murdered by gunshot victims. We figured the Burbank ER would be paper cuts, skinned knees, and a bunny rabbit with the heebie-jeebies.

Next time, we're going downtown. Or Baghdad. Or anywhere.

The Burbank ER is a hallucinogenic combination of real, screaming trauma, and people who – I swear to God – seem to be in there just to hang out and watch television.

I went inside to get a wheelchair, since my wife absolutely, in no way, could walk. Her ankle was sending flaming pillars of pain up her leg. I wheeled her inside, and an admitting nurse gave her a form to fill out, told her there'd be a wait, and told us not to block the walk-up lane with the chair – all without looking at us.

I juked the wheelchair over to a low, dividing wall between the admitting desk and a TV area. While my wife filled out her form, I took in the people around us.

A bald man writhed on the floor, occasionally heaving himself to his shaky feet to lustfully vomit into a trashcan. Turns out he had a kidney stone. My only experience with kidney stones was Al Swearengen's ordeal during the second season of DEADWOOD. Ol' Al squeezed his stones out with the manly elan of a true villain. Then he drank some scotch, slapped a whore, and won an Emmy.

The Kidney Stone Man in the Burbank ER was the anti-Al. He bounced womanly howls off the animal wallpaper of the waiting room. His family – a mother and wife – managed to look concerned and annoyed at the same time.

With Kidney Stone Man setting the high bar for desperation and need, everyone else in the waiting room had to dial down their drama. They may have been hurt, but not rolling-around-on-the-floor-and-puking hurt.

The stench hit my wife, wincing in her wheelchair. "Oh man, that really smells foul."

It did. Poor sweetie. She was trapped in that vinyl and metal chair, unable to escape the fumes. Her twisted, useless ankle had rendered her immobile – a captive witness to the horrors around us. It broke my heart.

The animal wallpaper distracted me for a moment. Lions, and zebras, and hippos and cheetahs, all snuggled together and smiling on the African veldt. I don't even think all of those animals live in Africa. And I know they don't snuggle together in a big pile. Maybe this was a way for the Burbank ER to psychologically soothe the people in its waiting room. If all these animals – predator and prey – can get along, can't you keep your yap shut about your grease burn or head trauma?

Suddenly, Kidney Stone Man was drowned out by two young women, who were palm-banging the plastic of the admitting nurse's window. Was someone in even more distress than K.S. Man? Was this a compound fracture, or someone going into convulsions? It sounded serious – the women were yelling in Valley-speak – far louder than the man trying to pass the high school ring through his urethra. The nurse finally slid the plastic window open.

"Can we change the TV channel to DANCING WITH THE STARS? It started 5 minutes ago! Pleeeeeeease…?"

While the nurse looked for the remote control, a child whom the two women cut off began a honking, phlegm-y asthma attack.

"Oh man, that kid looks like he's dying," said my wife. "Does the nurse see this?"

The nurse suddenly popped her head up, and spoke to the two young women. "Someone stole the remote yesterday! You have to change the channel manually!"

The two women groaned, threw their hands in the air, and sat back down. The thought of walking the four feet to the television, and actually switching the channel, never occurred to them.

Kidney Stone Man managed to shriek, cry and vomit at the same time. Asthma Kid and his snotty, mini-bellows lungs added a pleasing bass tone.

I couldn't watch the nurse not react to Asthma Kid anymore, so I took in more of the waiting room denizens.

A morbidly obese man, overflowing a straining plastic chair beside me, clenched his wide face with a muffin-sized hand, quietly weeping. A young couple ate Subway sandwiches, and chatted pleasantly. They actually looked like they had come to the ER to eat sandwiches, talk, and watch TV. Neither of them has anything even remotely wrong with them. Asthma Kid struggled for breath while the nurse made his dad fill out a form. Kidney Stone man cursed several different gods.

Just as a chubby Goth girl near the snack machine started singing "She Drives Me Crazy", I heard a sound behind me.

I turned. My wife had heaved herself out of the wheelchair.

"I can't take this, I'm sorry," she said. She twisted her ankle until I heard a light crack!, stood gingerly on it, took a careful step, and then hobbled out to the car.

It was the horrible-ness of the room. The room had cured her. And I couldn't help feeling like, after we left, the admitting nurse yelled, "Take five, everyone!". And then Kidney Stone Man, Asthma Kid, Goth Girl, Weepin' Chubs and the TV Ladies broke character, and had coffee, and did stretches, and waited for the next case to work their ghastly magic on.
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Dr. Jay E. Griffin, Cynical Misanthrope

 
Fancy meeting you here, Mandi!

I go to the ER purely for the entertainment factor, Patton. It sure beats paying for cable.
 
Posted by Dr. Jay E. Griffin, Cynical Misanthrope on Monday, June 18, 2007 - 2:16 PM
[Reply to this
Drew Harmon
Drew Harmon

 
E.R. : where hope goes to die.

And that includes the TV show!
 
Posted by Drew Harmon on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 1:18 PM
[Reply to this
====

 
kidney stone man, asthma kid, goth girl, weeping chubs...i think i see a sitcom or maybe a fantastic four sequel........did your wife really twist it back in, that's pretty amazing, kudos for that.
 
Posted by ==== on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 1:22 PM
[Reply to this
Christopher
Christopher Ginelli

 
please, for the love of god... write a book. honestly, if maddox and tucker max can write books--funny ones at that--surely you can stomp a literary mudhole on their asses.
 
Posted by Christopher on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 1:24 PM
[Reply to this
Ricky Malenki

 
excuse me tartyness on this blog of pattons. i read this and it made me laugh and feel bad. soo i had to say somethin.
 
Posted by Ricky Malenki on Monday, October 01, 2007 - 6:02 AM
[Reply to this
Ricky Malenki

 
maddox n that other dude just do simple observations, points out the obvious and puts it all together in witty ways. They are a boring.. i mean maddox wrote about video games that should of NEVER been made. For instance, The mary Kate ashley game and shit. LOL i mean, no one fuckin bought it and everyone knows those games were pointless. Yeah.. They're genius'..(sarcasm, in case you dont get it.) Patton does wit and puts it together in a entertaining and, articulate ways. I agree that he should definetley write a book or get a movie writing gig or atleast a sitcom writing gig. he's got somethin!

-Ricky
 
Posted by Ricky Malenki on Monday, October 01, 2007 - 6:01 AM
[Reply to this
Andrew
Andrew Hess

 
Do you find it difficult to speak with Maddox's dick in your mouth?

Patton can do whatever the fuck he wants.
 
Posted by Andrew on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 7:47 PM
[Reply to this
The Reverend
Jeff Snell

 
thank you, Andrew, for saying what I wanted to say.
 
Posted by The Reverend on Monday, June 18, 2007 - 11:23 AM
[Reply to this
Danny Party
Daniel Pewewardy

 
Maddox was cool but then I graduated high school and started developing opinions of my own.
 
Posted by Danny Party on Thursday, June 21, 2007 - 6:36 PM
[Reply to this
Ricky Malenki

 
LOL, ya maaan, my buddy told me about his shit, thats how i found out about that dude (maddox) in high school YEEEAAAARZ AGO!!... i still thought he was stale... and yes, we know patton writes and pitches his work. Hes blowin up
 
Posted by Ricky Malenki on Tuesday, October 02, 2007 - 7:36 AM
[Reply to this
Paul Galante
Paul Galante

 
And some people think that we don't need health care reform.

In all seriousness, I hope your wife is doing better
 
Posted by Paul Galante on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 1:25 PM
[Reply to this
Leonard

 
Try working graveyard at a motel. You'll run into the same people. At least I have protective glass...well, some sort of glass.
 
Posted by Leonard on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 2:05 PM
[Reply to this
Titi

 
Probably about the same time you guys were sitting in there - my nurse friend was recounting tales of the local ER while we lounged around the pool. Apparently, random people really do go there for coffee and TV...sounds like the floor show isn't half bad either. That is, if you like that sort of thing.
 
Posted by Titi on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 2:15 PM
[Reply to this
Dawn
dawn marmaduke

 
They bring the kids too, if you have cookies out!
 
Posted by Dawn on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 3:36 PM
[Reply to this
Titi

 
The poor man's drive in!!!!!
 
Posted by Titi on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 8:17 PM
[Reply to this
Jared
Jared Lord

 
The last time I had to visit the ER was from injuries sustained in a car accident. Apparently I had a major contusion to the inside of my chest wall from the seat belt, meaning my cardiovascular system slammed into the inside of my chest hard enough to bruise it. So I couldn't breathe and my heart was giving an irregular heart beat worthy of a dvorak concerto. Plus my chest hurt. They gave me Tylenol and sent me on my way. Why don't they make a realistic ER television show instead of the soap opera fantasy on NBC?
 
Posted by Jared on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 2:20 PM
[Reply to this
Mik

 
I work overnights at a psych-hospital and sometimes I have to cover the front while people are admitted. Sometimes that gets out of hand (nothing as absolutely horrible as you've just described), but I end up tuning the people's problems out and start concentrating really hard on Animal Planet, because you can only sit and listen to someone ramble on about how the government is controlling reincarnation via bases on the moon for so long before you start to wanting to kill yourself. That said, the nurse in your waiting room should be ashamed of herself... for even considering turning the channel to Dancing with the Stars.
 
Posted by Mik on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 2:41 PM
[Reply to this


 
I went to the ER when I had Kidney Stones.
I stayed home when I rolled my ankle playing football a year later.
Verily, you speaketh the truth about the abyss of medicine that is the emergency room.
 
Posted by on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 2:43 PM
[Reply to this
Alyzabeth Mitchell

 
Goddam! What a nightmare! I hope your wife got some kind of help after that, and that she's feeling better. Did not sound like fun.
 
Posted by Alyzabeth Mitchell on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 2:48 PM
[Reply to this
crummy

 
If I ever go to Burbank I know where I'll be hanging out. I was in line for a movie and watched a fat kid with two engorged ticks for hands pour massive amounts of butter into his popcorn and then fill four little plastic cups, an old women massaging her breasts commenting they were sore (sore from walking?), and listen to some lady bitch out loud about being let in, repeating "this is ridiculous" - Over and over with interspersed mouth breathing. I think we were one Kidney stone guy away from a rip in time space, awesome.
 
Posted by crummy on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 2:52 PM
[Reply to this
Brian

 
Best blog entry yet, Patton. Thank you!
 
Posted by Brian on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 3:01 PM
[Reply to this
Derek

 
...that episode of Deadwood made me squirm.......

This why I wait outside....My girlfriend got pneumonia once and I took her to a clinic early Sunday morning. We walked in amidst fifty other hacking and snorting patients. I went back outside, fearful for my lungs and sat on the parking lot curb.

Kudos to your wife's speedy recovery.
 
Posted by Derek on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 3:14 PM
[Reply to this
Wendy
Wendy Pederson

 
Nothing like walking into the ER in really dire straights and being told to wait until they can find someone to triage you. I had an allergic reaction to penicillon (sp?), drove myself to the ER and then had to wait until the triage nurse came back from break. "Wait? Sure! I'm bright red, swelling, all my hives are growing together into one giant hive and my throat is closing, making it hard to breathe but who needs oxygen?"

"It shouldn't be more than 15 minutes..."
 
Posted by Wendy on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 3:16 PM
[Reply to this
Dawn
dawn marmaduke

 
You fell for it! lol
i've worked in a very busy ER, while your all suffing in the front, ambulance suffer in the back.
In reality it is never an emergency unless life or limb. Granted your wifes ankle should have been screened immed. God forbid a bone was cutting off blood supply, she could lose her foot. We have had people wait 5-6 hours for kidney stones, not even a tylenol. poor guys,
imagine pissing a sandspur....heehee
nex time go to a walk in clinic, you'll see a Dr alot quicker, and pay less. ALSO if you don't have insurance make a deal like on price is right. I use to do that for our local hospital as well.
I know secrets you can't imagine...
happy fathers day
 
Posted by Dawn on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 3:34 PM
[Reply to this
Paul Oddo

 
I agree, the walk-in emergency clinic is a much better route. Those individually owned places in strip malls have the same resources and trained professionals with a fraction of the wait time, often none at all. The real plus about these places I've found through more experience than I'd like to think about is, if you're really screwed up and they need to get you to an ER they call ahead, get you on the guest list and you go right in. It's the only way to be seriously injured. Especially knowing that the people at the hospital desk deal with your (or your loved one's) pain with as much urgency as kid working the drive thru taking shit from a lady who didn't order pickles.
 
Posted by Paul Oddo on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 5:53 PM
[Reply to this
ryan gelatin
ryan gelatin

 
I once had to go to the emergency room at 5 in the morning while I was dressed as Bizarro Jr. I had cracked my chin open wide while sliding with a girl through puddles of beer on a gymnasium floor. I was totally hammered and had blood all over me, but still in full Bizarro costume. I had to get 17 stitches, but I probably cured that whole floor with my idiocy.
 
Posted by ryan gelatin on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 3:42 PM
[Reply to this
The Comatose Boy
Nathan Bentley

 
The ER does have it's own crazy kind of horror to it. Hope your wife actually got the ankle looked at and that it is ok.
 
Posted by The Comatose Boy on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 3:54 PM
[Reply to this
Steve Agee

 
dude, I used to live about three blocks away from you in Burbank. One night I got a car door slamed on my head (no joke) and fell into the street on the verge of unconciousness with my head bleeding like a stuck animal that jews won't eat.
So I drove myself to the ER in Burbank, blood running down my face, and then left because I COULDN'T FIND PARKING!! I didn't even make it in as far as you.
How's your wifey doing?
 
Posted by Steve Agee on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 4:01 PM
[Reply to this
Plasticsoul

 
I work at University of California Irvine Medical Center. If the Burbank ER can cure your wife's leg I'm convinced our's can cure cancer. We are a trauma center which means we get all of the cases that you had envisioned...plus all of the worthless dregs that bring their newborn children in a 3am complaining that "my baby has been coughing for a month". Of course because they have waited so long to bring their kid in they have pneumonia instead of a simple cold. Then you have to explain to them that, yes, medical care does in fact cost money.

Fortunately, I don't work IN the ER...just close enough that I can watch it like TV.
 
Posted by Plasticsoul on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 4:01 PM
[Reply to this
Awsome Kickass McCool!!!

 
Over the past few years I have had my share of ER trauma. Fortuately, I lucked out twice being the worst they had at that time; after getting hit by a car while bike riding (my entire backside contused, back of head split open and a snapped ankle) and smashing my left hand in an industrial accident (thus I only have 9 fingers and workman$$$$$ comp!). The worst experience was when I put a chisel in my finger. It required a number of stitches. Sadly, it also meant sitting for five hours in the waiting room with only Philip K. Dick's "Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch". When I eventually did get stitched up, the lidocain wore off and I insisted the doctor just finish without it. But the most painful event of the day was that horrible wait in the waiting room.
 
Posted by Awsome Kickass McCool!!! on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 4:06 PM
[Reply to this
MHz

 
Your married?
 
Posted by MHz on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 4:14 PM
[Reply to this
Phil

 
if there is a heaven and a hell, hell will most certainly be an inner-city hospital ER waiting room.
 
Posted by Phil on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 5:19 PM
[Reply to this
Preggy Sue

 
Reminds me of the story NBC reported last week. A woman was dying in the waiting room, and it was so bad that other people inside the waiting room were calling 911 for her because she was being ignored. They have the 911 recordings and everything. She was never treated and died in the lobby. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19251478/

I'm interested to see how the movie Sikko turns out. I think the health coverage and medical care in this country is a joke. I recently lost my grandmother to cancer, but up until the day she died in the hospital, we just thought she had really bad pnumonia. When a new doctor asked me what the other doctors reported about her tumor, thats when we realized we had been duped. It was too late to do anything about it, and she died. When we asked the original doctor why we weren't told about the cancer, the only reponce we got was "sorry."

I'm seriously afraid to grow old and get sick in this day and age.
 
Posted by Preggy Sue on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 5:24 PM
[Reply to this
e.a.i.o.u.

 
are you h. p. lovecraft?
 
Posted by e.a.i.o.u. on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 5:34 PM
[Reply to this
Philosopher Rogue
Schaeffer Tolliver

 
Patton, I think you're growing up into a more interesting Dave Barry. Granted, that's a low bar, but still, thanks.
 
Posted by Philosopher Rogue on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 5:43 PM
[Reply to this
Pocket Full of Brandie

 
I hate the ER. I had never been until 3 years ago I separated my shoulder playing ultimate Frisbee and spent an entire night in the ER in hallucinogenic pain waiting for an uncaring doctor to pop it back in. 2 days later I got into a car accident and had to go to the ER to get checked out (only a few cuts and a stitch in my lip thank God), and then a day or two later I got a horrible cold from spending so much time around the sick and the dying and had to go BACK to the ER in the middle of the night because I had fainted from whatever disease being in the ER 2 times in one week had given me. Luckily I haven't been since, but damn. Worst week ever.

I hope your wife is alright, she's in my thoughts and prayers. My advice to you both is to OD on vitamins for a day or two, just to be safe.
 
Posted by Pocket Full of Brandie on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 5:43 PM
[Reply to this
xoValeriexo
Valerie Bryant

 
Wow, your wife's hardcore. I cringed just reading the first sentence of your blog because I broke my ankle a year ago and now I think that ankle injuries are the most horrible thing in the world(horror movies don't help-Hello, Saw 3).

But, come on, you didn't see the Friends or the Full House with kidney stones? Only Deadwood? They were good ones..Uncle Jesse's stones damn near ruined little Michelle's birthday!
 
Posted by xoValeriexo on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 6:01 PM
[Reply to this
Sugar Ray fan

 
i'm glad she feels better-all ER rooms are such a horrible melting pot but that sounds pretty bad esp. for-as you mentioned-seemingly boring Burbank!
 
Posted by Sugar Ray fan on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 6:13 PM
[Reply to this
prophetic hindsight

 
wow, i whent there day before day before yesterda...uhh, i mean thursday, i couldnt find anyone that i could see was actually hurt, yet there was a guy with a do-rag looking at his lap an laughing...wonder what was wrong with him
 
Posted by prophetic hindsight on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 6:14 PM
[Reply to this
hsoj.

 
was michael moore taping any of this for sicko? sounds like it'd make for a solid dvd extra...
 
Posted by hsoj. on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 6:42 PM
[Reply to this
~Snufflegrl~

 
Make sure she still see's a doctor, I've had friends with bad sprains that turned out to be severe injuries, the longer they waited to see the doctor, the more damage they ended up doing.
 
Posted by ~Snufflegrl~ on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 6:48 PM
[Reply to this
VICTORY!
Daniel Walker

 
Patton Oswalt's blog: Where I go to find intelligent, funny people to add.

Dane Cook's blog: Where I go to find ignorant people to make fun of.
 
Posted by VICTORY! on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 7:12 PM
[Reply to this
Craigination!
Craig Williams

 
Out of all of that, the Dancing with the Stars girls were the most horrific thing.
 
Posted by Craigination! on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 7:26 PM
[Reply to this
Titi

 
Oh yeah - I forgot what I was originally going to say in response to your blog! ...I actually had a similar experience to your wife 11 years ago in DC! It was so awful that I have a clear recollection of it to this day.

At the time, I worked at a medical-type company chock full of nurses. When I showed up at the office rolling my watermelon foot (fell in a pot hole while playing soccer) on a rolling chair they ordered me to go to the GWU ER.

Anyway, the scene was eerily similar to your blog, without the comic relief. Instead of kidney stone guy it was a lady in a wheel chair screaming in pain from what I can only assume was a urinary tract infection. If I were a guy it would have been similar to being forced to watch another guy being tortured via constant electric shock to the genitalia. It was absolutely horrifying to me that no one seemed to notice or care that this woman was in excruciating pain.

This went on for HOURS. I was getting ready to bolt when they called me in to the triage area...it turned out to be a bad sprain. The next time, I actually DID break my ankle but that last ER visit left such a bad taste in my mouth that I waited until the next morning to go to my family doctor, who in turn sent me to a private urgent care center with a phone reservation - MUCH better...oh and good coffee too!
 
Posted by Titi on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 9:06 PM
[Reply to this
SeanOfTheDead

 
and you have to pay for this service?!?! Our ER rooms in Australia are often as anti-glamorous but at least we don't have to pay for the pleasure. But we do seem to like everything "US" down here so it won't be long before we lose our free healthcare. I can't wait 'til we start building a big fence to keep people out and letting our political leaders be elected by courts instead of the people...
 
Posted by SeanOfTheDead on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 9:23 PM
[Reply to this
Headphones Jeff

 
Patton, you should relate this story as a bonus feature on the DVD Micheal Moore's new documentary "SiCKO" about the broken health care industry. (Well, its not BROKEN...it works exactly as it was built - it benefits the monied interests instead of sick people). And I agree with whoever else said you should write a book.
 
Posted by Headphones Jeff on Wednesday, June 20, 2007 - 10:07 PM
[Reply to this
soulsistahmel

 
oh Patton, I know all too well the drama and trauma (I'm a friggin poet) of the ER, remember me.. graveyard shift girl? yep.. I worked the 11-7 in an ER, with a handy-dandy psych ward in the next building so we got all the loonies, drunks, psychopaths, genuinely injured and homeless huddled masses yearning to...fill out forms at my request.. I felt so bad. Oh, your head is bleeding, alrighty then, do you have insurance? I couldn't hack it... I used to get in trouble with the head nurses for having compassion.

I'd go and get warm blankets, juice, crackers, and sometimes meals for the people that were waiting in my waiting room. staring at me, with a look of desperation, as if I was their last hope. I felt so impotent in that all I could do was lamely go disturb the vital conversations that the beeyotches were havin to ask when the wounded people could find a bed.

Thank the Lord above I'm out of there! I'd like to think however, that I was a teeny beacon of warmth in that cold, sterile environment. Especially since I'd have you on tv doing your bits on Conan and I'd be peeing myself laughing in the background, I'd get everyone else laughing too and people that didn't know you would ask who you were and I'd say that's Patton Oswalt, he's really funny,

then of course there was time you called me a fucking sell-out cuz i said you were funny... ah good times.(that really happened people)
 
Posted by soulsistahmel on Tuesday, June 19, 2007 - 4:59 AM
[Reply to this
LamentConfig

 
WOOOOOOOOW! That INSANE! My roomate in the other room is probably wondering why Im laughing so fucking hard! Keep the hilarious blogs coming.

Burbank: A history of things working out fine.
 
Posted by LamentConfig on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 9:25 PM
[Reply to this
Brandon
Brandon Reilly

 
Fantastits! Sorry about your ankle's wife... err.
 
Posted by Brandon on Monday, June 18, 2007 - 2:15 PM
[Reply to this
Neri

 
My lord, that was epic. I do hope your wife feels better really soon.

I had a similar experience a couple months ago when I hurt my back. It was a tragically wide assortment of the freaky and the gleefully oblivious. And for some reason there was a large group of sick, coughing kids that were allowed to roam free, coughing on everyone while yelling and screaming. It was the most effective condom commercial I could imagine.
 
Posted by Neri on Sunday, June 17, 2007 - 10:56 PM
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