u/Imma_Lick_That

▲ 5 r/ask

What branded foods taste different abroad?

I recently watched a video about how branded foods such as Heinz tomato sauce, McDonald's fries and other well-known brands have diffirent ingredients in diffirent countries depending on their food laws. So my question is, what foods have you had abroad that tastes different, and was it better or worse?

reddit.com
u/Imma_Lick_That — 1 day ago
▲ 178 r/ask

What's the strangest "off-menu" thing someone has ordered from a restaurant/food service?

One for the workers here. I spent 5 years working at McDonald's while studying and heard some strange request in my time. I think perhaps the strangest was a man who came in 3 minutes before closing and asked for just a burger box full of pickles. Apparently his pregnant wife was having cravings for McDonald's pickles in particular.

reddit.com
u/Imma_Lick_That — 3 days ago
▲ 669 r/TheHobbit

If Dwarfs are such master builders, why would they make a set of stairs you couldn't climb?

u/Imma_Lick_That — 16 days ago

I was watching a clip of Samuel L Jackson on the Jimmy Fallon show, and they beeped out all the swear words. Here in the UK on a equivalent show like the Graham Norton show, (or any program after the 9pm watershed) swearing is fine and pretty normal. I would imagine film have the swearing left intact, but do all TV shows have censored swearing?

reddit.com
u/Imma_Lick_That — 18 days ago
▲ 2 r/xmen

We all know wolverine in damn near immortal and indestructible, if not for the toxicity of the adamantium who knows how long he might of lived, but how strong is he. I imagine he is stonger than most just to move with that extra weight, and obviously doesn't need to worry about torn of damages muscles. However, in Deadpool & Wolverine, he managed to break down what is essential a heavy duty vault door to help Deadpool, something that would require truly superhuman strength, something Logan is renowned for having.

reddit.com
u/Imma_Lick_That — 21 days ago

Since Lily Potter was muggle born or a "mudblood" as some might say, did that mean harry is considered a half-blood like Snape aka the half-blood prince, or is he pure blood because despite her muggle parents, Lily was still a witch.

reddit.com
u/Imma_Lick_That — 22 days ago