- Joined
- Oct 27, 2021
It's been 2 years. You can forgive yourself. The 2020ish+/- years were weird.This thread all but constantly sucked his dick on a daily basis, including me,
It's not even so much the TV bc that can be moved. And looks like they aligned it with the fireplace grate....which could have worked - if it weren't for the cheap ass faux stone veneer that was unaccountably stopped where it was.What the fuck is even going on here, also that off-center TV irritates the fuck out of me:
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Lol they really took these pictures with April's stuff all over the place.damn you beat me to it. Ill addapril'sthe fleshlight's stuff.
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Psst, April, if your sugar daddy only provides you mismatched plastic hangers, you're doing it wrong.
Do Catholic churches call it a rectory, too? I thought that was a purely Episcopalian term (and priests in the EC are, formally, rectors, though depending on flavor/background will accept priest and pastor as well. Epis Church is best church, just muddledChurches require a rectory house for the Priest. I'm down. Oftentimes the Priest has to either live in a house owned by the denomination or live at the charity of some wealthy parishioner who has a spare house somewhere. Churches that actually have a rectory owned by the church parish itself are rare these days, so would be a big own.
Would not even care that the money ultimately ended up with Lord Balldo. He would just squander it on hookers and blow anyway. It was the Church that intervened after all. If they need a rectory, I say go for it.
Most MN homes need a water softener, whether on municipal water or well. https://www.health.state.mn.us/communities/environment/water/wells/waterquality/iron.htmllooks like their area has some serious hard water and they don't have a softener or carbon filter. Yuck.
Although I understand that at present time glass tops are a new rage (meaning induction cook tops), gas (of vintage < 30 years old) has been and is it. But it's clear from those appliances (stove and the rest) and the bathrooms, trim, kitchen, etc., that they kept this house to its middle class origins*. Nothing wrong with that - they moved from that house awhile ago and were renting/allowing people to live there for free; totally understandable they'd do the minimum. At least it's...clean? (ignoring slasher horrors in the bathroom**)Upside down pineapple
This is trashy as fuck and also a perfect example of why you on't go with a glass top range. They're fucking trash fit only for people who don't understand cooking and want to look "fancy".
*same for their main house but I digress.
** for not much money they could have had that thing retiled. I appreciate a "we know someone's going to rip everything tf out so not going to bother too much" house sale, but mercy, that shower.
Maybe, but houses there built long before that time don't routinely have that level of discoloration, by a long shot.The house was built in 1981 and iron pipes were the norm back then. So likely a combination of the pipes and the water running through them. Still, why wouldn't you put lipstick on that pig? Wouldn't have cost much to replace that small shower.
I was wondering the same (if they were on well water). Yet still, you have what you have, and you deal with it. That pic says, "not dealing with anything."They probably are using a well, since they're out in the country. Probably a lot of iron in between the surface and the aquifer. Still... not suprising to see Nick was a shitty homeowner.
The biggest problem with this house, aesthetically speaking, is that it's just a fucking garage in front. Some misguided idea of privacy, maybe, even though it's a 7.8 acre lot. Terrible. Just terrible.It seems like a house with a poorly designed extension that added at some point, probably the giant kitchen, dining, living room. Like hanging out in a school gym.
Idk about this house but their main house is a very common mn design: the walkout. Main level, lower (livable and sometimes very nice, equal detail to main) level. It's not in vogue now but there are a billion houses in mn with that style and it can be done well.The one interesting thing I noticed, and liked, is the house seems to be built into the land. Not sure how that plays out with water/moisture but would be great for keeping a house warm in winter and cool in summer.
Agree it's got builder's standard decisions, but I don't see it as a mcmansion. Where is the double-height foyer with brass chandelier, I ask you?!Nick’s current home is a big tacky “1990’s fake craftsman ” McMansion. Also appears to be another rich guy with ideas plus contractor special. (They usually pick something out of a blue print publication and then tweak it to death with all their bad ideas for a house)
Their main house seems to me standard slightly above-average builder's/90s mn aesthetic that was updated in some ways (iirc their outdoor space has some nice upgrades (with wood walls/ ceilings/ soffits) though I could be misremembering) but they apparently enjoyed the <90s/early 2000s Midwestern trim, carpet, materials, etc. If he didn't have money I wouldn't say a word about it, BUT.
Law school is 3 years.10 years? AFAIK, he had 5 for the bachelor and 2 for lawschool?