There is not much that will get me out of my house on a Tuesday night, and there is even less that will get me out of my house and into a party at a club in Hollywood. But this was no ordinary Tuesday, and this was no ordinary party; this was the launch of Taco Bell's new menu item the Grilled Cheese Dipping Taco, dropping this Thursday at locations nationwide. I get that kind of invitation, and I shine up my Hollywood shoes, I reserve an Uber, and I go. You would, too. The invitation came from a guy named Rene Pisciotti, and what I am going to tell you about Rene Pisciotti around 75 words from now is going to blow your mind. I met Rene a couple of months ago, when Taco Bell did a collaboration with Yeastie Boys, a popular Los Angeles bagel-based food truck. He was wearing a very official-looking apron, so I asked if he was one of the Yeastie Boys, and he said, "I'm the head chef of Taco Bell," and then everything sort of went blurry and white for a moment as a choir of angels sang. Rene's unofficial job title is "Taco Whisperer"; he's in charge of menu innovations at Taco Bell, and I think we can agree that no fast-food menu has been more consistently innovative than the Bell's. |
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Let's get you that pair of studio-level cans. |
| The breezy fabric manages to make even the most casual of shorts look effortlessly chic. |
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We're barely a month out now from the release of WHY WE LOVE BASEBALL… and I thought it might be fun to count down to the big day with a few stories about baseball history. The focus, though, will be about how baseball history impacts the game today. You probably know that there's history everywhere in the game, even in the language we use such as "clubhouse" and "pitcher." The pitcher is called that because in the early days of baseball, they really did pitch the ball, underhanded, like horseshoes. One of the very first rules of baseball—one of the 20 original Knickerbocker Rules adopted in 1845—was "The ball must be pitched, not thrown, for the bat." This is a key thing to remember for today's entry: A brief history of the walk. |
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From now 'til August 22nd get gear for the best price of the season. |
| We did the grinding, drinking, and hyper-caffeinated testing for you. |
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I just got back from a week "Out East," which is what people who vacation in The Hamptons say when they know they're actually way too poor to claim they'd vacation in the Hamptons. The other thing you do when you're too poor to claim you're vacationing in The Hamptons is drink cheap liquor in a crowded bar out of small plastic cups. Ben Affleck, spotted recently on a Hamptons Vacation with his wife, Jennifer Lopez, likely did not. But he kind of looks like he did. I know it too well. I emerged from my lodgings looking similar last week. (Shout out to Montauk's The Point). Our perpetually disheveled king and my hungover-looking Hero is elsewhere being lauded for his Dunkin dedication, but what stuck out to me was that unbeknownst to the photographer, they captured him the exact moment he was experiencing the coolest stage of smoking a cigarette: when it's been lit for around ninety seconds and is hanging perfectly balanced out of your mouth. |
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