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rbmorris
Vampyroteuthis

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Do you own any "As Seen On TV" products?

I have the Magic Bullet Blender, the Smart Spin food storage system and a Ronco rotisserie thingy.

All three are fantastic.

c

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Originally posted by rbmorris
Do you own any "As Seen On TV" products?

I have the Magic Bullet Blender, the Smart Spin food storage system and a Ronco rotisserie thingy.

All three are fantastic.
We have a Ronco - that thing sucks. Everytime my dad uses it I have to wait like 5 hours for it to cook.

It does taste good when it's done though...

rbmorris
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Originally posted by cmsMaster
We have a Ronco - that thing sucks. Everytime my dad uses it I have to wait like 5 hours for it to cook.

It does taste good when it's done though...
Well yeah, it's not the Ronco that sucks. It's just the fact that rotisserie chicken takes a while to cook.

Oh, I also have a Foreman Grill, which rocks. If you have one, next time you make a sandwich (like roast beef or something), put it in the Foreman grill for a minute or two before eating. Makes it nice-n-toasty and puts pretty lines on your bread.

DS

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Originally posted by rbmorris
Do you own any "As Seen On TV" products?

I have the Magic Bullet Blender, the Smart Spin food storage system and a Ronco rotisserie thingy.

All three are fantastic.
I've got a video camera, as seen on crimewatch.

N

The sky

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Originally posted by rbmorris
Do you own any "As Seen On TV" products?
I don't own a TV, so how would I know?

SJ247

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Originally posted by rbmorris
Well yeah, it's not the Ronco that sucks. It's just the fact that rotisserie chicken takes a while to cook.

Oh, I also have a Foreman Grill, which rocks. If you have one, next time you make a sandwich (like roast beef or something), put it in the Foreman grill for a minute or two before eating. Makes it nice-n-toasty and puts pretty lines on your bread.
It's called a panini.

L

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Originally posted by Nordlys
I don't own a TV, so how would I know?
Maybe you can buy an "as seen on TV" TV.

a

THORNINYOURSIDE

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Originally posted by SJ247
It's called a panini.
Nope its definately a Foreman Grill 😉

C
Dark Legend

Galaxy near You

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Originally posted by adramforall
Nope its definately a Foreman Grill 😉
That Foreman Grill is very good. Makes the best lamb chops.

N

The sky

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Originally posted by LanndonKane
Maybe you can buy an "as seen on TV" TV.
That would be a "will see it on TV" TV then.

huckleberryhound
Devout Agnostic.

DZ-015

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My cat....As seen on the TV. 😛

klopdisselboom
Fossil Fuel Burner

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I don't have a tv either. RHP forums provide all the mindless entertainment I need. 😵

rbmorris
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Originally posted by SJ247
It's called a panini.
Thanks, Numbers. I know. They serve them at our local high-end grocery store. 😛

N

The sky

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Originally posted by rbmorris
Thanks, Numbers. I know. They serve them at our local high-end grocery store. 😛
"Pāṇini (Devanāgarī: पाणिनि; a patronymic meaning "descendant of Paṇi"😉 was an ancient Indian grammarian from Gandhara (traditionally 520–460 BC, but estimates range from the 7th to 4th centuries BC[1]). He is most famous for his Sanskrit grammar, particularly for his formulation of the 3,959 rules of Sanskrit morphology in the grammar known as Aṣṭādhyāyī (meaning "eight chapters"😉. It is the earliest known grammar of Sanskrit (though scholars agree it likely built on earlier works), and the earliest known work on descriptive linguistics, generative linguistics, and perhaps linguistics as a whole. Panini's comprehensive and scientific theory of grammar is conventionally taken to mark the end of the period of Vedic Sanskrit, by definition introducing Classical Sanskrit."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P%C4%81%E1%B9%87ini

Cool!

Edit: Argh, it's all messed up. You'll have to use Reply & Quote or follow the link.

rbmorris
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Originally posted by Nordlys
"Pāṇini (Devanāgarī: पाणिनि; a patronymic meaning "descendant of Paṇi"😉 was an ancient Indian grammarian from Gandhara (traditionally 520–460 BC, but estimates range from the 7th to 4th centuries BC[1]). He is most famous for his Sanskrit grammar, particularly for his formulation of the 3,959 rul oducing Classical Sanskrit."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P%C4%81%E1%B9%87ini

Cool!
The original Grammar Nazi! ( OGN© )

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