Bags containing nothing but unwanted items are known colloquially as fukōbukuro ("misfortune bags") or utsubukuro ("depressing bags"), and some stores which have nothing good to offer inside actually name their bags this and offer them at extremely low prices (such as 500-1000 yen).
@katylava@JonT@Thumperchick I actually had to go back and read the source code - the blur keeps crashing Chrome. That'll teach me . . . oh well, the $5 spent is a quarter of a decent lap dance, I guess I'll have a good laugh when it gets here.
It's true what they say, people really don't read. No matter how hard you make it for them to do so.
@katylava you are up late at night more than once. you now work nights or something?
@Kidsandliz it's a fuk*bukuro night. gotta be up for those.
@katylava What's even worse: People DO read, and ignore quality advice.... such as me :)
@katylava . but . . . but . . if you take the time to read, you'll miss it for sure.
because they were calling it the unlucky bag this time
fukobukuro is a pun meaning "unlucky bag"
@wylel it's the Japanese translation of "misfortune bag" or "unlucky bag", and Fuk*u*bukuro is "lucky bag" in Japanese.
Bags containing nothing but unwanted items are known colloquially as fukōbukuro ("misfortune bags") or utsubukuro ("depressing bags"), and some stores which have nothing good to offer inside actually name their bags this and offer them at extremely low prices (such as 500-1000 yen).
You can lead a @Pavlov to the write up, but you can't make him read it... when it's upside down.
@katylava @JonT @Thumperchick I actually had to go back and read the source code - the blur keeps crashing Chrome. That'll teach me . . . oh well, the $5 spent is a quarter of a decent lap dance, I guess I'll have a good laugh when it gets here.
Faulty address verification pays off again!