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Had director
Steve James replaced the brief shot of topless women with hundreds of men being
machine-gunned to death, “Life Itself” might have gotten the PG-13 rating “The
Expendables III” hilariously brandishes. To quote The Waco Kid, Sly Stallone
and his band of merry old action stars “kill more men than Cecil B. DeMille,”
yet somehow this is more kid-friendly than bare breasts. In fact, no one in “The
Expendables III” takes his shirt off, presumably because Terry Crews’ obscenely
massive pecs alone would almost guarantee an R.
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It is genuine
farce to follow the gore-soaked prior installments of this franchise with one
Minnesota-based General Mills announced a whole bunch of new food products hitting store shelves this summer.
The company shared earlier this week that many of their brands will debut new products from cereal to yogurt, taco kits to snack bars, and even some new items for your pets.
Jodi Benson, chief Innovation, Technology and Quality officer at General Mills, commented on the products, sharing that many of the new offerings take into consideration what they see as current consumer trends that balance indulgence and self-care . With offerings like Lucky Charms oatmeal in the new roster, that seems like an appropriate description.
That frosting has got quite the kick. CBS is reporting that a New York man and a woman from Maine were arrested after a significant amount of cocaine disguised as cake was found in their vehicle. CBS 6 Albany had initially reported that the arrest happened in Gardiner in Orange County, though WGME says it was actually Gardiner, Maine.
CBS says that the duo had been under investigation for distributing coke in the state of Maine. CBS says that drug agents seized more than four pounds of cocaine from their vehicle Tuesday. Police go on to say more than two pounds of the coke was disguised as cake, though they didn t go into what kind of cake exactly. Good thing that didn t end up at some kid s party, for that would have been one wild get together. Police say the two had wrapped gourmet cake in cellophane and sprinkled coffee grounds on top to hopefully hide the scent from K9s.
Illustration by Texas Monthly; Background: Getty
Krazy Kookie Dough came into Rebecca Muehl’s life when she needed it most. It was the summer of 2020 the height of Texas’s second COVID wave. Pregnant with her first child, the San Antonio office assistant was overcome with strange new cravings, but felt too scared to risk a trip to the grocery store. When she simply couldn’t take it anymore, she sent her husband off to Walgreens, telling him not to return without ice cream. He brought back Krazy Kookie Dough, a seasonal Blue Bell flavor first introduced in 2013, because “artificially flavored cake batter ice cream with sugar cookie dough pieces” was the only description that sounded good to his pregnant wife when he read the label to her over the phone. She was an immediate convert. “It was