Guest
Our toaster gave up the ghost the other day and, seeing as replacements at WalMart are running less than 15 bucks, I decided to retire, rather than repair.
I was carrying it out to the trash can when I decided that, side-on, it was a target that even I could hit. So I loaded up the 1860 Colt with 180 grain round-nose .44s, set the toaster atop a fence post (with a good-size hill behind it) and administered a coup de grace from 25 yards away.
It did such a spectacular backwards somersault off the post that I did it again with the other four rounds in the cylinder. It didn't look much like a toaster after the second shot.
It made an interesting chore out of taking out the trash. In fact, just as soon as this computer gives up the ghost, I now know exactly what I'm going to do with it. Might even swing it by its electrical cord, just to see how much I have to lead it.
Is this my own personal oddity, or has anybody else had their own experience with executing various and sundry household items?
I was carrying it out to the trash can when I decided that, side-on, it was a target that even I could hit. So I loaded up the 1860 Colt with 180 grain round-nose .44s, set the toaster atop a fence post (with a good-size hill behind it) and administered a coup de grace from 25 yards away.
It did such a spectacular backwards somersault off the post that I did it again with the other four rounds in the cylinder. It didn't look much like a toaster after the second shot.
It made an interesting chore out of taking out the trash. In fact, just as soon as this computer gives up the ghost, I now know exactly what I'm going to do with it. Might even swing it by its electrical cord, just to see how much I have to lead it.
Is this my own personal oddity, or has anybody else had their own experience with executing various and sundry household items?