I meant if I went to a Cubs game at Wrigley and they were playing Pirates, I wouldn’t show up to that game wearing Cards gear, but I’d wear a Razorbacks hat as I’m just there to see Wrigley and watch a ball game regardless of who’s playing since I’m not a fan of either team.
According to good ol Wiki Cholo (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈtʃolo]) is a loosely defined Spanish term that has had various meanings. Its origin is a somewhat derogatory term for people of mixed-blood heritage in the Spanish Empire in Latin America and its successor states as part of castas, the informal ranking of society by heritage. Cholo no longer necessarily refers only to ethnic heritage, and is not always meant negatively. Cholo can signify anything from its original sense as a person with one Amerindian parent and one Mestizo parent, "gangster" in Mexico, an insult in some South American countries (similar to chulo in Spain), or a "person who dresses in the manner of a certain subculture" in the United States as part of the cholo subculture.[1][2] Modern usage United States Main article: Cholo (subculture) Cholos, cholas and cholitas are used as informal slang terms in parts of the US, to refer to people of Mexican descent, who usually are low-income and "tough", and may wear stereotypical clothes.[2] The origin is complex: Racial and cultural status, along with social class are reflected in the term cholo itself, which was adopted in California in the 1960s by youth following the pachuco tradition, as a label for that identity (Cuellar 1982). In 1571, Fray Alonso de Molina, in his Nahuatl vocabulary (Vocabulario en Lengua Castellana y Mexicana Y Mexicana y Castellana), defined the word xolo as slave, servant, or waiter. The Porrúa Dictionary defines cholo, as used in the Americas, as a civilized Native American or a half-breed or mestizo of a European father and Native American mother. The word has historically been used along the borderland as a derogatory term to mean lower class Mexican migrants, and in the rest of Latin America to mean an acculturating Indian or peasant.[11] Despite, or because of, its long history of denigrating semantics, the term cholo was turned on its head and used as a symbol of pride in the context of the ethnic power movements of the 1960s.[12]
Lots of debate over time on what a sucker punch is but I'd love to hear someone try to argue that not being one considering the White Sox fan wasn't looking at the guy, nor was the punch thrower even involved in the drink over the head/pushing altercation.
White Sox fans can be trash too. So I suppose it makes sense for an Astros fan to get confused and hit it, thinking it's a garbage can. (that's a stretch, I know).
He certainly did. That dude swung damn hard but impressive chin by White Sox fan. Popped back up right away.
I am not trying to kink shame anybody but what type of woman goes through two super fans in a lifetime? Is it some kind of fetish? I have a few questions for that woman.
Led me to another, SIAP. Not much context, everyone is pretty nonchalant, not quick draw on the phone game.
So many questions. Was this after the game or during the delay? Why was he not allowed to collect cups if after the game? Why did the other guy get to steal them from him?
During the delay. People left their cups at their seats, he was stealing them. Other guy assumedly gave them to the rightful owners waiting under cover like they were directed to.
Dont think so. Those look like the standard $12 large soda you buy so you can chug part of it then empty your flask of cheap whiskey into cups.
If you can find a girl willing to go in a men's room and do it with a crowd of 1000 hyenas gathered around, I think you still can