In Austin there is another bill aimed to pass that would ban texting, and other digital communication involving reading, writing, or sending electronic messages while driving. Are you for or against this?
It's kind of annoying to walk into a bar these days and see EVERYONE sitting there texting. No one's talking to friends. No one's hitting on anyone. They're just texting and occasionally drinking. But there's a new invention in Brazil that's trying to change that and we hope it makes its way up here soon.
It doesn't matter which way we spin it; breaking up stinks. (Unless, of course, you're the breaker-upper, in which case it's like a cause for celebration.) Either way, cutting the relationship cord has gotten a bit easier ever since text messaging hit the scene. As it turns out, break up texts can be hilarious.
Being a teenager is a perilous time in one's life as a not-quite fully developed brain will cause the teen to make all kinds of questionable decisions.
Now thanks to a new phenomenon called sleep-texting, the teenager can even make these bad decisions while they are catching z's.
Remember the video from a couple years ago of a girl falling into a shopping mall fountain because she was texting?
Well, it happened again. But this time in Birmingham, England...to a woman named "Laura Safe"...and she fell into an icy CANAL.
Texting while driving? Dangerous. Texting while walking? Generally just a bit impolite if you're in a crowded area.
At least, that's normally the case. If you live near a cliff, it might not be a great idea.
A black bear has been showing up in a neighborhood outside L.A. for a month, and yesterday morning authorities finally caught it. But not before it gave one resident the scare of his LIFE.
I think it just looks sad when you see a table of people at dinner, and none of them are talking to each other because they're all texting. So I have to call this idea GENIUS.
Buckle your seat belts, folks.
According to Harris Poll chairman Humphrey Taylor regarding a new survey, “The number of drivers who engage in potentially dangerous, in some cases extremely dangerous, behaviors while driving is terrifyingly high.”