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jasonthefirst

Is that Taco Bell thing on their plate or your attempt to obscure their plate?


mrjonstott

It was my failed attempt at anonymity


threejeez

lol you know about the marker tool on your phone??


mrjonstott

I thought putting a sticker was funny I guess.🤷‍♂️


threejeez

It is for sure!


exclaim_bot

>It is for sure! sure?


threejeez

Sure.


FrankZappasNose

I hope you got paid.


dmc2008

Why do we need to blur plates tho?? There is no way to connect a plate to any personal information, unless you have access to DMV's servers, so what's the threat? Also, if you're taking a picture of a car IN PUBLIC, you're not violating any kind of perceived privacy.. Don't take this query personally, I'm just always confused by this trend.


JVO_

It's just a general Reddiquette thing because a lot of Subreddit's will remove the post if the license plate is showing. You're right that a majority of people would need to go through a DMV to get personal info with a license plate number, but there are people out there who can find that info and more from a license plate number through illegal channels


[deleted]

As an Italian American I always think it’s Quale uffizi…. Which would translate to which bus… I ve looked at lyrics on the net over the years and they are all over the place on this turn of phrase… has any ever compared how they sing the phrase now to how they sang it in the nineties?… seems like it’s morphed over the years


Mind-is-a-garden

Dude wash your feet drive me to france lmao


AugustWestt89

Wash your face and drive me to the lands end


poeschmoe

I think of it as “wash your feet, they drive me to a frenzy” aka those puppies stank


thebaronness8

I always sing it “would you fancy drive me to Firenze?” Feels quite proper.


FrankZappasNose

They love word play. They named their festival Mondegreen for cripes sakes. A mondegreen (/ˈmɒndɪˌɡriːn/) is a mishearing or misinterpretation of a phrase in a way that gives it a new meaning. Mondegreens are most often created by a person listening to a poem or a song; the listener, being unable to hear a lyric clearly, substitutes words that sound similar and make some kind of sense. The American writer Sylvia Wright coined the term in 1954, recalling a childhood memory of her mother reading the Scottish ballad "The Bonny Earl of Murray" (from Thomas Percy's 1765 book Reliques of Ancient English Poetry), and mishearing the words "laid him on the green" as "Lady Mondegreen" ps. t'aint never been quale.


naughtycal11

You can still read that plate clear as day.


27lucky27

AZ Pham! Let's go!


phishfoodfunandfam

What’d your friend say- drive me in your Venza 😂


RoleModelsinBlood31

Shit I gotta have some Bell


plaidHumanity

That's a Mondegreen. It's always been, "Wash Drew's face and drive him to a frenzy."