Ya,meant knock-off as in Sears licensed items from name brands, much like Krogers or other stores do now where the product are from the brands but renamed. Sears did this for many items to pull in sales as exclusives. Not sure on the licensing aspect either. It felt like the execs were throwing spaghetti.As someone old enough to buy a ton of games from Sears during The Collapse (seriously, the games sold for $5 but still had a $5 mail-in rebate (the joys of corporate accounting)), I'm virtually positivethe systemwasn't a "knockoff" - it was an Atari-made 2600 with Sears branding on it.
The games, on the other hand, were mostly clones - I don't believe Atari had licensing, so anyone could manufacture a game that played on the system if they liked.
I had that Atari and the Apple IIGS off to the side in that pic.
Oh well let's just go ahead and hook this blob up to the power grid since they're apparently a source of infinite energy.
Thats remarkable, a 30,000kcal/wk deficit is 4285kcal/day, which if lets postulate she's a 40 year old female, means her body weight has to be approximately 808lbs and she would eat NOTHING. If she's eating lets say 1500kcal/day to hit a 30kcal/wk deficit she'd have to weigh ~1150lbs.
I had the same thought. That's a lot more than double the suggested caloric intake.Thats remarkable, a 30,000kcal/wk deficit is 4285kcal/day, which if lets postulate she's a 40 year old female, means her body weight has to be approximately 808lbs and she would eat NOTHING. If she's eating lets say 1500kcal/day to hit a 30kcal/wk deficit she'd have to weigh ~1150lbs.
Truly, truly remarkable
The outcome for this wonderful young man makes me squeel with joy.
after the video:
I used to have that comic (it was a giant-sized issue if I remember correctly). Wish I still had it. And for the record, I rooted for Ali over Superman.