Jul 2013
5:45pm, 3 Jul 2013
13,824 posts
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Steady Edina
I sometimes like a bit of almond milk not keen on black coffee
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Jul 2013
8:27pm, 3 Jul 2013
19,730 posts
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ogee
Coffee, white, one sugar ta muchly.
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Jul 2013
8:47pm, 3 Jul 2013
13,828 posts
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Steady Edina
Remember those Red Mountain adverts where they would go in the kitchen and make noises like a coffee machine
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Jul 2013
8:48pm, 3 Jul 2013
10,352 posts
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What The Actual Fleecy
And the adverts with the couple getting it together
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Jul 2013
8:50pm, 3 Jul 2013
562 posts
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old mum
He was better in Buffy.
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Jul 2013
8:51pm, 3 Jul 2013
10,353 posts
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What The Actual Fleecy
If you were both a barrister and a barista you could offer your legal clients a bloody good cup of coffee, or you could offer legal advice to customers drinking your coffee I think maybe Chiefy needs to fill this niche
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Jul 2013
8:52pm, 3 Jul 2013
16,342 posts
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FenlandRunner
Hate coffee, can't go wrong with Tea *not a troll* *this is an honest opinion*
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Jul 2013
8:54pm, 3 Jul 2013
61,803 posts
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Hanneke
Haven't you got a hill to run up FR
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Jul 2013
8:56pm, 3 Jul 2013
563 posts
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old mum
Then hunt out Imporient (their green tea and peach is fab hot, red berry makes a corking iced tea) and Ridgeways. Best cuppa cha you'll ever have.
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Jul 2013
8:58pm, 3 Jul 2013
2,233 posts
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Wobbling
My training was in criminal law, a lot of my clients would have been in prison (one of big reasons I decided to give it up, would you want to go to prison a couple of times a week?) so I wouldn't want to give them coffee. Similarly, I'm not sure I wanted to serve coffee to people who needed legal advice on their criminal activities.
All in all, being a barista was far more satisfying / less risky than being a barrister.
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