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I remember 2 years ago my boyfriend and I went out with his best friend and his girlfriend, my boyfriend and I rode in the front seat and they sat in the back. This crazy "(rhymes with witch)" said she had a headache and whipped out a stick of "head on" and he rubbed it on her forehead. I wanted to laugh so bad. A little while later, headache gone. I couldn't believe it!

Do you think that was some sick form of foreplay, or did she really have a headache and "Head on" really works? I think about how I had to hold in the laugh while in the car with those nuts everytime the "head on" commercial airs.

2007-06-09 04:38:30 · 7 answers · asked by half sam, half amazing 4 in Entertainment & Music Polls & Surveys

that (rhymes with witch) is not my friend, my boyfriend hates her too. And I think the headache was for show...she likes attention.

2007-06-09 04:54:12 · update #1

7 answers

I've always wondered if the product was only good if you had a headache in your forehead. I get headaches in different parts of my head, particularly the back of my head, and my neck. Would it work there too?

Oh, and about your crazy "witch" friend, how do you KNOW she had an actual headache and that later it "disappeared"? Maybe it was all a show.

2007-06-09 04:47:01 · answer #1 · answered by kitten lover3 7 · 0 0

Not that brand, but about 20 years ago (yes, 20!!) I had an asian friend and everytime she had a headache she put this ointment on her forehead that her mother made. I tried it and it worked. Every time. I guess someone finally decided to market it...
Herbal remedies have been around forever, anyhow.

2007-06-09 04:41:19 · answer #2 · answered by flipdout2 5 · 1 0

I have no idea if this product works, but now I'm completely intrigued by your erroneous but entertaining side story. What exactly happened the night you and your boyfriend sat in the front seat and these freaks sat in the back?
From now on, when I see that commercial, I'm going to think of that song "crazy *itch" by Buckcherry and wonder how head-on can be used during fore-play.
"Hey, you're a crazy *itch' but you F so good I'm head-on top of it."

2007-06-09 05:00:37 · answer #3 · answered by haute.pepper 4 · 0 2

Nope, but when I think of the music industry at current, and what Lynn Marie Latham is doing to "The Young and the Restless," that's exactly what I feel like using sometimes.

2007-06-09 04:52:58 · answer #4 · answered by Sharon Newman (YR) Must Die 7 · 0 0

that style of merchandising ought to be unlawful. i might prefer to stay with my foot directly to their ***. no one needs their crappy product before everything and stressful the hell out of incredibly everyone does not make it from now on useful for them or us. i'm thinking of beginning a petition to deliver to CNN. incredibly everyone who hates this advert ought to a minimum of e mail CNN approximately removing them as a sponsor.

2016-10-07 04:18:06 · answer #5 · answered by duktig 4 · 0 0

the stuff really does work... its a topically applied analgesic...

2007-06-09 04:41:46 · answer #6 · answered by Barack_O' Llama 6 · 0 0

Yes, but I thought they said 'foreskin' and WOW was my b/f happy.

2007-06-09 04:42:26 · answer #7 · answered by cme2bleve 5 · 0 1

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