Description
<p><b style="color: rgb(84, 84, 84); font-family: "Open Sans"; font-size: 12px;">Your exes as the creeps of the deep sea.</b><br style="color: rgb(84, 84, 84); font-family: "Open Sans"; font-size: 12px;"><br style="color: rgb(84, 84, 84); font-family: "Open Sans"; font-size: 12px;"><span style="color: rgb(84, 84, 84); font-family: "Open Sans"; font-size: 12px;">While there may be plenty of fish in the sea, the ones down deep may not be worth catching.</span><br style="color: rgb(84, 84, 84); font-family: "Open Sans"; font-size: 12px;"><br style="color: rgb(84, 84, 84); font-family: "Open Sans"; font-size: 12px;"><i style="color: rgb(84, 84, 84); font-family: "Open Sans"; font-size: 12px;">Deep-sea Creeps</i><span style="color: rgb(84, 84, 84); font-family: "Open Sans"; font-size: 12px;"> is a taxonomy of those terrible exes that should have been left lurking in the murky depths of your Tinder messages from The Self-Proclaimed Nice Guy to The Egomaniac, and even The Ex Who Wanted To Break Up (But Wanted You To Do It).</span><br style="color: rgb(84, 84, 84); font-family: "Open Sans"; font-size: 12px;"><br style="color: rgb(84, 84, 84); font-family: "Open Sans"; font-size: 12px;"><span style="color: rgb(84, 84, 84); font-family: "Open Sans"; font-size: 12px;">This hilarious oceanographic expedition is for anyone whos cut a loser from their line, and will (hopefully) help identify the next creep before you reel him in.</span></p>


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