By OnMilwaukee Staff Writers   Published Sep 25, 2016 at 6:01 PM

There is nothing like a good ole Sunday Funday. Here are just a few of the things we suggest to have a great one – whether home or out. 

Have it: "You're the Worst"

For my Sunday Funday, I want a detailed and definitive list of Sunday Funday things to do, like in "You're the Worst," and friends who want to do both the brunching and the drunken activities, like getting a zen garden massage, going to a petting zoo and racing in shopping carts. Failing such an intrepid group, I'll take ingesting the Big Bad Burrito at Karma brunch and then laying on my couch watching football for 10 hours. – Jimmy Carlton

Must have it: Bumstead Provisions

When it comes to starting off your Sunday Funday in proper form, I'm pretty sure the new brunch at Bumstead Provisions is worth a gander. After all, what could be better than endless pours of sparkling wine, fresh berries and hot mini doughnuts? – Lori Fredrich

Visit one: beer garden

I spent an alarmingly small amount of time at beer gardens this summer. I don't know why, it just happened that way. Hence, to make up for lost time – and because there are few Sundays left that beer gardens are an option –  I'm going to visit a couple before they shutter for the season. The only decision, really, is which one to hit first. – Molly Snyder

Run with it: ViewSPORT running T-shirts

These days I find myself running not just for exercise but also for fun and satisfaction. I especially find that 45 minutes or so to myself to think – or to not think – and be outside are some of the best minutes of my day. Luckily, I'm motivated right now, but sometimes a little encouragement helps keep me going. Like the two little kids in Tosa that shouted "good job!" to me as I ran past recently. Also, like ViewSPORT's tees, which slowly reveal positive, encouraging messages on them as you sweat. (I get that it's cool for me, but maybe a little euw-worthy for others.) But it was a nice surprise when I was running in it the first time to see the words emerge. However, I'd argue they should appear upside down so I can read them better when I look down. After all, they're meant for me. viewsport.us – Bobby Tanzilo

Chill with it: Slingbox

The concept of cutting the cord is a fun one to consider, but let's be honest, it's not quite there yet. Especially with Packers season here. Even with Apple TV, Chromecast or Roku, you face quite a few limitations and hoops to jump through, especially when it comes to live sports, local TV and general reliability. Our cottage, which gets decent broadband Internet, is too far from Green Bay to get over-the-air TV, and I'm not paying for a satellite dish for its very limited use. Thankfully, Slingbox – not a new invention – is the absolutely best way to watch your own TV on the go. Here's how it works: it connects to your cable or satellite or U-Verse box at home, and then uploads whatever is on your TV to your mobile device (including to your Roku box so you can watch it on another TV somewhere else). Amazingly, you virtually control your own remote control via an infrared dongle, so there's a little bit of a delay; but for the most part, it just works. I've had zero problems streaming to my iPhone and iPad, but connecting to my Up North Roku took some rebooting/re-installing before I got it to work. And, the latency with the IR remote means that occasionally, I typed in the wrong channel, but it syncs nicely with your actual channel guide. Finally, I'm a little surprised that it connects with component cables and not HDMI, but the quality, if you have good bandwidth, is quite good. Overall, Slingbox is an amazing value at $197, with no additional fees, forever. There's a cheaper version, the M1, that is identical from a hardware perspective, but then you get dinged on adding additional devices, and you see some ads. Spend the extra cash and stream your stuff everywhere. – Andy Tarnoff