The WORST part of living alone. I feel your pain, Iron Man
(Source: calmrad, via the-absolute-best-posts)
The WORST part of living alone. I feel your pain, Iron Man
(Source: calmrad, via the-absolute-best-posts)
Story. Of. My. Life.
(Source: forever90s, via the-absolute-best-posts)
Hannibal, Translated: EVERYTHING IS PEOPLE
This actually sums up the entire season, with a hell of a lot less confusion
Typographical scientific artwork by Dr Stephen Gaeta
- Extraocular: Text from Zoonomia, the 1794 masterpiece of Erasmus Darwin (grandfather of Charles), in which he attempted to catalog and explain human anatomy, pathology, and physiology, including the visual system. (SOURCE)
- Beat Poetry: Text from the seminal 1809 work of cardiologyCases of the Organic Disease of the Heart, with Dissections and Some Remarks Intended to Point Out the Distinctive Symptoms of These Diseases, by John Collins Warren. In this work, Warren describes the symptoms of 11 of his patients with heart disease as they presented in his office and, later, on his dissecting table. (SOURCE)
- Reactant: Text from the The Sceptical Chymist by Robert Boyle (1661), in which he provided the foundations of modern chemistry by proving that matter is comprised of individual atoms. (SOURCE)
- Transgenic: Text from Chromosome 1 of the human genome.
[found by Atavus]
I love these more than you love these. I’ll bet you money.
life:
Today we present 40 portraits that help us see the human beings behind some of the 20th century’s most vital works of art.
Pictured: Roy Lichtenstein, 1963
(John Loengard—Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images)
Love
raspberry popovers: recipe here
(via thefoodqueens)
This, I love
So “Teddy Roosevelt Mascot” is the best thing ive ever googled ever.
i literally can not be upset about anything ever again
Oh Teddy, you’re everyone’s favorite
(via pleatedjeans)
This was magical.
If you ever needed a reason to follow @TheDailyShow, this is it.
Here’s the original segment, in case you missed it.
(via evangotlib)
The Bento Laptop Tablet, designed by René Woo-Ram Lee.
Take our money now.
“We are trying to be provocative in the best use of that term.” –Jon Rubin, Conflict Kitchen co-director
GREAT story we just posted about Conflict Kitchen, a Pittsburgh restaurant that only serves food from countries in conflict with the USA. Check this out, a great concept, and some great quotes.“Reaction’s been great,” Rubin says when asked the obvious. “There’s never been this kind of food in Pittsburgh, and we didn’t know whether people would be into that. But people are starving for food and diversity.”
Such an amazing idea.
This is awesome
(via disneybound)