misterwalsh:

JOSIE! For SPITBALLIN’

misterwalsh:

JOSIE! For SPITBALLIN’

Reblogged from kimpine with 334 notes

(Source: mysimpsonsblogisgreaterthanyours)

Reblogged from joala with 43,684 notes

fer1972:

Mural design for Goelia 225 concept store in GuangZhou, China by Shan Jiang

Reblogged from fer1972 with 2,816 notes

Reblogged from itmeansmoto with 549 notes


Michael K. Williams, 2013 (Christian Weber)

Michael K. Williams, 2013 (Christian Weber)

(Source: save-me-thewaltz)

Reblogged from squintyoureyes with 1,138 notes

Concept art for Janelle Monáe’s The ArchAndroid by Chad Weatherford

omocat:

does anybody really like NBC’s community, because i do! there’s going to be a six seasons and a movie art show, opening on june 23rd.
i’ll be there opening night, probably standing awkwardly next to this piece…
see you there!

omocat:

does anybody really like NBC’s community, because i do! there’s going to be a six seasons and a movie art show, opening on june 23rd.

i’ll be there opening night, probably standing awkwardly next to this piece…

see you there!

Reblogged from omocat with 6,141 notes

mcdevinpants:

ianbrooks:

Kayak vs. Volcano

While getting footage for a program about kayaking in Hawaii, Alexandre Socci followed professional kayakers Pedro Oliva, Ben Stookesberry, and Chris Korbulic as they attempted to get all kayak-y up in the fiery wrath of active volcano Kilauea, off the southeast slope of Mauna Loa. Alexandre remarked that the shots were incredibly hard to get due to their impending doom, their safety constantly threatened by boiling hot waters and errant magma coals, in fact several of the actual kayaks emerged from the carnage pocketed with newly-formed, smoldering craters. Definitely something majority of humanity should not attempt on their own, though if you’re certified EXXXTREEEEME, then why haven’t you already done this naked?

Photog: Website (via: My Modern Met)

This…is pretty hardcore.

Reblogged from mcdevinpants with 1,004 notes

ryallsfiles:

Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein by Bernie Wrightson

Reblogged from swegener with 734 notes

faitherinhicks:

anthonyholden:

ルパン三世へのファンとしての愛情をどういう風に表せばいいかを迷っていたら、やっと考えついた。銭形警部も入れてメインキャラがちょうど五人いるんだから短歌にしてみました。コイツコイツに脅かされてマーべルコミックスのキャラも入れたり。

字余ってないのに、流れ等が短歌らしくないのを悔しく思うが、外人なりにこれ程のものしか作れないと言っとこうかな。

気に入ったのなら是非フェースブックのページをフォローしてください。宜しくお願いします!

Dudes, I love Lupin The Third so much that I took a shot at writing a tanka poem. And I got so inspired by my buddies Jake and Jake that I added Marvel characters into the mix.

And in case you were wondering, here is a rough translation:

 O, thou noble thief

Picking a fight with justice

Ever in Training

Require but a single shot

To steal whatever you like

Follow the party on facebook if you haven’t already!

Holy cow. 

Reblogged from faitherinhicks with 3,610 notes

"Horror films are light on characterization by design—why get too familiar with someone who will be hanging from a meat hook shortly?—which has an equalizing effect on the characters irrespective of race. In horror, everybody is just a body. Given the interchangeability of the characters, it’s noteworthy when black characters tend to die first, especially when the indiscriminate nature of the killer’s actions derives much of the terror. The horror universe is one in which black characters are seldom afforded the opportunity for survival, heroism or love.

It can be troubling to watch this trope, as real-life horrors such as the murders of Sean Bell and Trayvon Martin buttress the deeply unsettling idea that the American culture-at-large judges the value of human life subjectively, and the black and the brown are considered expendable. That idea is what makes the Black Person Dies First trope both painful and oddly vindicating. It is at once horribly racist and an acknowledgement of horrible racism; a rare admission that, yes, in America there still are and always have been spaces in which black bodies aren’t considered as valuable as white ones. When we pose questions about why there’s 24-hour news coverage of a missing white woman, when black women go missing every day to little notice, we do so already knowing the answer."

Joshua Alston, First To Die: Evil Dead and Blackness in Horror (via theraceproblem)

(Source: mififi)

Reblogged from cheyennecult with 766 notes