-
Charles takes in the view.
Posted on July 25, 2011 via will be / was with 1 note
Source: willbewas
-

(via juliasegal, internetgirlfriend-deactivated2)
I think that’s what being 14 is for, no?
Or is being 14 what GWAR is for?
Grammar schmammer.
-
Plays: 1,610[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

He said it. I’m just agreeing.
It is blogs like this that justify the existence of the internet.
Posted on October 27, 2010 via Rappers Looking Like Magicians with 11 notes
Source: magicalrappers
-
meh.ro, whatever that means, has an AMAZING collection of shark related humor.
-
Lincoln getting his hurrs did.
You knew it had to happen.
-
Don’t GIS “mutilated old lady”
Sage advice from a smart person.
Other things you shouldn’t GIS: fistula, carcinoma, adiposis dolorosa.
Yes, I work in a hospital.
Posted on October 22, 2010 via cuthbert killed osmium
Source: osmium
-
Stop the presses: New Jersey is being attractive.
-
Being a Hipster Is an Excellent and Wonderful Thing
An aside: I am one of the ancients, myself, but I can still remember something of that fear; wanting to prove I was smart, fit to participate, things like this. Nervous that I might not really be as worthy as I hoped, no matter how hard I worked. A common paradox, I think: it’s a strange thing, but as an ancient I feel far less informed, less well-read than I did at eighteen, when I thought it was such a big deal to have read (a tiny bit of) Dostoevsky (in English.) Maybe this is partly a question of making friends with your own inescapable ignorance? So that you go in the library and can fully, absolutely realize that you’re only ever going to absorb the tiniest particle of what there is. I can remember, too, how liberating it was to be able to admit freely and even with pleasure, “I don’t know!” and to view saying so as an opportunity to learn something, rather than as an admission of inferiority. Ignorance is Liberty! Haha, God, now I sound like Orwell, whatever.
The other and equally good reason for encouraging the hipsters is that bohemian values of inventiveness and not-so-much-materialism are particularly helpful to have just now in the U.S. Because there has been way too much materialism over the last fifty years, new ways of looking at “success” and so on are badly needed. It would be great if, instead of excoriating the hipsters, people took a serious look at how they like to live, and maybe tried some of the things they like, for example riding a bicycle instead of driving a fancy car, or trying a vegan diet, or learning to play music. If we could broaden the idea of excellence to include more than wealth and power-to include cultural fluency, invention and new experiences—it could be such a good thing.
So obviously, linking to The Awl puts me in either the hipster or poseur category, and I don’t know which. But in either case, I am (like the author) one of the ancients, so it really doesn’t matter.
-
food on the fire-escape: THE LITERARY SANDWICH: A LIST AND A QUEST
October 19, 2010
Posted by Jenny Hendrix
Last week, a menu made the rounds in our office from a restaurant specializing in author-themed sandwiches, such as the Hemingway (filet mignon on a toasted bun with steak fries) and the Henry Miller (hot pastrami and melted Swiss, served only…
This reminded me of an idea the young man came up with over dinner the other night - Schrödinger’s Restaurant, where you’re required to order two entrees, which remain in superposition until you open the box in which your dinner is served.
Posted on October 21, 2010 via food on the fire-escape with 11 notes
Source: http
-
Today is exciting!
This feels enough like my real life that it was worth logging into Tumblr. To re-share! Hello Tumblr!
Posted on October 20, 2010 via explodingdog with 748 notes
Source: explodingdog




