Still alive
🪼
ojovivo
Mike Driver
sheepfilms
dirt enthusiast

JBB: An Artblog!

#extradirty

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if i look back, i am lost
Cosmic Funnies
$LAYYYTER
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
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Keni

blake kathryn

Andulka
Today's Document

ellievsbear

Product Placement
Stranger Things
seen from Spain
seen from T1
seen from United States

seen from T1
seen from Spain
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from T1

seen from Japan

seen from Japan

seen from Japan

seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia
seen from Australia

seen from T1
seen from T1
@benforx
Still alive
Still alive. Still thotty
Still alive. Still thotty
My final message to the world
Tom of Finland, c.1950s
Embracing the transition to my dad bod era
When we’re out of town we do yoga
Butt
Happy Valentine’s Day porn bots
Golden hour
Americans love Disneyland because it’s a walkable city
That's actually a really popular analogy. Howard Kunstler wrote about Disneyland as a "capital of unreality," where "the public realm is packaged for sale as a commodity."
"Through the postwar decades Americans happily allowed their towns to be destroyed. They’d flock to Disneyland at Anaheim, or later to Disney World in Florida, and walk down Main Street, and think, gee, it feels good here. Then they’d go back home and tear down half the old buildings downtown and pave them over for parking lots, throw a parade to celebrate a new K Mart opening—even when it put ten local merchants out of business—turn Elm Street into a six-lane crosstown expressway, pass zoning laws that forbade corner grocery stores in residential neighborhoods and setback rules that required every new business to locate on a one-acre lot until things became so spread out you had to drive everywhere. They’d build the new central school four miles out of town on a busy highway so that kids couldn’t walk there. They’d do every fool thing possible to destroy good existing relationships between things in their towns, and put their local economies at the mercy of distant corporations whose officers didn’t give a damn whether these towns lived or died. And then, when vacation time rolled around, they’d flock back to Disney World to feel good about America."
If anyone's interested, The Geography of Nowhere is unrivaled as a crash course on and scathing critique of American postwar urban planning.
Hashtag Flex Friday 💪🏼
I need to start working out again…