Happy Birthday Joseph! (9/27)
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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Happy Birthday Joseph! (9/27)
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Phantom Blood as a retro movie poster!
I love you dumplings I love you gyoza I love you xiaolongbao I love you wonton I love you baozi I love you mandu and yes even you, ravioli
i don’t have a good caption
RED DEAD REDEMPTION II ∞
he is in preschool do you love him
whats he studying?
toys and playtime
oh i’m sure he is a pleasure to have in class!
Between Scream and The Lost Boys, I’m starting to think horror movie fans like to indulge in a two-pointed escapist fantasy/crushing realization:
1. There will come a day when your knowledge of horror movies will come in handy!
2. But not that handy, because you’re still no good in an actual confrontation. Nerd.
It turns out the cookies are real — sort of.
They are baked at the home of Lara MacLean, who has been a “puppet wrangler” for the Jim Henson Company for almost three decades. MacLean started as an intern for Sesame Workshop in 1992 and has been working for the team ever since.
The recipe, roughly: Pancake mix, puffed rice, Grape-Nuts and instant coffee, with water in the mixture. The chocolate chips are made using hot glue sticks — essentially colored gobs of glue.
The cookies do not have oils, fats or sugars. Those would stain Cookie Monster. They’re edible, but barely. “Kind of like a dog treat,” MacLean says.
Before she reinvented the recipe in the 2000s, the creative team behind “Sesame Street” used versions of rice crackers and foams to make the cookies. The challenge was that the rice crackers would make more of a mess and get stuck in Cookie’s fur. And the foams didn’t look like cookies once they broke apart.
Cookie has been portrayed since 2001 by David Rudman, who took over the role from Frank Oz. Rudman’s right hand moves the mouth, which is eating, and his left hand holds the cookies. Both work in concert to break the cookies, which means they have to be soft enough to fall apart.
Rudman said soft cookies are best, adding, “The more crumbs, the funnier it is. If he eats the cookie, and it only breaks into two pieces if it’s too hard, it’s just not funny,” he said. “It looks almost painful. But if he eats a cookie and it explodes into a hundred crumbs, that’s where the comedy comes from.”
MacLean has perfected a recipe that is “thin enough that it’ll explode into a hundred crumbs,” Rudman said. “But it’s not too thin that it’ll break in my hand when I’m holding it.”
Not every (human) guest realizes that the cookies aren’t meant to be eaten. Adam Sandler appeared on an episode and decided to share in the muppet's delight by spontaneously eating a cookie with him on set.
“As soon as the cameras cut, he was like, ‘Blech!' ” MacLean said.
Van Helsing: Alright Lucy, we have to talk seriously, so let's get the virgin out of the room.
Jack Seward: I INVITED YOU HERE!
光に寄ってくる蛾たち💡
Moths approaching the light💡
for a better tomorrow
Pokemon Heritage Post
illus. Narumi Sato "Spectrier" from Lost Origin
I have realized that the perfect form of media must have a delicate balance between absolutely heart wrenching pure emotional devastation and the most ridiculous nonsense you have ever seen in your whole life