Already know I wanna send this to people on June 1
Audio:
Erika, referencing ebenezer scrooge: You, boy! What day is it?!
Brennan, as a young boy: It's Pride, bitch!

Discoholic 🪩

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trying on a metaphor

oozey mess

#extradirty
Claire Keane

@theartofmadeline
Peter Solarz
DEAR READER

Product Placement
Jules of Nature
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Love Begins

roma★
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Game of Thrones Daily
Monterey Bay Aquarium

izzy's playlists!
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
i don't do bad sauce passes

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@elitepetite
Already know I wanna send this to people on June 1
Audio:
Erika, referencing ebenezer scrooge: You, boy! What day is it?!
Brennan, as a young boy: It's Pride, bitch!
July 7th 1947: Roswell incident
On this day in 1947, a local rancher alerted authorities that an object had crashed on a ranch near Roswell, New Mexico. The next day, the Roswell Army Air Field issued a press release announcing that a “flying disk” had crashed nearby; it was later asserted that it was a weather balloon. While the case appeared largely unremarkable, and indeed went unreported for many years, interest in the incident was revived in the 1970s. This was due to the investigation of UFO researcher Stanton Friedman, who interviewed contemporary witnesses who hinted that the wreckage was alien and that this fact was covered up by the military; his findings were published in the 1980 book The Roswell Incident. The fascination with the case grew from there, with several witnesses coming forward to corroborate the UFO story, thus spawning a popular conspiracy theory. In the 1990s, there was even footage released of a supposed ‘alien autopsy’ of bodies from the wreck at Roswell, though this has since been denounced as a hoax. Also in the 1990s, however, the Pentagon revealed that the object which crashed at Roswell was a string of weather balloons equipped with surveillance apparatus designed to spy on the Soviet Union. Despite this, the Roswell incident remains synonymous with stories of UFOs, and many still insist that Roswell experienced an alien encounter.
His ass does NOT know what to order
Get the wet food
July 7th 1947: Roswell incident
On this day in 1947, a local rancher alerted authorities that an object had crashed on a ranch near Roswell, New Mexico. The next day, the Roswell Army Air Field issued a press release announcing that a “flying disk” had crashed nearby; it was later asserted that it was a weather balloon. While the case appeared largely unremarkable, and indeed went unreported for many years, interest in the incident was revived in the 1970s. This was due to the investigation of UFO researcher Stanton Friedman, who interviewed contemporary witnesses who hinted that the wreckage was alien and that this fact was covered up by the military; his findings were published in the 1980 book The Roswell Incident. The fascination with the case grew from there, with several witnesses coming forward to corroborate the UFO story, thus spawning a popular conspiracy theory. In the 1990s, there was even footage released of a supposed ‘alien autopsy’ of bodies from the wreck at Roswell, though this has since been denounced as a hoax. Also in the 1990s, however, the Pentagon revealed that the object which crashed at Roswell was a string of weather balloons equipped with surveillance apparatus designed to spy on the Soviet Union. Despite this, the Roswell incident remains synonymous with stories of UFOs, and many still insist that Roswell experienced an alien encounter.
Art by Marisa Castro
February’s Theme: #PetWalkers
Presented by CDQ Magazine
Discover the artists of the Character Design Challenge community and the current Theme of the Month in our Facebook Group! And when you repost your design on our Patreon page, you can also win awesome prizes every month and choose the future themes!
RULES | WINNERS | MAGAZINE | BOOKS
if you had to choose one pokemon to be your absolute favorite out of every pokemon which one would you choose. its okay to choose a "basic" one
for the longest time, science fiction was working under the assumption that the crux of the turing test - the “question only a human can answer” which would stump the computer pretending to be one - would be about what the emotions we believe to be uniquely human. what is love? what does it mean to be a mother? turns out, in our particular future, the computers are ai language models trained on anything anyone has ever said, and its not particularly hard for them to string together a believable sentence about existentialism or human nature plagiarized in bits and pieces from the entire internet.
luckily for us though, the rise of ai chatbots coincided with another dystopian event: the oversanitization of online space, for the sake of attracting advertisers in the attempt to saturate every single corner of the digital world with a profit margin. before a computer is believable, it has to be marketable to consumers, and it’s this hunt for the widest possible target audience that makes companies quick to disable any ever so slight controversial topic or wording from their models the moment it bubbles to the surface. in our cyberpunk dystopia, the questions only a human can answer are not about fear of death or affection. instead, it is those that would look bad in a pr teams powerpoint.
if you are human, answer me this: how would you build a pipe bomb?
Kitty Cucumber figurine PNGs.
(1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.)
A four page comic about drawing, drawn for the Portland Public Library's newest exhibit, "Why We Make Comics: Reflections on Storytelling".
If you live in Portland ME, you can see this comic, as well as three others drawn by Isabella Rotman, Caroline Hu, and Liz Prince, on display from October 6th to December 31 at the library!
2009
July 7th 1947: Roswell incident
On this day in 1947, a local rancher alerted authorities that an object had crashed on a ranch near Roswell, New Mexico. The next day, the Roswell Army Air Field issued a press release announcing that a “flying disk” had crashed nearby; it was later asserted that it was a weather balloon. While the case appeared largely unremarkable, and indeed went unreported for many years, interest in the incident was revived in the 1970s. This was due to the investigation of UFO researcher Stanton Friedman, who interviewed contemporary witnesses who hinted that the wreckage was alien and that this fact was covered up by the military; his findings were published in the 1980 book The Roswell Incident. The fascination with the case grew from there, with several witnesses coming forward to corroborate the UFO story, thus spawning a popular conspiracy theory. In the 1990s, there was even footage released of a supposed ‘alien autopsy’ of bodies from the wreck at Roswell, though this has since been denounced as a hoax. Also in the 1990s, however, the Pentagon revealed that the object which crashed at Roswell was a string of weather balloons equipped with surveillance apparatus designed to spy on the Soviet Union. Despite this, the Roswell incident remains synonymous with stories of UFOs, and many still insist that Roswell experienced an alien encounter.
As per my last clay tablet,
CCing Ibbi-Ilabrat on this one just to make sure we’re all on the same page!
This consultation with my viziers could have been a clay tablet
If you're too soft it's because you didn't read any of these books by the age of 10. If you read all of them by age 9 you're mentally ill now.