it’s August 30th, 2024
Claire Keane
hello vonnie
wallacepolsom
🪼
taylor price
Stranger Things

No title available

Kaledo Art
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
AnasAbdin
dirt enthusiast
Monterey Bay Aquarium

#extradirty
No title available
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
DEAR READER
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Mike Driver
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

ellievsbear
seen from Australia

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Iraq
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from Australia
seen from Australia
seen from Canada
seen from Ireland

seen from Malaysia

seen from Türkiye

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Iraq
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
@harryhadouken
it’s August 30th, 2024
you’ve been visited by money birb. reblog and good fortune will come your way.
This pun…..oh man…..
We only have less than a month to use this pun. The rarest of puns that can no longer be used, once the year is over.
Thanks, Doc.
I’m not crying there’s just a DeLorean in my eye. :’)
Tomorrow is the last day the future will still be the future, before forever being in the past. I’m not ready.
that face that cats make when you scratch their chins
reblog if you agree
ARE YOU KIDDING ME?!
The person I reblogged this from deserves to be happy
I tried to scroll past this. I really did
I feel like minor acts of kindness and good intentions are really important on days like this.
Wait... Hold on a second.
A Bush and a Clinton are running for president
A Jurassic Park movie is #1 at the Box Office
A Terminator movie is coming out next month
Final Fantasy VII
WHAT YEAR IS IT?!
GET OUT YER FLANNEL AND YER NANO PETS IT’S TIME TO GET JIGGY WITH IT AND WATCH SOME SNICK
Christopher Lee Dies at age 93
Born: May 27, 1922 - Died: June 7th 2015
Sir Christopher Frank Carandini Lee starred in 281 films. Most would know him from his portrayal of Saruman in The Lord of the Rings trilogy and The Hobbit trilogy films but others also know him from his early roles as Dracula in multiple films, along with portraying The Creature character in The Curse of Frankenstein (1957). He played many characters over the course of his acting career. In an interview in 2013, Lee spoke about his love of acting. “Making films has never just been a job to me, it is my life,” he said. “I have some interests outside of acting – I sing and I’ve written books, for instance – but acting is what keeps me going, it’s what I do, it gives life purpose.” Christopher has done so much greatness for this world, it’s a sad day knowing he is no longer a part of it but his memory and many films will live on forever.
Christopher Lee was an incredible human being. I could try and summarize his life and all the great things he’s done but nothing I type would do him justice. So I am going to add interesting trivia on him below.( Source )
Did not start acting until he was 25 years old.
He was one of the few actors who has portrayed three different Sherlock Holmes characters: Sherlock Holmes, Mycroft Holmes and Sir Henry Baskerville.
Since his feature film debut in Corridor of Mirrors (1948), he has had at least one film role every year except for 1993, 1995, 1997, 2000 and 2006.
At 6 feet 5 inches, he is entered into the Guinness Book of World Records as “The Tallest Leading Actor”.
Like his Lord of the Rings director, Peter Jackson, he has appeared in films with three generations of Astins.
As a veritable J.R.R. Tolkien expert and the only member of the cast who had met Tolkien himself, he often visited the Production department on the sets of the various Lord of the Rings movies to give advice and tips on the various attributes of the films.
Read the Lord of the Rings trilogy once a year for decades, long before the film series ever got started.
He got started in films when his cousin Count Niccolo Carandini, Italy’s first post war ambassador to Britain introduced him to Filipo Del Guidice of Two Cities Film.
Rest in Peace Christopher Lee, we love you.
Look how handsome young lee is!
Too strange to live, too cool to die. Thank you, Sir Christopher.
Artist removes 1 inch off the peak of England’s highest mountain; Brits want their inch back.
It is still England’s highest mountain, but Scafell Pike is ever so slightly smaller now after an artist stole the top inch of the summit to display in a gallery.
Oscar Santillan, 34, was accused of vandalism after removing the stone pinnacle of the 3,209ft Lake District peak for an exhibition in London.
Ian Stephens, managing director of Cumbria Tourism, said: “This is taking the mickey and we want the top of our mountain back.”
I love art
This is the funniest thing I have ever seen
what r they going to do just glue it back on
This reads like a Monty Python sketch and I love it.
I've returned from FanimeCon! It was a welcome four day break from the world. Can't wait for 2016!
This is one of my favorite things from this book, I loved writing the Atom/Giganta relationship.
True story, it was Patton Oswalt’s idea, originally.
Bless Gail Simone and Patton Oswalt.
#animal #avian #owl
Psst, hey kid...
Wanna buy some Tootsie Pops?
reblog this is if you know an amazing trans guy
what’s the absolutely least harmful scp
like, is there one that’s just “orange juice that doesn’t taste like orange juice”
Definitely SCP-999. It's an orange blob that acts like a friendly cat, eats candy, and emits pure happiness.
NASA: California Has One Year of Water Left
Plagued by prolonged drought, California now has only enough water to get it through the next year, according to NASA.
In an op-ed published Thursday by the Los Angeles Times, Jay Famiglietti, a senior water scientist at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, painted a dire picture of the state’s water crisis. California, he writes, has lost around 12 million acre-feet of stored water every year since 2011. In the Sacramento and San Joaquin river basins, the combined water sources of snow, rivers, reservoirs, soil water and groundwater amounted to a volume that was 34 million acre-feet below normal levels in 2014. And there is no relief in sight.
"As our ‘wet’ season draws to a close, it is clear that the paltry rain and snowfall have done almost nothing to alleviate epic drought conditions. January was the driest in California since record-keeping began in 1895. Groundwater and snowpack levels are at all-time lows" Famiglietti writes. "We’re not just up a creek without a paddle in California, we’re losing the creek too."
On Wednesday, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced that one-third of the monitoring stations in California’s Cascades and Sierra Nevada mountains have recorded the lowest snowpack ever measured.
"Right now the state has only about one year of water supply left in its reservoirs, and our strategic backup supply, groundwater, is rapidly disappearing,” Famiglietti writes.
He criticized Californian officials for their lack of long-term planning for how to cope with this drought, and future droughts, beyond “staying in emergency mode and praying for rain.”
Last month, new research by scientists at NASA, Cornell University and Columbia University pointed to a “remarkably drier future” for California and other Western states amid a rapidly-changing climate. “Megadroughts,” the study’s authors wrote, are likely to begin between 2050 and 2099, and could each last between 10 years and several decades.
With that future in mind, Famiglietti says, “immediate mandatory water rationing” should be implemented in the state, accompanied by the swift formation of regulatory agencies to rigorously monitor groundwater and ensure that it is being used in a sustainable way—as opposed to the “excessive and unsustainable” groundwater extraction for agriculture that, he says, is partly responsible for massive groundwater losses that are causing land in the highly irrigated Central Valley to sink by one foot or more every year.
Various local ordinances have curtailed excessive water use for activities like filling fountains and irrigating lawns. But planning for California’s “harrowing future” of more and longer droughts “will require major changes in policy and infrastructure that could take decades to identify and act upon,” Famiglietti writes. “Today, not tomorrow, is the time to begin.”
I AM GOING TO SCREAM
i’ll bet you five dollars that no one listens to the scientists until people start dying
*Sideeyes the California coast, full of oil and gas platforms and not a single desalination plant in sight*
I wish I had words to go with this.