80s G.I. Joe - Cobra B.A.T. and Cobra Troopers
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
almost home
KIROKAZE
trying on a metaphor

blake kathryn

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

JBB: An Artblog!
we're not kids anymore.
AnasAbdin
Cosmic Funnies
One Nice Bug Per Day
h
dirt enthusiast
Jules of Nature
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

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Janaina Medeiros
NASA

⁂

Discoholic 🪩

seen from United Kingdom

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seen from Singapore

seen from United States

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@jormungandr
80s G.I. Joe - Cobra B.A.T. and Cobra Troopers
No, I haven’t died
I’ve been posting to my Instagram recently- mondo_mike_the_fugitoid Dedicated toystagram with small comments added. I try to keep it pretty but nothing more than that. I’ll probably end up making a second tumblr one day for the same purpose but as for now this is where I am. Come follow!
Don’t ever give me Coloring Pages because I will do this to them
The best guess about the origin of the Kilroy image is that two already popular memes merged together in an unholy alliance – the dude with the nose was probably a well-known British doodle called “Mr. Chad,” and as for the caption, we can thank an American welding inspector from Quincy, Mass., named James J. Kilroy.
Back in those days, it was up to men like Kilroy to inspect the rivets of whatever piece of metal their employers paid them to stare at all day. Most inspectors simply approved the work by marking it with a piece of chalk, but Kilroy decided to add some excitement to his dead-end job by signing “Kilroy was here.” Apparently he was pretty goddamn prolific.
Somehow, Kilroy’s message combined with the already popular image of Mr. Chad became so popular that GIs began to scribble Kilroy’s name and new identity onto everything they passed throughout the war: bunkers, bridges, walls, the Arc de Triomphe and likely Hitler’s bathroom at Eagle’s Nest. Once the war was won, an epic race broke out to stick Kilroy’s name and face on whatever else existed anywhere, from the Statue of Liberty to the Berlin Wall to, no joke, the moon.At the height of the fad, it was common for pranksters to approach some landmark or another and whip out their markers, only to find that Kilroy had already been there.
7 Memes That Went Viral Before The Internet Existed
Now available on VHS
Biollante finishes off Stalkkus in Godzilla x The Kaiju Killer (2009).
What in the absolute fuck did I just watch
Punisher: The Tyger
Static Shock | TV Intro
smooth
Heavy Metal, May 1990 Illustration by Dorian Vallejo
My Bartkira pages! It was weird to handle balancing three different art styles, but it was still pretty fun and I like how it turned out
Picture Cook Book, 1960
white america
US theatrical trailer for King Kong Escapes (1967) (x).