Bonus question
Crumble goes with
Hot custard
Cold custard
Vanilla ice cream
Other ice cream
Cream
Nothing
Something else
AnasAbdin
Show & Tell
ojovivo

Kaledo Art

roma★
Stranger Things

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Keni
noise dept.

Origami Around

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
occasionally subtle
No title available

Kiana Khansmith
NASA
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Not today Justin
i don't do bad sauce passes
almost home
Cosmic Funnies
seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from T1

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Ireland

seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Brazil
@mellowunknownsoul
Bonus question
Crumble goes with
Hot custard
Cold custard
Vanilla ice cream
Other ice cream
Cream
Nothing
Something else
Where did you first READ fanfiction?
Archive of Our Own
Wattpad
Fanfiction.net
Livejournal
Quotev
DeviantArt
Fandom specific sites (i.e fimfiction, fandom wikis)
Other
Portrait of The Stranger, White Horse Tavern, 1389
My personal headcanon is that Hob, thanks to his immortal life, he took the time to learn how to draw and paint his Stranger after the second time he meets him. So, after each centurial meeting Hob paints him down to the last detail, he has a very good memory, trust me.
You must read Hob Gadling vs the British Museum which is based around that very plot point.
The disease, which is treatable with a vaccination, broke out at an Amazon warehouse, the company confirmed
As staff continue to be tested as a precaution, Amazon says, a union calls for the site's closure.
yayyyy
Denzel Washington and Keanu Reeves in leather pants, riding horses in Tuscany.
no nuance...
yes, I use generative AI as part of my creative process
no, I don't use generative AI as part of my creative process
I should probably define what falls under the umbrella of generative AI here but I kinda don't feel like it, but like. using an image generator to make references. brainstorming by talking with chatgpt. generating images of characters as inspiration. all that kinda jazz counts. as of course does full-on using genAI to make your stuff.
remember that your vote is anonymous, so you don't have to out yourself on one side or the other when you share. I'm just curious what the spread is actually like when there's some anonymity. if you're wondering my own opinion it's in my original tags, but I'm attempting not to be judgemental in this accompanying text.
just remember that if y'all want to see how bad the genAI users get ratioed, you need to reblog it...
You know those videos that talk about things in Japan that are "mindblowing" (often they're not that common or just small little touches). Well fuck it, here's a load of things that I think will blow people's minds about the UK that are just common knowledge here.
If you find a road that's oddly straight out in the countryside, chances are it was originally a Roman road. Several Major roads and sections of motorway follow the route of Roman Roads. There's a Roman Road that goes under the end of my street, part of it is still in use.
Every hour, on the hour, BBC radio 4 plays a series of beeps that tell you when it's exactly on the hour so you can set your clocks and watches.
We have a TV show made for Amateur Astronomers that has been going on since 1957. They cover major events and discoveries in Astronomy.
We have a Gameshow called Countdown wherein people take semi random letters and try create the longest word they can from it, and then take semi random numbers and try to use them to get to a random number. It is one of the Longest running and popular daytime gameshows and is a national treasure.
In Scotland, a lot of our chip shops were/are opened by Italians or people of Italian descent, so you can also get pizza there. Haggis pizza is a common menu item and it slaps.
The controllers in charge of the power grid have to watch every major soap opera and sports event because when the event ends or goes to commercial break, so many people get up to go make a cup of tea it risks a blackout, so they have to use Pumped storage stations to generate more power. There's one of these power stations near Wales's Highest Mountain and one at Loch Ness.
Every major channel rehearses for the death of the current monarch so they don't fuck it up. Under the news desk at the BBC, there's a black tie for the men and a black cardigan for the women that they put on if a major royal dies. You can see this happen if you watch the footage.
The government announces tests of the EAS system in advance so people know that A) it's a test, don't panic and B) so people with hidden phones (like abused spouses) can turn them off.
Our lifeboat and lifeguard service, The Royal National Lifeboat Institution, is completely volunteer run and funded through donations. Volunteers have to have pagers on them that ring if they're called up so they can run to the boats and rescue people. They're often in remote areas, and they're a common charity to raise money for because everyone agrees that they're not just heroic, but based as all fuck.
Most major supermarkets deliver, and by that I don't mean "you can send a gig-worker to do your shopping", I mean Tesco, Sainsbury's, Iceland and ASDA all have fleets of official trucks where you can do your shopping online, a supermarket worker picks your stuff for you, and at a designated time someone comes and delivers your shopping. They're even a common site in rural areas.
It's a Christmas tradition to go to your local theater to see a Pantomime, which is basically a retelling of a fairy tale done by drag queens aimed at children, but with jokes for the adults and modern cultural references. Famous actors will often take part in these shows. It's a beloved Christmas tradition that's illegal in Tennessee.
BBC radio 4 Broadcasts a Special Weather Forecast for people who work at sea or even on the water. It's very technical and concise and people who do not work at sea or even live near any major body of water listen to it because it is very, very relaxing.
I heard/read somewhere (wish I could remember where) that the RNLI prefer to remain a charity rather than government funded because it means they can rescue *anybody* who needs rescuing without getting involved with the politics.
On a related note; a few years ago a family (not mine) decided to celebrate New Year with a Space Hopper race across the beach. They did it for a couple of years, then other people joined in and now it is a massive event run as a fundraiser for the local RNLI station.
Check out Trearddur Bay Lifeboat Station on Facebook for more details.
You know those videos that talk about things in Japan that are "mindblowing" (often they're not that common or just small little touches). Well fuck it, here's a load of things that I think will blow people's minds about the UK that are just common knowledge here.
If you find a road that's oddly straight out in the countryside, chances are it was originally a Roman road. Several Major roads and sections of motorway follow the route of Roman Roads. There's a Roman Road that goes under the end of my street, part of it is still in use.
Every hour, on the hour, BBC radio 4 plays a series of beeps that tell you when it's exactly on the hour so you can set your clocks and watches.
We have a TV show made for Amateur Astronomers that has been going on since 1957. They cover major events and discoveries in Astronomy.
We have a Gameshow called Countdown wherein people take semi random letters and try create the longest word they can from it, and then take semi random numbers and try to use them to get to a random number. It is one of the Longest running and popular daytime gameshows and is a national treasure.
In Scotland, a lot of our chip shops were/are opened by Italians or people of Italian descent, so you can also get pizza there. Haggis pizza is a common menu item and it slaps.
The controllers in charge of the power grid have to watch every major soap opera and sports event because when the event ends or goes to commercial break, so many people get up to go make a cup of tea it risks a blackout, so they have to use Pumped storage stations to generate more power. There's one of these power stations near Wales's Highest Mountain and one at Loch Ness.
Every major channel rehearses for the death of the current monarch so they don't fuck it up. Under the news desk at the BBC, there's a black tie for the men and a black cardigan for the women that they put on if a major royal dies. You can see this happen if you watch the footage.
The government announces tests of the EAS system in advance so people know that A) it's a test, don't panic and B) so people with hidden phones (like abused spouses) can turn them off.
Our lifeboat and lifeguard service, The Royal National Lifeboat Institution, is completely volunteer run and funded through donations. Volunteers have to have pagers on them that ring if they're called up so they can run to the boats and rescue people. They're often in remote areas, and they're a common charity to raise money for because everyone agrees that they're not just heroic, but based as all fuck.
Most major supermarkets deliver, and by that I don't mean "you can send a gig-worker to do your shopping", I mean Tesco, Sainsbury's, Iceland and ASDA all have fleets of official trucks where you can do your shopping online, a supermarket worker picks your stuff for you, and at a designated time someone comes and delivers your shopping. They're even a common site in rural areas.
It's a Christmas tradition to go to your local theater to see a Pantomime, which is basically a retelling of a fairy tale done by drag queens aimed at children, but with jokes for the adults and modern cultural references. Famous actors will often take part in these shows. It's a beloved Christmas tradition that's illegal in Tennessee.
BBC radio 4 Broadcasts a Special Weather Forecast for people who work at sea or even on the water. It's very technical and concise and people who do not work at sea or even live near any major body of water listen to it because it is very, very relaxing.
Ohhh good point @sweetlyfez , a thing about pantomime is that there’s specific call-and-responses. Children are trained to shout things at the actors at specific points, like if someone is creeping up behind a character, the audience all go “it’s behind you!” in a slightly creepily unified chorus. Like, the tone and cadence are always perfectly consistent.
But a thing about the UK is that people a) will show up to the opening of an envelope, b) will make the HELL out of a tradition or ritual. If it happens three times, it’s an official local ritual.
Rituals always contain a tremendous reliance on everyone’s willingness to participate and suspend cringe. Like the panto call-and-response, people are often surprisingly willing to do it.
So you can get a surprising number of people to do bonkers unified things like “hold hands with strangers and dance around a person dressed as a Green Man”. There was a “clap for the NHS” thing in lockdown (cringe, annoying) but people were willing. There’s a local ritual that involves stomping around a local apple orchard, wassailing it, and hanging toast on the branches. Everyone is tremendously engaged and serious about this. Crowds are generally quite willing to turn up and shout unified chants. During right-wing property vandalising outbreaks there were far more people turning up in anti-fash defence than there ever were fash, but what was most amusing about it was that anti-fash brought bands and snacks. Like within thirty minutes of people being outside systematically, there will start being self-organised predictable small Behaviours. When the shed blew down on my allotment, a collection of elderly people righted it and repaired it and brewed tea about it in about 30 minutes, including the time it took to stand around congratulating each other.
You can genuinely say, “turn up at 3 pm to a muddy field, we’re all going to scream at the sky. No, that’s it, literally that’s all I’m offering” and get 100 people in frigid winter to race willingly to a muddy field in awful weather with flasks of tea, alcohol, picnics, an impromptu cricket game, several more guests than you expected, and a really startling total willingness to scream like fools at the sky. Like YEAH SKY SCREAMING TIME. Let’s do it every Thursday at 4!!! And the thing is you’ll find yourself being like “oh man. I love Sky Screaming Time actually.”
Oh and the milk floats are electric
Last year they stopped doing the reenactment of the Boston Tea Party on the harbor. This year people showed up anyway.
They weren't throwing tea into the water.
They were throwing ice.
@massachusetts-official
Source and more details below:
Around 1,000 protesters plan to dump ice into Boston Harbor tonight, reimagining the Revolutionary Tea Party to oppose Trump administration
"Progressive activists plan to dump ice into Boston Harbor later tonight [Tuesday, December 16, 2025,] in a symbolic protest against Trump administration immigration enforcement, reimagining the Boston Tea Party for a modern political audience.
Why it matters: The demonstration connects Boston's colonial resistance to the contemporary immigration debate and draws parallels between 1773's "taxation without representation" and what organizers call Trump's governmental overreach.
State of play: Around 1,000 protesters plan to rally at the Irish Famine Memorial Plaza (outside the Old South Meeting House where the OG Tea Party kicked off) before marching to the waterfront.
They'll hurl clean ice blocks into the harbor near the Boston Tea Party Ships & Museum.
The event coincides with the 252nd anniversary of the original Boston Tea Party.
Mass 50501 and Boston Indivisible organized the nonviolent action.
State conservation guidelines mandated the use of only environmentally safe, clean ice. [Note: the protestors did indeed arrange for "clean ice" only and told people not to bring their own.]
The big picture: The protest targets Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations that have accelerated under the Trump administration.
The theatrical protest is a response to earlier threats from Trump's border czar Tom Homan, who said he'd be "bringing hell" to Boston.
Organizers positioned the demonstration as "modern-day civic action against political tyranny," protesting what they describe as "armed government intimidation" and advocating for Massachusetts' Safe Communities Act."
-via Axios, December 16, 2025
😂😂😂
i do think i’m better than people for not shopping on shein or temu
Do people deadass have grocery list apps? You don’t just use whatever paper and writing utensil nearby?
I’ll use a. 50 lb Clay tablet and stylus before I use an app
Grocery list options
50lb clay tablet
Whatever writing material is on hand
Im a slave to my phone
Special designated stationary
If you’re not on the poll don’t vote, I don’t give a shit about you. Tag yap see if I care
I do not have a grocery-specific app because that feels like spyware BUT I do have a group chat for my household so the four adults with wildly different work schedules and severe ADHD Can add to it when we think of stuff and then we actually get what we need, without duplicates, and we can confuse the grocery reward system into thinking we are some sort of superorganism.
My ADHD ass can lose paper immediately but the phone is harder to misplace and consistently on-hand, and the fewer steps on a task, the more likely I am to accomplish it.
One of the cartoons in my new book 'Physics for Cats'. Available now in good bookshops an online now www.tomgauld.com/comic-books-v2
Hypothetical scenario: A month from now, you have to start teaching a class that will run for at least two months. You can choose the subject and the level (primary school, secondary, university, etc), but it must be genuinely educational.
If you had to teach a class for two months (level and subject of your choice), would you be able to do it?
I already am a teacher
Yes, piece of cake
Yes, but it would be somewhat difficult for me
Probably, but it would be very difficult for me
Probably NOT, but I'd be down to try
No, it would go very badly
No, there's nothing I know enough about to be able to do this
No, this would be impossible for other reasons (e.g. my health)
Other/it's complicated
We ask your questions anonymously so you don’t have to! Submissions are open on the 1st and 15th of the month.
Reblog if you love “—” and have never used ChatGPT
Today’s the only day you can reblog this until next year guys.
HOW TO TURN OFF GOOGLE AI in GMAIL:
Open Gmail in your browser
Click on the Gear Icon ⚙️ in the upper right
In the General Tab, scroll down to "Smart Features" and UNCHECK THE BOX. It is about halfway down.
Then, right below that is Google Workspace smart features. Click on the "Manage Workspace Smart Features" and make sure both toggles are OFF