Bill Hader on How He Cast Henry Winkler in Barry
d e v o n
todays bird

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Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
AnasAbdin
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Origami Around

ē„ę„ / Permanent Vacation

Kiana Khansmith

tannertan36
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
macklin celebrini has autism
Claire Keane
tumblr dot com

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we're not kids anymore.
Jules of Nature
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⣠Chile in a Photography ā£

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@missgela
Bill Hader on How He Cast Henry Winkler in Barry
So i'm finallyyyyy able to share my design codes now š„°
Sokka: Aang y'know how you took away Ozaiās firebending?
Aang: I recall yes
Sokka: can I have it
Aang: ā¦what?
Sokka: can I have his firebending. just for like ten minutes
Aang: what no
Sokka: why not I wanna prank zuko
Aang:
Aang:
Aang: okay five minutes
hi take everything I own
Thereās more!
All of themĀ (ć ̄ā½ļæ£)ć
I want to make more, I just love drawing pokemon
Ko-Fi
Source for more facts follow NowYouKno
This is actually true!Ā
āIn some places, such as Nri, the royal python, Ć©kĆ©, is considered a sacred and tame agent of Ala and a harbinger of good fortune when found in a home. The python is referred to asnne āmotherā in areas where the python is revered, it is a symbol of female beauty and gentleness. Killing of the python is expressly forbidden in these places and sanctions are taken against the killer including the funding of expensive human sized burials that are given to slain pythons.ā (x)
And more thanks to kaijutegu:
āA public levy is made for giving elaborate burial rites when the python dies from natural causes. Every python has a human soul within it; this must be liberated by ritual after the death of the reptile. Any offence against the snake is an offence against the ancestor.ā (x) p15
THATāS. SO. SWEET.
Okay, want to know the practical reason for this:
What do ball pythons eat?
Rodents.
Ball pythons are sacred in central Africa for the exact same reasonĀ cats are in north Africa and the middle east.
They are guardians of the granary.
That and theyāre docile. They curl up into a ball when scared rather than biting or feinting biting. (While constrictors arenāt venomous, some may behave like a viper and mock strike to drive off threats if startled). While they can bite, accidental bites are less common, theyāre not going to strike you for accidentally reaching or stepping too close.
So they not only protected granaries, but they didnāt pose a threat to people as compared to other sorts of snakes which may bite or in the case of venomous ones, pose a threat to people and live stock.Ā
So they fulfill the two key things humans like in other animalsĀ
1) Helpful to us 2) Not harmful.Ā
They were calledĀ āRoyal Pythonsā because theyāre calm enough that you can wear them like jewelry, which some royalty did. Itās human nature to like animals that let us touch them, hold them, use them as we see fit and donāt hurt us. Even among Christian Igbo the snakes are seen as a positive animal, a gift from god, because humans tends to see animals asĀ āgoodā orĀ ābadā based on if they pose any threat to us.Ā
And that actually is fairly practical for humans to do, to distinguishĀ ādangerousā fromĀ ānon dangerousā and develop negative prejudices againstĀ āharmfulā and positive feelings towards ānon-harmful/helpfulā animals.Ā
@smartwittyurl thoughts?
Sacred Scaly Noodle Cat
Theyāre the best
LeVar Burton wants to live-stream book readings to families for free, prompting Neil Gaiman and other authors to offer all of their titles.
HEY GUYS!!!
One, @neil-gaiman is one of the best things in this world and I love him.
But TWO, and more importantly as regards this post:
If you didnāt grow up in the 1980s or 1990s, you may not remember Reading Rainbow. It was a show where LeVar Burton would take you on a tour or activity that was related to the book the show was about to read out loud for you, and then a narrator would read the book (sometimes Burton, sometimes someone else). At the end, Burton would tie the activity and the book together, and then say there were lots of other great books like it, ābut donāt take my word for it.ā Then youād get book recommendations from a couple of school-aged kids, different ones in most episodes. It, along with Wishbone, was part of a PBS effort to promote childhood literacy. Many of the books the show shared were also culturally diverseāI was a little kid at the time and so obviously remember the actual titles of very few, but I remember multiple books about Black and Latine kids, titles set in different time periods, and at least one about a Chinese character. The activities for these episodes often focused on the culture of the child in the book, but not in a weird tokeny wayālike one was a book I think was called The Patchwork Quilt and the tour part was talking about how cool and important quilting was in history and to certain cultural communities. Sadly, the show was cancelled in 2003, and although Burton spearheaded a Kickstarter that made the show available in classrooms, nothing like it has ever aired on TV again.
Having watched Reading Rainbow from preschool until I was in fifth or sixth grade, I cannot overstate how expertly Burton will do this. And so I am asking: IF YOU PERSONALLY KNOW ANY AUTHORS OF CHILDREN'Sā BOOKS, OR ARE SUCH AN AUTHOR YOURSELF, PLEASE REACH OUT TO TRY TO GET MORE BOOKS INTO HIS HANDS. This is a wonderful projectāand sadly, who knows how long weāre going to need it.
LeVar Burton wants to live-stream book readings to families for free, prompting Neil Gaiman and other authors to offer all of their titles.
HEY GUYS!!!
One, @neil-gaiman is one of the best things in this world and I love him.
But TWO, and more importantly as regards this post:
If you didnāt grow up in the 1980s or 1990s, you may not remember Reading Rainbow. It was a show where LeVar Burton would take you on a tour or activity that was related to the book the show was about to read out loud for you, and then a narrator would read the book (sometimes Burton, sometimes someone else). At the end, Burton would tie the activity and the book together, and then say there were lots of other great books like it, ābut donāt take my word for it.ā Then youād get book recommendations from a couple of school-aged kids, different ones in most episodes. It, along with Wishbone, was part of a PBS effort to promote childhood literacy. Many of the books the show shared were also culturally diverseāI was a little kid at the time and so obviously remember the actual titles of very few, but I remember multiple books about Black and Latine kids, titles set in different time periods, and at least one about a Chinese character. The activities for these episodes often focused on the culture of the child in the book, but not in a weird tokeny wayālike one was a book I think was called The Patchwork Quilt and the tour part was talking about how cool and important quilting was in history and to certain cultural communities. Sadly, the show was cancelled in 2003, and although Burton spearheaded a Kickstarter that made the show available in classrooms, nothing like it has ever aired on TV again.
Having watched Reading Rainbow from preschool until I was in fifth or sixth grade, I cannot overstate how expertly Burton will do this. And so I am asking: IF YOU PERSONALLY KNOW ANY AUTHORS OF CHILDREN'Sā BOOKS, OR ARE SUCH AN AUTHOR YOURSELF, PLEASE REACH OUT TO TRY TO GET MORE BOOKS INTO HIS HANDS. This is a wonderful projectāand sadly, who knows how long weāre going to need it.
I made an oni top while messing around with patterns. Iām also taking pattern requests through ko-fi
[ko-fi requests]
animal crossing: fishing moodboard
original post
bonus:
Hey weird weird question: in New Horizons do the lawn gnomes all look different even if not labeled as so? Because I got a sick looking one with sunglasses and thought thatās just what they looked like now but just saw a post with one that was like normal so
Also realized I forgot to elaborate on this so hereās my gnome that is currently my favorite thing in the universe
I have the same gnome and why did you not show the back of his jacket
The what
OH MY GOD
I'm very aware no one really asked for these but I was pretty bored, so why not. Also inhuman Jaskier is such an amazing concept. So yeah, enjoy some fairy Jaskier š
I DIDNāT KNOW I NEEDED THIS UNTIL NOW!!!! THANK YOU FOR MAKING SOMETHING SO AMAZING.
just wanted to tell you guys something
whenever you thinkĀ āthats too big to be sea bassāā¦
its not too big
it is a sea bass