Today's Document
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Cosmic Funnies
Misplaced Lens Cap

Product Placement
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
tumblr dot com
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todays bird
NASA
untitled
Claire Keane
Xuebing Du

izzy's playlists!
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
will byers stan first human second
Cosimo Galluzzi
Fai_Ryy

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seen from Greece

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seen from United Kingdom

seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia

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seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from T1
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seen from United States
@stressednotblessed-blog
It’s easy to love someone when they’re happy. What’s hard is loving someone when they’re crying on the bathroom floor at 2am because everything came crashing down at once.
(via intractably)
Phil’s liveshow - March 15, 2015
honestly, you're one rude bitch
jokes on you. i am ten rude bitches in a large coat
and here we have pikachu upset that he was unable to drown meowth
when ur running down the stairs with no bra on
"you’re all posers" i say to the models. they are very good at their job
hi I’m auditioning for Sam Pepper and I will be singing “Blurred Lines” By Robin Thicke
Hi, I’ll be auditioning for the part of William Shakespeare and I’ll be singing ‘I Write Sins Not Tragedies’.
Yes, I would like to try out for the role of Mary Winchester, with the audition song, “Ceiling Can’t Hold Us” by Macklemore & Ryan Lewis
Before Jaws hit theaters in 1975, great white sharks weren’t the villains we now believe them to be. But when the movie–which was purely fiction–became a blockbuster, it directly caused humans to seek out and kill sharks, causing widespread population drops in shark species across the board. The influence of that piece of fiction (coincidentally also based on a novel) even coined its own name: The Jaws Effect. When Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita was published, it was perceived by the public to be an erotic novel, despite the fact that it told the story of child sexual abuse through the viewpoint of an unreliable narrator. The result? To this day, we refer to sexually precocious teen girls as “Lolitas,” despite the author’s intent. Yes, 50 Shades of Grey is fiction, but fiction isn’t created or consumed in a vacuum. It is influenced by our culture, and influences our culture, and 50 Shades of Grey isn’t an exception. Even though something is “just fiction,” it can still have detrimental effects on society or expose problems that already exist in our perceptions. So when someone says “50 Shades of Grey promotes abuse as romance,” they’re not saying, “50 Shades of Grey is a totally real thing that happened and is a cautionary tale.” They’re saying that this work of fiction is having, or has the potential to create, real world effects.
Jenny Trout, “Get Over It!” How not to respond to critics of 50 Shades of Grey (via katelouisepowell)
I JUST CHOKED ON MY WATER
WHEN YOU AND THE TEAM ARE STUCK IN SFO INTERNATIONAL FOR 13 HOURS
THIS IS A LITERAL MASTERPIECE
Parent: what does a cow say?
Baby: "moo!"
Parent: yes! And what does a sheep say?
Baby: "baah!"
Parent: yay! And what does a pig say?
Baby: *whistles* "damn babygirl u a fine piece'a ass wanna hop n my car n ill drive ya to pound town!!"
Tom Gauld (Scottish, b. 1976) - The Reason I Stayed In The House All Day Drawings (All perfectly valid reasons)