he is In Your House
"What are you doing in my house?"
"I want waffle fries."

seen from Singapore

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Switzerland

seen from Switzerland

seen from Finland
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from Switzerland
seen from Italy
seen from Switzerland
seen from China
seen from Egypt
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
he is In Your House
"What are you doing in my house?"
"I want waffle fries."
They took his whole channel in the divorce <- Still anxiously awaiting Johnstone's glorious return from getting hacked.
is there a tag for pokétubers the way MCYT is for Minecraft YouTubers?
An expert pickpocket - yes please
Associates with all classes of pickpocket.
Comp: fresh
Trade: Labourer
Build: prop
Eyes: blue
Ht: 5'6
Hair: Brown
Marks: Tatt
Scar: Bk
Listen to a reading of this article (reading by Tim Foley): “Israel Rescues 4 Hostages in Military Operation; Gazan Officials Say Scores Are
“Israel Rescues 4 Hostages in Military Operation; Gazan Officials Say Scores Are Killed,” reads a New York Times headline from Saturday.
It’s a very odd-looking headline even if you don’t know anything about the propagandistic tactics being employed in it. The first half is very clear, while the second half is unintelligible and reads like some weird kind of riddle or word puzzle.
The New York Times is performing these bizarre, cryptic linguistic gymnastics to discuss the latest Israeli massacre in Gaza which as of this writing has a reported death toll of 236.
Right off the bat we can see something weird in this headline with the use of the word “scores” to describe the number of people reported killed in the massacre. The New York Times article itself says it was reported that “more than 200 people were killed in central Gaza,” so the correct quantifier for the headline would be “hundreds”, not “scores”. This would be like a headline saying “dozens” of people were killed on 9/11 instead of “thousands”; it would technically be correct since the number of people killed were mathematically speaking many many dozens, but it would give readers the wrong impression of the lethality of the incident.
And what’s interesting is that nothing The New York Times editors did here is technically a lie. Every word they meticulously selected for their headline is technically true, but it is shaped in such a way that it draws the reader’s attention away from the fact that Israel just massacred hundreds of human beings.
Meeting Johnstone and participating in a giant Pokémon Black 2/White 2 meetup was the highlight of my weekend. I'm so happy I was able to make it out to Randall's Island for GO Fest NYC!
Joining the #JohnArtChallenge or #JohnJulyArtChallenge here on Instagram to finally get back into practicing landscapes. it´s a great motivation. References taken from the challenge, you can find them @john_stone.art Instagram page.^^
I have made a horrible mistake