17 Again if "Mark" was actually Mike's nephew @azure-aeon-soulstar + @roundaboutnow
"This seems like the kinda thing a responsible parent wouldn't want you doing... good thing I'm an uncle! Avenge me, kid! AVENGE MEEEEE!"
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17 Again if "Mark" was actually Mike's nephew @azure-aeon-soulstar + @roundaboutnow
"This seems like the kinda thing a responsible parent wouldn't want you doing... good thing I'm an uncle! Avenge me, kid! AVENGE MEEEEE!"
Alex fell in love with mark. I’ts a fact.
Ladies , gents and non-binary babes, I would to introduce you to Mark Gold, the newest K-pop ⭐ to hit the internet! Coming to a computer near you! @markiplier
Princess Charlene’s fabulous earrings collection (44/?)
List of Favourite Characters:184 Mike O’ Donnell/ Mark Gold
Thank goodness for that makeover Ned gave Mike ("Mark") so he no longer looked like he "mugged k fed", but rather like the king of gorgeous he is (in teen form)
Zac Efron in 17 again ♥
From Twitter to WhatsApp: how social is too social?
"Look up from your phone, shut down the display. Take in your surroundings, make the most of today.” While this may sound like a Dr Seuss rhyme, it’s actually a call to action by British filmmaker Gary Turk. In an emotionally charged video, Turk urges people to unplug from their smartphones, turn off social media, and have a real conversation with the person in front of them. The five-minute video raises questions about how much of our lives we spend online, and the impact it’s taking on the real world. “I looked around and realised that this media we call social is anything but,” he continues. “When we open our computers it’s our doors we shut.” And with almost 20 million views in just over a week, the video has been well-received, tweeted by everyone from tennis player Andy Murray to American Idol winner Jordin Sparks. An obsession with the latest gadgets and apps keeps us preoccupied at all hours of the day, whether walking down the street or riding the bus. In turn, a growing number of people are growing concerned at the strength of this digital tide. More than a third of British adults admit that they’re “highly addicted” to their smartphones, while research shows that heavy smartphone usage is ruining many people’s personal relationships.
This disillusionment with technology has led many to seek a solution. While Los Angeles chef Mark Gold offers diners a 5% discount in his restaurant if they dump their digital devices at the door, the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema will throw anyone out who dares use their phone while the film is playing. In the US people are even paying for expensive retreats to escape technology. The aptly named Digital Detox invites people to eat vegan food, practice yoga and keep a journal about being offline. And while it’s been critiqued as “a cheesy poem [presenting] an overdramatised strawman argument”, Gary Turk’s video does provoke debate over the benefits of living in an age of hyperconnectivity. While it might be a little sentimental, his depiction of an over-connected online generation is resonating with these “robots” across the world. Read more content like this at Canvas8.com