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#dc comics#dc#batman#dc universe#bruce wayne#tim drake#batfam#batfamily#dick grayson#dc fanart




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You're a UX Writer? What do you do?
I look at this and say...
!!New commission info!!
If you don’t vote, you can’t complain!!! 🗳️
Please Forward // Stupid
Follow for more tunes.
Finer than a frog's hairs split four ways, sanded and greased. That's mighty fine.
Hey Lee, how’re you doing today? Cartoonist Josh Neufeld worked as a Red Cross volunteer after Katrina and wrote about his experiences, notably those with his coworkers, on his blog, 4-Eyes.
Now, Neufeld’s experiences, along with many others, are preserved in Please Forward: How Blogging Reconnected New Orleans After Katrina
Not that I'm a pillar of normalcy but I do pay taxes and manage to mingle in polite society occasionally, yet I once led an organization called the Mystik Knights of Mondrian's Chicken. In homage to the great painter, we rode in a giant cube shaped chicken, wore costumes the color of yolks and threw egg-shaped beads, while white helium balloons were periodically released from a hole in the chicken's ass. After three years with this same float, we were told by the parade organizers we would have to change our design. The novelty of our cubits chicken had apparently worn off. It just wasn't weird enough anymore.
Academy Award-winning filmmaker William Joyce on the absurdity of Hurricane Katrina, which he argued in February of 2006 essentially reflects the ever-impending doom of living below sea level.
Joyce’s writings are amongst those collected in Please Forward: How Blogging Reconnected New Orleans After Katrina
American Red Cross with your free Dr. Seuss hot lunch today. We've got hams and yams served in a clam by hand by two guys named Stan in the back of a van. So come as quick as you can!
During the Hurricane Katrina aftermath, cartoonist Josh Neufeld volunteered with a Red Cross ERV driver named Lee, who took over the loudspeaker at mealtimes.
Neufeld’s observations of his time post-Katrina, originally published on his blog, 4-Eyes, have been preserved in Please Forward: How Blogging Reconnected New Orleans After Katrina