bjork girlfriend era?!?
like i wasnt kidding 😭
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
i don't do bad sauce passes

JBB: An Artblog!
Claire Keane
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Game of Thrones Daily
styofa doing anything

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$LAYYYTER

★

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
noise dept.
almost home
Three Goblin Art
trying on a metaphor
todays bird
dirt enthusiast
🪼
cherry valley forever

seen from United States
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seen from Thailand

seen from Türkiye
seen from Philippines
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seen from United States

seen from Belgium

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seen from T1
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@yellow--laces
bjork girlfriend era?!?
like i wasnt kidding 😭
i love horror movie bts photos of women just covered in blood
awesome every time
YAYYYYYYYY
i never did anything i just admitted to having an affair with this woman
So, Ovi used to decorate his own sticks with stylized 8′s in a… unique way.
“It’s Drinking Man, Fat Man, Man Who Have Legs, and this is Girl,” he said, pointing to the last stick on the right. He said that he does the artwork himself, and that the order is, in fact, significant: the Drinking Man is his first stick, the Fat Man is his second stick, and so on.
For all I know he was making this up, but he explained that each drawing had numerical significance. Drinking Man’s holding a stick in his left hand that looks like the number one. Fat Man has two eyes. Girl (i.e. No. 4) has two hands and two eyes. And Man Who Have Legs…well, how exactly do you get the number three out of Man Who Have Legs?
“I don’t know,” Ovie said. “Maybe third leg.”
(Source)
The Boys react to Roysie's end of season ig post 😹
Andrew Cristall using the diminutive form of Ilya in the comments of Ilya Protas' year end instagram post is making me feel something.
I am not an expert on Russian, but to my understanding (which is supported by these links) is that diminutives are personal and intimate* in a way that normal nicknames are not. https://www.russianlessons.net/vocabulary/russian_names.php
https://www.wikihow.com/Russian-Nicknames
*I don't mean intimate in a romantic/sexual sense, just very close.
↳ TOM WILSON | VIA @/TAYLOR_PISCHKE | 5.18.26
Nothing says love quite like drunkenly hugging your teammates in a fountain (x)
Alex Ovechkin goofs around while eating a hot dog at the Giants vs. Nationals game. Makes Nicklas Backstrom cry of laughter.
Man, Xi Jinping knows more American culture and history than most Americans.
Fairy tale illustrations by Nadezhda Illarionova
Vumbi Pride lionesses versus C-Boy. This was snapped right after C-Boy growled at one of the cubs.
Taken in the Serengeti, Tanzania Photographed by Michael Nichols
She played bass on 10,000 songs, including the most-played track of the twentieth century. She was paid $55 per session. Her name never appeared on the albums.
Gold Star Studios, Los Angeles, 1964. A woman in a cardigan walks past the receptionist, a Fender Precision bass in her hand like a briefcase. She doesn’t sign autographs. She signs a timesheet.
Her name is Carol Kaye. In three hours, she will record what will become the most-played track of the twentieth century. She’ll pocket fifty-five dollars and head to another studio, on the other side of town, for the next session.
The record label will never put her name on the album.
Between 1957 and 1973, Carol Kaye took part in roughly 10,000 recording sessions. Not as the featured artist, not as a guest, but as a hired hand. She was part of an anonymous collective nicknamed The Wrecking Crew—elite studio musicians who actually played the instruments on your favorite records while the famous bands posed for promotional photos.
The work was relentless. Three albums before the day was over. Stale coffee in paper cups. No rehearsal. The charts arrived minutes before the tape rolled. If you couldn’t read a chart and nail the take in two tries, you didn’t get called for the next session.
Carol could do it on the first try.
She started playing guitar in grimy bars at fourteen because her family couldn’t pay the electric bill. Music wasn’t a romantic dream for her. It was survival. It was a job—factory work with better acoustics and lower pay.
But she was faster and sharper than almost everyone else. She corrected charts in pencil while the producer was still explaining what he wanted. In one session in 1968, she told a famous producer his arrangement sounded like a dying dog. She chose her own line. They kept her version.
That descending bass line that drives the Beach Boys’ “Wouldn’t It Be Nice”? Carol Kaye. The propulsive groove of “These Boots Are Made for Walkin’”? Carol Kaye. The acoustic-guitar intro to “La Bamba”? Carol Kaye. The iconic theme from Mission: Impossible? Carol Kaye.
She invented techniques on the spot, out of sheer necessity. When the bass sound was too muddy for AM radio, she stuck felt under the strings and used a hard pick instead of her fingers. The tone cut through the static like a blade. It became the sonic signature that defined 1960s pop.
Bassists spent years—decades—trying to crack the secret of the Beach Boys’ gear to get that sound. They were studying the wrong people. They should have been studying Carol.
She received no royalties. No residuals. No gold-record ceremony. No credit on the album sleeves. When “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’” hit number one, Carol was already back in a studio cutting a soap jingle.
The biggest bands mimed her bass lines on TV variety shows. New York marketing departments decided a mom in classic clothes didn’t fit the rebellious-youth image they were selling. So they simply left her name off the album credits.
For thirty years, almost no one cared. The truth only began to surface in the late 1990s, when music researchers found the same union contract numbers on thousands of hit records. The very documents meant to preserve studio musicians’ anonymity betrayed them.
Think about it. Every time you heard “Good Vibrations,” “River Deep – Mountain High,” the Righteous Brothers, Nancy Sinatra, or Sonny and Cher, you were hearing Carol Kaye. She composed the soundtrack of an entire generation’s youth.
And yet the records still say nothing. She’s now over eighty. She wrote instructional books. She trained countless bassists. She is finally starting to be recognized by music historians who uncovered the truth about The Wrecking Crew.
But she never got what she deserved: her name on those albums. Credit for the music that defined an era. Recognition that those bass lines everyone associates with the “Beach Boys” were, in fact, Carol Kaye’s.
Fifty-five dollars a session. Ten thousand sessions. The most-played track of the twentieth century.
And the world didn’t know her name.
thinking about all the times in life that i genuinely did create intricate rituals which allowed me to touch the skin of other women
Fellas is it weird to borrow your teammate's baby to cuddle while cuddling with a different teammate.
………This is my favorite Bruce Sermon