gleelesbian:

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This is the funniest thing I have ever seen. If I were a professor I would pin this to my office door.

malekedd:

Rami’s speech about Freddie Mercury after winning the Breakthrough Performance of the Year at the Palm Springs International Film Festival… (x)

gum-my-bears:

Spiderman noir coming into 2018 and finding out there are still nazis

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thesnadger:

Into The Spiderverse took 100% of its critically acclaimed visuals from comic books and street art and while there are obvious in-universe reasons for this it can’t be ignored that BOTH of these are traditionally seen as “lowbrow” populist art forms, here celebrated for their inherent beauty, complexity and sociopolitical importance. In this essay I will-

girlfriendluvr:

this is still the best tweet ever made

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peteseeger:

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This is literally so fucking funny

tumblr poll!

biggest-gaudiest-patronuses:

a-sociopathic-psychologist:

biggest-gaudiest-patronuses:

should i rub my dog’s head or her belly?

You’ve got two hands don’t you? Why not both?

I stand here an absolute heathen, fool, a pissant

onion-souls:

tilthat:

TIL that the Count in Sesame Street does not count all the time to teach children numbers! In folklore, vampires had arithmomania, or an obsession with numbers. This derives from the old superstition that throwing poppy seeds on the ground stopped vampires because they had to count them all first.

via reddit.com

I like the poster’s implication that the producers of Sesame Street did not put a counting vampiric count on a children’s educational series to teach kids how to count; this was just an incidental side effect of their fidelity to obscure vampire folklore.

qoa:

amazing

idimmadontgiveashit:

annevbonny:

annevbonny:

annevbonny:

annevbonny:

i just started the young pope and i know fuck all about catholicism but i gotta say. lenny has the most potent bde

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i am SCREAMING

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When a rogue bluffs his way into being a cleric

ultrafacts:

This German art student, Benjamin Harff, decided, for his exam at the Academy of Arts, to do something only slightly ambitious — to hand-illuminate and bind a copy of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Silmarillion. It took him six months of work. He hand-illuminated the text which had been printed on his home Canon inkjet printer. He worked with a binder to assemble the resulting book.

More pictures HERE

(Fact Source)