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And wistful thinking never stopped us from wanting it all

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The dirty little world inside

chrisfox:

This may or may not be the best (spoiler: it is the best).

1 hour ago on June 20th, 2013 | J | 101,700 notes

So let me get this straight:

the-doctors-sweetie:

daisyunderthestars:

People are boycotting Kraft just because of this one ad

kraft zesty dressing

yet

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no one

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sees

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problem

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with

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these ones?

I

1 hour ago on June 20th, 2013 | J | 7,516 notes
thesecretbeta:

hardlyfunctioningempath:

Will Graham texts 

This is exactly how the season is going to end.

thesecretbeta:

hardlyfunctioningempath:

Will Graham texts 

This is exactly how the season is going to end.

3 hours ago on June 19th, 2013 | J | 24,514 notes

sithlordtennant:

moriartyse:

Did I leave the oven on?
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SHIT.
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Did I forget to tell Jawn i’m alive?
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SHIT.

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13 hours ago on June 19th, 2013 | J | 11,356 notes

caulfieldy:

history meme | 3 inventions [1/3] → "QWERTY keyboard" 

The first practical typewriter was patented in the United States in 1868 by Christopher Latham Sholes. His machine was known as the type-writer. It had a movable carriage, a lever for turning paper from line to line, and a keyboard on which the letters were arranged in alphabetical order. But Sholes had a problem. On his first model, his “ABC” key arrangement caused the keys to jam when the typist worked quickly. Sholes didn’t know how to keep the keys from sticking, so his solution was to keep the typist from typing too fast. He did this using a study of letter-pair frequency prepared by educator Amos Densmore, brother of James Densmore, who was Sholes’ chief financial backer. The QWERTY keyboard itself was determined by the existing mechanical linkages of the typebars inside the machine to the keys on the outside. Sholes’ solution did not eliminate the problem completely, but it was greatly reduced. . The keyboard arrangement was considered important enough to be included on Sholes’ patent granted in 1878, some years after the machine was into production. QWERTY’s effect, by reducing those annoying clashes, was to speed up typing rather than slow it down. The new arrangement was the “QWERTY” arrangement that typists use today. Of course, Sholes claimed that the new arrangement was scientific and would add speed and efficiency. The only efficiency it added was to slow the typist down, since almost any word in the English language required the typist’s fingers to cover more distance on the keyboard. The advantages of the typewriter outweighed the disadvantages of the keyboard. Typists memorized the crazy letter arrangement, and the typewriter became a huge success.

3 days ago on June 16th, 2013 | J | 876 notes

xtinemay1920:

jennipuu:

eeriberry:

cocchilweran:

Sometimes I have an unreasonably hard time re-watching movies I love with other people 8D

all the time

nailed it

WHY DIDN’T YOU LAUGH AT THAT PART. *LOOKS OVER* HOW CAN YOU BE TEXTING RIGHT NOW! I’M REWINDING IT. YOU HAVE TO WATCH THIS PART PROPERLY

3 days ago on June 16th, 2013 | J | 72,565 notes

visualgraphic:

Art Deco Playing Cards

3 days ago on June 16th, 2013 | J | 3,550 notes
3 days ago on June 16th, 2013 | J | 12,137 notes
plays

kate-mcgill:

Sooooooo I haven’t been apart of the Hannibal fandom for long, but I was wondering if you guys have come across this gem……..

3 days ago on June 16th, 2013 | J | 3 notes
plays

gaydayparade:

I’M YELLING GUYS I FOUND IT

3 days ago on June 16th, 2013 | J | 68,326 notes

Life Before Photoshop -1950

Bruce Mozert was renowned for being pretty innovative, coming up with underwater tricks to make these scenes seem as real as possible including using baking powder to create the powdery “smoke” coming out of the underwater barbecue. 

4 days ago on June 15th, 2013 | J | 41,775 notes

museumuesum:

Erik Olson

I Fucking Love Space, 2011
oil on panel, 48 x 36 inches

Mercury, 2011
oil on panel, 48 x 36 inches

Venus, 2011
oil on panel, 48 x 36 inches

Earth, 2011
oil on canvas, 72 x 84 inches

Mars, Fear & Dread, 2011
oil on panel, 48 x 36 inches

Jupiter, 2011
oil on panel, 48 x 36 inches

Saturn, 2011
oil on panel, 48 x 36 inches

Uranus, 2011
oil on panel, 48 x 36 inches

Neptune, 2011
oil on panel, 48 x 36 inches

The Gateway (Hubble Deep Field), 2011
oil on canvas, 72 x 84 inches

4 days ago on June 15th, 2013 | J | 20,573 notes

likeafieldmouse:

Jose Parla - Broken Language (2013)

4 days ago on June 15th, 2013 | J | 1,774 notes

geothebio:

i-am-no-man-bitch:

akatriel-rowanborn:

mrchristianbale:

image

I WILL NEVER NOT REBLOG.

This is still the best thing on the Internet

4 days ago on June 15th, 2013 | J | 143,632 notes
tsar-bucks:

georjajayhurrison:

fangks:

christieanne:

I’d be laughing ll the way out the door

do u at least get to see a dick tho

tumblr user fangks asks the real questions

my mother has been there and reports that yes you do get to see the dick and also it’s worth it

tsar-bucks:

georjajayhurrison:

fangks:

christieanne:

I’d be laughing ll the way out the door

do u at least get to see a dick tho

tumblr user fangks asks the real questions

my mother has been there and reports that yes you do get to see the dick and also it’s worth it

4 days ago on June 15th, 2013 | J | 89,405 notes