“Well, they’re in here, dear”
“You little farts. Little farts.” *pets the deer, clearly overjoyed and fond*
I like this person filming them.
dude i know this one guy i’ve studied with for like 4 years and his facebook is hilarious bc he’s an honest to god monarchist?? like. in the year of our lord 2015 there’s a growing movement for the return of the monarchy in brazil?? it’s like watching a bad movie but it happens in real life
in this, the waning hours of 4/20
that was some of the greatest cackling i have ever fucking heard
Killua looking after Alluka is just the cutest though
Togashi’s comment on that fanart of Killua and Gon as circles:
“Even just with these simple lines, you can immediately tell it’s Killua and Gon. A genius example of the chibi art style!”
https://vine.co/v/MeLM6FOHTKY/embed/simple//platform.vine.co/static/scripts/embed.js
ryan:
YOU DON’T UNDERSTAND HOW MANY TIMES I JUST WATCHED THIS
if anyone is unhappy please for god’s sake, just watch this over and over
BABY
On Pins and Needles: Stylist Turns Ancient Hairdo Debate on Its Head – WSJ
via redheadbouquet so cool!
“This is my hairdresserly grudge match with historical representations of hairstyles,” says Ms. Stephens, who works at Studio 921 Salon & Day Spa, which offers circa 21st-century haircuts.
Her coiffure queries began, she says, when she was killing time in the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore back in 2001. A bust of the Roman empress Julia Domna caught her eye. “I thought, holy cow, that is so cool,” she says, referring to the empress’s braided bun, chiseled in stone. She wondered how it had been built. “It was amazing, like a loaf of bread sitting on her head,” says Ms. Stephens.
She tried to re-create the ‘do on a mannequin. “I couldn’t get it to hold together,” she says. Turning to the history books for clues, she learned that scholars widely believed the elaborately teased, towering and braided styles of the day were wigs.
She didn’t buy that. Through trial and error she found that she could achieve the hairstyle by sewing the braids and bits together, using a needle. She dug deeper into art and fashion history books, looking for references to stitching.
In 2005, she had a breakthrough. Studying translations of Roman literature, Ms. Stephens says, she realized the Latin term “acus” was probably being misunderstood in the context of hairdressing. Acus has several meanings including a “single-prong hairpin” or “needle and thread,” she says. Translators generally went with “hairpin.”
The single-prong pins couldn’t have held the intricate styles in place. But a needle and thread could. It backed up her hair hypothesis.
In 2007, she sent her findings to the Journal of Roman Archaeology. “It’s amazing how much chutzpah you have when you have no idea what you’re doing,” she says. “I don’t write scholarly material. I’m a hairdresser.”
John Humphrey, the journal’s editor, was intrigued. “I could tell even from the first version that it was a very serious piece of experimental archaeology which no scholar who was not a hairdresser—in other words, no scholar—would have been able to write,” he says.
On Pins and Needles: Stylist Turns Ancient Hairdo Debate on Its Head – WSJ
Astronaut readjusts to life back on Earth
> Don’t give him a baby for a while.
HE GRABS THE CUP BUT THEN HE DROPS THE PEN 0.0003 SECONDS LATER
AND HE LOOKS UP AT THE CEILING INSTEAD OF AT THE GROUND WHEN HE CAN’T FIND THEM
I CAN’T STOP LAUGHING HE JUST DROPS IT
IT’S NOT FUNNY IT’S VERY LOGICAL THAT HE WOULD HAVE ADJUSTED TO LIVING LIFE WHILE HE WAS IN SPACE BECAUSE IT’S DIFFERENT FROM EARTH BUT I CAN’T FUCKING BREATHE
*THUNK*
https://vine.co/v/OY9PZitIKt1/embed/simple//platform.vine.co/static/scripts/embed.js
otter: EEEEEEEEAAAH
speaker: he cant do much besides go around in circles
otter: EEEEHit me
