Untitled
lulz-time:

Follow this blog, you will love it on your dashboard

Yea, fuck you kid. Your going to grow up to be a serial killer with how you treat animals :)

lulz-time:

Follow this blog, you will love it on your dashboard

Yea, fuck you kid. Your going to grow up to be a serial killer with how you treat animals :)

lifesahappys0ng:

serdavos:

“Remember, Chiyo, geisha are not courtesans. And we are not wives. We sell our skills, not our bodies. We create another secret world, a place only of beauty. The very word ‘geisha’ means artist and to be a geisha is to be judged as a moving work of art.”

this movie is so gorgeous but so AWFUL

One of my favorite movies in the whole world; Captures the book extremely well, and the way you see Chiyo grow up and evolve from a grungy, fishers daughter, to this exquisite, mature, grown woman/geisha, is reason why it’s my favorite. I want to kill the one guy though. He grosses me out >:(

lulz-time:

Follow this blog, you will love it on your dashboard

I think i might need to find out what fight this is of UFC, so i can uh… record it and fap to it forever  watch with interest c:

lulz-time:

Follow this blog, you will love it on your dashboard

I think i might need to find out what fight this is of UFC, so i can uh… record it and fap to it forever  watch with interest c:

lulz-time:

Follow this blog, you will love it on your dashboard

For some reason, I’m mesmerized by the way he eats that doughnut O_________O *is officially creeped out by myself*

striderprovider:

femkarkate:

These would be prefect signs for fantrolls. 

these are

whoa

o_o I should try too summon one of these XD I’d probably be dead when i try.

sirbrob:

(via imgTumble)

*dies* He’s too drop dead gorgeous DX

sirbrob:

(via imgTumble)

*dies* He’s too drop dead gorgeous DX

phillipsdepury:

ANDY WARHOL | Gun, 1981-1982 | acrylic and silkscreen ink on canvas
Sold for $7,026,500 at the Contemporary Art Evening Sale, 10 May 2012, New York. [Video]
Jordan Crandall: You don’t like guns, do you?
Andy Warhol: Yes, I think they’re really kind of nice.
(From Splash No. 6, 1986, excerpted in I’ll Be Your Mirror: The Selected Andy Warhol Interviews, Edited by Kenneth Goldsmith, New York, 2004, p. 373).
After Andy Warhol’s assassination attempt in 1968 by Valerie Solanas, much of the violent imagery that had occupied his work of the 1960s—electric chairs, traffic accidents, nuclear explosions—vanished from his new pictures. Instead, during much of the 1970s, both famous and unfamous faces became a prominent trope. Warhol also began to incorporate different series into his silkscreens, including the infamous oxidation paintings and the “shadow” paintings of the late 1970s. Yet as the injuries from 1968 exerted their relentless and painful influence upon Warhol’s life and work, he returned in 1981 and 1982 to the subjects that he had avoided for more than a decade. 1982 saw showings on opposite sides of the Atlantic for Warhol’s Guns, Knives, and Dollar Signs, some of the most ominous and captivating work of his entire career. Gun, 1981-1982, exhibits Warhol’s full-circle return to the events that shook him to his mortal core in 1968, as we observe upon his canvas the exact style of pistol that almost claimed his life two decades before his death.

This is real? I thought it was art o.o Incredible, i love it!

phillipsdepury:

ANDY WARHOL | Gun, 1981-1982 | acrylic and silkscreen ink on canvas

Sold for $7,026,500 at the Contemporary Art Evening Sale, 10 May 2012, New York. [Video]

Jordan Crandall: You don’t like guns, do you?

Andy Warhol: Yes, I think they’re really kind of nice.

(From Splash No. 6, 1986, excerpted in I’ll Be Your Mirror: The Selected Andy Warhol Interviews, Edited by Kenneth Goldsmith, New York, 2004, p. 373).

After Andy Warhol’s assassination attempt in 1968 by Valerie Solanas, much of the violent imagery that had occupied his work of the 1960s—electric chairs, traffic accidents, nuclear explosions—vanished from his new pictures. Instead, during much of the 1970s, both famous and unfamous faces became a prominent trope. Warhol also began to incorporate different series into his silkscreens, including the infamous oxidation paintings and the “shadow” paintings of the late 1970s. Yet as the injuries from 1968 exerted their relentless and painful influence upon Warhol’s life and work, he returned in 1981 and 1982 to the subjects that he had avoided for more than a decade. 1982 saw showings on opposite sides of the Atlantic for Warhol’s Guns, Knives, and Dollar Signs, some of the most ominous and captivating work of his entire career. Gun, 1981-1982, exhibits Warhol’s full-circle return to the events that shook him to his mortal core in 1968, as we observe upon his canvas the exact style of pistol that almost claimed his life two decades before his death.

This is real? I thought it was art o.o Incredible, i love it!

tobycarsonphilips:

thatonewritergirl:

pumpkinpasties-and-jammiedodgers:


Multi-awarded actress Maggie Smith was halfway through her cancer treatment when she made Harry Potter and The Half-Blood Prince, starring as Professor Minerva McGonagall. 
“I was hairless. I had no problem getting the wig on. I was like a boiled egg,” she said.
The chemotherapy was, she said, “something that makes you feel much worse than the cancer itself”. “You feel horribly sick. I was holding on to railings, thinking ‘I can’t do this’,” she said.
But she insisted she will “stagger through” the final Harry Potter film, The Deathly Hallows. Let’s just pause and ponder on how awesome this woman is, a true Gryffindor.



I will never not reblog this.  This woman is my hero.  I’ve seen what my mom went through with chemo.  To go through it and still put on such a moving performance is something she should be very proud of.
So much love and respect for this woman <3 :) 



I had absolutely no idea she was going through cancer for the last part of this franchise. Wow. Just proves that people who whine about the smallest BS are lesser beings. Wait a second. That’s just me :/

tobycarsonphilips:

thatonewritergirl:

pumpkinpasties-and-jammiedodgers:

Multi-awarded actress Maggie Smith was halfway through her cancer treatment when she made Harry Potter and The Half-Blood Prince, starring as Professor Minerva McGonagall. 

“I was hairless. I had no problem getting the wig on. I was like a boiled egg,” she said.

The chemotherapy was, she said, “something that makes you feel much worse than the cancer itself”. “You feel horribly sick. I was holding on to railings, thinking ‘I can’t do this’,” she said.

But she insisted she will “stagger through” the final Harry Potter film, The Deathly Hallows. Let’s just pause and ponder on how awesome this woman is, a true Gryffindor.

I will never not reblog this.  This woman is my hero.  I’ve seen what my mom went through with chemo.  To go through it and still put on such a moving performance is something she should be very proud of.

So much love and respect for this woman <3 :) 

I had absolutely no idea she was going through cancer for the last part of this franchise. Wow. Just proves that people who whine about the smallest BS are lesser beings. Wait a second. That’s just me :/

THIS. IS. TOO. FUCKING. GORGEOUS. *DIES* i LOVE asian culture &lt;3 &lt;3 &lt;3 

THIS. IS. TOO. FUCKING. GORGEOUS. *DIES* i LOVE asian culture <3 <3 <3 

myblossom:

oh. this 

So true :/ This is why I&#8217;m graduating early~

myblossom:

oh. this 

So true :/ This is why I’m graduating early~