towerofsleep:

Scott Sternberg of Band of Outsiders looks like Milhouse.

Matt Mondanile of Ducktails and Real Estate looks kind of like Scott Sternberg and Milhouse.

Saturday morning, 3 a.m., was spent hunting for Ducktails pics. This one is the best I’ve seen. Sleepover Buddy, you have good taste in men!

(Source: nickelcobalt)

comiques:

Possible subject matter

comiques:

Possible subject matter

(Source: azizisbored)

springbreakforever:

This video of gansta kids gotta be my fave NSFW video of 2011 (via Stereogum).

I never played with guns, but this seems like an accurate depiction of imagination in action…

beckyontheinternet:

scented candles

Since when do M&Ms actually have a smell?

beckyontheinternet:

scented candles

Since when do M&Ms actually have a smell?

This guy makes paper dolls of all the TV characters we love so much! He’s got all the Arrested Development folks, and is busy working his way through Parks and Rec now. Joy!

flannelanimal:

Doll #12

This guy makes paper dolls of all the TV characters we love so much! He’s got all the Arrested Development folks, and is busy working his way through Parks and Rec now. Joy!

flannelanimal:

Doll #12

Untitled (curtain)

jeremyjansen:

2011
9,000 punk studs, vinyl curtain, wood
32” x 70”

Can you see Michael Jackson’s face in here, too?

pasttensevancouver:

Don’t Be a Sucker, 1947
In April 1947 the price of a chocolate bar in Canada skyrocketed from a nickel to eight cents, apparently caused by a sharp increase in the price of cocoa beans. Kids in Chemainus on Vancouver Island were the first to raise a stink by picketing their local candy store. Ladysmith followed (pictured), and in no time at all the campaign spread across the country. Children in Fredericton reportedly pooled their resources and made huge batches of homemade fudge to get them through the crisis. In Victoria, kids managed to shut down the provincial government by storming the legislature over the issue, and in Burnaby, a bicycle parade was held that blocked traffic on Kingsway for two hours. Retailers complained that sales of candy bars plummeted by 80% almost overnight.
Just when the protest was at its height and victory seemed within reach, the thrill-kill Toronto Telegram published an editorial claiming the campaign was just another Communist conspiracy and that these kids were dupes of Moscow, as if affordable chocolate bars would signal the first stage of a proletarian revolution. “Communist youth organizers,” alleged the Telegram, “have been instructed to use every possible means of developing and encouraging the chocolate bar agitation.”
The intense anticommunism at the time meant that support for the protest withered almost instantly. In Vancouver for example, the 2500-member Sat-Teen Club withdrew its support under pressure from city officials, police, and the clergy, stating that “mob demonstrations and strikes are not consistent with the ideals of the club. Was it a Communist conspiracy? Norman Penner, the head of the National Federation of Labour Youth – the main coordinating body of the national campaign – was the son of a founding member of the Communist Party of Canada who went on to become a prominent Marxist historian of the Canadian left. But despite such associations, it’s unlikely anyone in Moscow influenced or even knew about the strike.
Source: Photo from the Vancouver Sun, 26 April 1947

pasttensevancouver:

Don’t Be a Sucker, 1947

In April 1947 the price of a chocolate bar in Canada skyrocketed from a nickel to eight cents, apparently caused by a sharp increase in the price of cocoa beans. Kids in Chemainus on Vancouver Island were the first to raise a stink by picketing their local candy store. Ladysmith followed (pictured), and in no time at all the campaign spread across the country. Children in Fredericton reportedly pooled their resources and made huge batches of homemade fudge to get them through the crisis. In Victoria, kids managed to shut down the provincial government by storming the legislature over the issue, and in Burnaby, a bicycle parade was held that blocked traffic on Kingsway for two hours. Retailers complained that sales of candy bars plummeted by 80% almost overnight.

Just when the protest was at its height and victory seemed within reach, the thrill-kill Toronto Telegram published an editorial claiming the campaign was just another Communist conspiracy and that these kids were dupes of Moscow, as if affordable chocolate bars would signal the first stage of a proletarian revolution. “Communist youth organizers,” alleged the Telegram, “have been instructed to use every possible means of developing and encouraging the chocolate bar agitation.”

The intense anticommunism at the time meant that support for the protest withered almost instantly. In Vancouver for example, the 2500-member Sat-Teen Club withdrew its support under pressure from city officials, police, and the clergy, stating that “mob demonstrations and strikes are not consistent with the ideals of the club. Was it a Communist conspiracy? Norman Penner, the head of the National Federation of Labour Youth – the main coordinating body of the national campaign – was the son of a founding member of the Communist Party of Canada who went on to become a prominent Marxist historian of the Canadian left. But despite such associations, it’s unlikely anyone in Moscow influenced or even knew about the strike.

Source: Photo from the Vancouver Sun, 26 April 1947

If I ever went out, this would be SO TRUE.

If I ever went out, this would be SO TRUE.

(Source: 100yearsoflolitude)

azizisbored:

Essential reading for any gentleman!
gq:

What Would Jean-Ralphio Do? (WWJ-RD?)
Parks and Recreation’s Snake Juice entrepreneur offers love advice and more.

GQ: Best way to pop the more important question, i.e. “Will you have sex with me?” Jean-Ralphio: Text; tweet; Friendster post; fortune in a fortune cookie; during a screening of Stuart Little; sign language; Legos; make an adorable 2-year-old hand over a note asking the question for you; as a follow-up question, after she says “no” to “will you marry me.”GQ: What’s the ideal date? Jean-Ralphio: Me, Snake Juice, anything by Tyrese or Sisqó playing in the background, waterbed.GQ: You’re in fifth grade. It’s math class. Julie sends you a note: I think you’re kinda cute.” What’s your next move?Jean-Ralphio: I pass her a scientific calculator with pre-typed numbers that, when held upside down, spells BOOBIES.GQ: You’re 83 years old. It’s bingo night. Ethel makes eye contact. What’s your next move?Jean-Ralphio: I pass her a scientific calculator with pre-typed numbers that, when held upside down, spells BOOBIES.


I wish boys showed me clever calculators…

azizisbored:

Essential reading for any gentleman!

gq:

What Would Jean-Ralphio Do? (WWJ-RD?)

Parks and Recreation’s Snake Juice entrepreneur offers love advice and more.



GQ: Best way to pop the more important question, i.e. “Will you have sex with me?”
Jean-Ralphio: Text; tweet; Friendster post; fortune in a fortune cookie; during a screening of Stuart Little; sign language; Legos; make an adorable 2-year-old hand over a note asking the question for you; as a follow-up question, after she says “no” to “will you marry me.”

GQ: What’s the ideal date?
Jean-Ralphio: Me, Snake Juice, anything by Tyrese or Sisqó playing in the background, waterbed.

GQ: You’re in fifth grade. It’s math class. Julie sends you a note: I think you’re kinda cute.” What’s your next move?
Jean-Ralphio: I pass her a scientific calculator with pre-typed numbers that, when held upside down, spells BOOBIES.

GQ: You’re 83 years old. It’s bingo night. Ethel makes eye contact. What’s your next move?
Jean-Ralphio: I pass her a scientific calculator with pre-typed numbers that, when held upside down, spells BOOBIES.




I wish boys showed me clever calculators…