DORFS

May 26

Could somebody get me a link to the raws of the new episode? Google has failed me

[video]

May 25

Metro 2033 more like never sleeping again

kamicarrot:

Those SNK fans that have only watched the anime and are arguing about whether or not that one titan is Eren.

And then there’s me who watched the anime and read the manga and is like

image

[video]

May 24

pandadistractions:

like, can “moves like Jaeger” become a thing please

simonmarshallcolfer:

help-the-fandoms-have-me:

WHOA

DO YOU KNOW WHAT I JUST REALIZED

If there were hunters out there like Sam and Dean, or a secret organization called Torchwood, or the Doctor showing up, or fairies or wizards or demigods or whatever,

the ONE thing that would keep it completely secret

is if someone wrote a book or made a TV show about it

because by doing an internet search, all that would show up

would be the show or the book

and people will assume it’s fiction

but… what if?

image

And this is exactly how Mundus operates

it takes something real, twists it a bit, and popularizes it

so that when the real thing pops up

no one is any wiser

(via freackthehopeful)

sir-argues-a-lot:

In which novels are magically superior by virtue of not having images and music.

>implying that literary classics are made for analysis by college students
>implying that what defines something as a “literary classic” is not incredibly arbitrary
I’m sorry but as a student of English I’m gonna hafta ask OP’s friend to step the flip back and pull his head out of his bunghole. “Classical Literature” is such a nebulous and abstract category that no one has been able to come up with a satisfying explanation of what it even is. 
I prefer to classify “literature” (or rather, “art”) as something that makes you think, which, by extension, means that everyone will classify different things as lit. By that definition, I not only classify “Mrs. Dalloway” as literature, but also Terry Pratchett’s “Reaperman” and Neil Gaiman’s “Neverwhere.” 
“Homestuck” certainly qualifies, in my opinion, as literature and as art. While it at first seems to invite you to think about the nature of fate and inevitability, those things are quickly swept aside by what Hussie considers the more important questions: What does it mean to be a hero? Is an action justified solely by the fact that it will lead to the most favorable outcome? What are the dangers of idolization?
“Homestuck”, funny comic with animation and music though it may be, really does invite the reader to think about some pretty serious subject matter. 
Never, ever (and I people who know me know that I rarely use absolutes), judge something by its medium, its demographic, or its cover. Because you can never really tell what something is going to be like until you’ve experienced it.

sir-argues-a-lot:

In which novels are magically superior by virtue of not having images and music.

>implying that literary classics are made for analysis by college students

>implying that what defines something as a “literary classic” is not incredibly arbitrary

I’m sorry but as a student of English I’m gonna hafta ask OP’s friend to step the flip back and pull his head out of his bunghole. “Classical Literature” is such a nebulous and abstract category that no one has been able to come up with a satisfying explanation of what it even is. 

I prefer to classify “literature” (or rather, “art”) as something that makes you think, which, by extension, means that everyone will classify different things as lit. By that definition, I not only classify “Mrs. Dalloway” as literature, but also Terry Pratchett’s “Reaperman” and Neil Gaiman’s “Neverwhere.” 

“Homestuck” certainly qualifies, in my opinion, as literature and as art. While it at first seems to invite you to think about the nature of fate and inevitability, those things are quickly swept aside by what Hussie considers the more important questions: What does it mean to be a hero? Is an action justified solely by the fact that it will lead to the most favorable outcome? What are the dangers of idolization?

“Homestuck”, funny comic with animation and music though it may be, really does invite the reader to think about some pretty serious subject matter. 

Never, ever (and I people who know me know that I rarely use absolutes), judge something by its medium, its demographic, or its cover. Because you can never really tell what something is going to be like until you’ve experienced it.

(Source: unpopular-hs-opinions, via freackthehopeful)

May 23

THE SESSION IS CORRUPT: eva-420: thorki: the scar i have on my knee is from doing manly... -

morhek:

ludificorpayne:

eva-420:

thorki:

the scar i have on my knee is from doing manly activities like boxing and jumping the grand canyon on a motorcycle it is most definitely not from getting too pumped up during my first deathwing kill and smashing my knee into the side of my desk and having to get stitches

my super manly eyebrow scar from fighting bears and drop kicking sharks is definitely not from chicken pox when i was 3 years old

those red marks under my eyes are from getting PEPPERSPRAYED by a BEAR while CAMPING in the WILDERNESS and definitely not crying all day.

The lightning bolt scar on my knuckle is from when I punched Voldemort in the face, and totally not from trying to open a coconut with a cleaver.

this scar under my eye is totally from a ricocheting bullet and not from bumping into an end table at the age of three