A simple smile
and all was well
4. The digital camera: That clunky, old 35-millimeter actually saved you time. Each roll of film contained no more than 36 photos, which meant that when you ran out, you put the camera down and enjoyed yourself. You were living, not simply photographing living. Sure, it’s great you can now take a picture and e-mail it to a friend. But don’t you get overwhelmed by having to sort (and remove red eyes from) 2,132 photos after every trip? Maybe dropping film off at the drugstore wasn’t such a bad gig after all. — 10 Biggest Time Wasters Article
Indeed.
(via brosephstalin)
*Laughter ensues*
(via ragetoons)
hahaahahahah the last 2 frames
A life. You know what that is? It’s the sh*t that happens while you’re waiting for moments that never come. — Lester Freamon
What started as a g-chat between myself and Jason Michaels evenutally lead into the Loldwell / Gamerpaper collab to end all collabs. Be sure to read the rest over on the GP site.
(via genebarroga)
I should not have loled at that.
(via calvinhobbes)
But everything about the story, the setting, the dialog, and the parts that aren’t purely visual is awful. It’s actually worse than Dances with Wolves in terms of cultural imperialism. Like so many other “white guy goes back to nature” movies, it posits that the best native is in fact a white guy gone native. He was raised in the offending culture so he understands how it works, but he’s also able to learn the native culture almost instantly, become an accepted member of that culture, become a better native than the erstwhile best native (usually a young, hot-tempered man), and lead the natives into battle, either showing himself to be an honorable leader or dying valiantly in the attempt. It’s a bunch of racist hoo-haw, even if we’re dealing with made-up blue Gumbys. — GoatDog’s review of Avatar
(via allmyfavorites)
lotusohm:libraryland:orangeishpunkin:
Damn skippy you will.
Sometimes I think we’re alone in the universe, and sometimes I think we’re not. In either case the idea is quite staggering. — Arthur C. Clarke