May. 20, 2013 at 9:55pm with 1,218 notes
Reblogged from didyoueatallthisacid
12:14am with 8,196 notes
Reblogged from prettyyvacant
areyousuretonightsadangernight:
OMG THIS IS A REAL PHOTO.
I AM DEAD.
Love. Them.
(Source: igotyoufirst)
May. 19, 2013 at 12:21pm with 114,841 notes
Reblogged from psilocymian
May. 17, 2013 at 12:00am with 74,544 notes
Reblogged from laughhingcow
pissing my pants
someone thought of this
May. 16, 2013 at 11:56pm with 140,489 notes
Reblogged from tokillamockingtroll
Starfish feeding on a dead whale.
i’ve never been scared of starfish until this moment
look at that creepy, tall, dancing one
look at him
‘yes, my darlingssssss’
‘feed to your hearts content’‘feast on what is rightfully ours’
‘feast, thrive— soon, we will conquer all‘
(Source: nervation)
May. 15, 2013 at 10:41pm with 12,855 notes
Reblogged from prettyyvacant
10:31pm with 13,094 notes
Reblogged from moonyrocketship
Rocketship: fuckyeahcracker: Effects Of Thinking White People Are “All Like...
Effects Of Thinking White People Are “All Like That”:
- Literally nothing other than white people having their feelings hurt on the internet
- I’m not joking there is no real world consequence of this
Effects Of Thinking People of Color Are “All Like That”:
9:52pm with 10,612 notes
Reblogged from fuckyeahcracker
“
The thing that sucks about Girls and Seinfeld and Sex and the City and every other TV show like them isn’t that they don’t include strong characters focusing on the problems facing blacks and Latinos in America today. The thing that sucks about those shows is that millions of black people look at them and can relate on so many levels to Hannah Horvath and Charlotte York and George Costanza, and yet those characters never look like us. The guys begging for money look like us. The mad black chicks telling white ladies to stay away from their families look like us. Always a gangster, never a rich kid whose parents are both college professors. After a while, the disparity between our affinity for these shows and their lack of affinity towards us puts reality into stark relief: When we look at Lena Dunham and Jerry Seinfeld, we see people with whom we have a lot in common. When they look at us, they see strangers.
2:21am with 53,874 notes
Reblogged from dereshishi
(Source: evilgr33nranger)
May. 14, 2013 at 11:06am with 269,384 notes
Reblogged from laughhingcow
