Pliny the 3rd's blog of mostly cool stuff
January 16
 
Reblogged from: justinrampage
+239 notes
justinrampage:


The man with no name means rubber band business in Ben Chen’s humorous “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” shirt design. Thanks to your awesome votes, this shirt is now on sale over at Threadless!
Related Rampages: How To Eat These? (More)
Rubber Band Duel by Ben Chen (Flickr)

justinrampage:

The man with no name means rubber band business in Ben Chen’s humorous “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” shirt design. Thanks to your awesome votes, this shirt is now on sale over at Threadless!

Related RampagesHow To Eat These? (More)

Rubber Band Duel by Ben Chen (Flickr)

December 13
 
Reblogged from: metropolismarvel
+81 notes
metropolismarvel:

call it what it is! It’s a Holodeck!

metropolismarvel:

call it what it is! It’s a Holodeck!

(Source: milazzoill)

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Reblogged from: juliasegal
+28,284 notes

(Source: nothingislinear)

September 28
 
Reblogged from: gorg
+41 notes
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Reblogged from: juliasegal
+3,474 notes

(Source: lionskeleton)

September 26
 
Reblogged from: weezul
+9 notes
Tags:#finger#art
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Reblogged from: squarethecircle
+55,519 notes
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+250 notes
September 13
 
Reblogged from: thedailywhat
+965 notes
thedailywhat:

Letter Of Note of the Day: On February 13, 1986, an inter-office memo was sent out to Disney employees announcing the retroactive renaming of many studio classics.
The notice, attributed to then-Walt Disney Feature Animation president Peter Schneider, was actually the handy work of Ed Gombert, an animator who, along with many of his colleagues, was upset over the decision to rename Disney’s Basil of Baker Street adaptation “The Great Mouse Detective.”
Then-Disney CEO Jeff Katzenberg, who reportedly called Schneider into his office to do some explaining, was unable to determine the fake memo’s true origin. Nor was he successful in stopping itself spread beyond the walls of Disney HQ: A copy of the memo eventually landed in the pages of the LA Times.
[l|o|n.] 

thedailywhat:

Letter Of Note of the Day: On February 13, 1986, an inter-office memo was sent out to Disney employees announcing the retroactive renaming of many studio classics.

The notice, attributed to then-Walt Disney Feature Animation president Peter Schneider, was actually the handy work of Ed Gombert, an animator who, along with many of his colleagues, was upset over the decision to rename Disney’s Basil of Baker Street adaptation “The Great Mouse Detective.”

Then-Disney CEO Jeff Katzenberg, who reportedly called Schneider into his office to do some explaining, was unable to determine the fake memo’s true origin. Nor was he successful in stopping itself spread beyond the walls of Disney HQ: A copy of the memo eventually landed in the pages of the LA Times.

[l|o|n.] 

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Reblogged from: caffrin25
+4,547 notes
tonksinthetardis:

supernining:

yep. pretty much.

truth

tonksinthetardis:

supernining:

yep. pretty much.

truth

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Reblogged from: caffrin25
+11,740 notes
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Reblogged from: caffrin25
+22,317 notes

TOP 5 JIM PRANKS ON DWIGHT (no particular order) → conflict resolution list (3/5)

(Source: c-valois)

September 1
 
Reblogged from: juliasegal
+38,226 notes
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Reblogged from: thefrogman
+12,672 notes
sofapizza:

do not want!

sofapizza:

do not want!

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Reblogged from: ubergrid
+584 notes
Seriously one of the coolest pictures I’ve ever seen.
samuraicinema:

natepatrin:

discopotential:
H.A.M.
abloodymess:

Toshiro Mifune. Sword on dash.


There is no better photo of anything anywhere, ever.

I try not to reblog stuff, but every once in a while, Toshiro Mifune drives a car. 

Seriously one of the coolest pictures I’ve ever seen.

samuraicinema:

natepatrin:

discopotential:

H.A.M.

abloodymess:

Toshiro Mifune. Sword on dash.

There is no better photo of anything anywhere, ever.

I try not to reblog stuff, but every once in a while, Toshiro Mifune drives a car.