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68 notas

comedycentral:

Countdown to Futurama: The World Is Ending Again Clip

Yesterday, we gave you a still and the first details about “A Farewell to Arms,” the second episode in Futurama’s one-hour season premiere. Well, today, you get to see an actual clip from the episode. How can we possibly top that tomorrow? One word: e-candy!*

Futurama’s one-hour season premiere airs Wednesday, June 20 at 10/9c!

*e-candy will only be provided tomorrow if one of you guys invents it and gives me a bunch for free.

43 004 notas

drwhom:

chrissy-marie:

zukois2innocent:

That’s right, it’s a 38 foot wide human transmutation circle! Took four hours and two buckets of chalk, completed by me and my two buddies in my cul-de-sac. Covered in chalk and asphalt from head to toe, and neighbors may or may not think we are satan worshippers. Worth it? I think yes.

wow all that chalk must have

cost you 

an arm

and

a

leg

(vía rosey-so-silly)

51 notas

magox:

#fb
elgranconcepcion:

Autopista Talcahuano Concepción (Trébol) antes del Mall, Suractivo, Automotoras, DuocUc, Casino etc.


Por lo visto ni siquiera estaba el Trebol, porque s eve super plano el camino

magox:

#fb

elgranconcepcion:

Autopista Talcahuano Concepción (Trébol) antes del Mall, Suractivo, Automotoras, DuocUc, Casino etc.

Por lo visto ni siquiera estaba el Trebol, porque s eve super plano el camino

525 notas

Totally agree
newsweek:

This week’s cover features a very average-looking Jesus Christ, whose cover line urges we follow him—and ditch the church. The cover story is written by Andrew Sullivan, who who argues that Christianity in America is “in crisis,” as political issues like contraception, health care, and abortion have been usurped by religious thinking, and the kind of Christianity that is most essential and pure has been lost. 
Here’s an excerpt (full story online and on newsstands tomorrow AM): 

It seems no accident to me that so many Christians now embrace materialist self-help rather than ascetic self-denial—or that most Catholics, even regular churchgoers, have tuned out the hierarchy in embarrassment or disgust. Given this crisis, it is no surprise that the fastest-growing segment of belief among the young is atheism, which has leapt in popularity in the new millennium. Nor is it a shock that so many have turned away from organized Christianity and toward “spirituality,” co-opting or adapting the practices of meditation or yoga, or wandering as lapsed Catholics in an inquisitive spiritual desert. The thirst for God is still there. How could it not be, when the profoundest human questions—Why does the universe exist rather than nothing? How did humanity come to be on this remote blue speck of a planet? What happens to us after death?—remain as pressing and mysterious as they’ve always been?  That’s why polls show a huge majority of Americans still believing in a Higher Power. But the need for new questioning—of Christian institutions as well as ideas and priorities—is as real as the crisis is deep.

Totally agree

newsweek:

This week’s cover features a very average-looking Jesus Christ, whose cover line urges we follow him—and ditch the church. The cover story is written by Andrew Sullivan, who who argues that Christianity in America is “in crisis,” as political issues like contraception, health care, and abortion have been usurped by religious thinking, and the kind of Christianity that is most essential and pure has been lost. 

Here’s an excerpt (full story online and on newsstands tomorrow AM): 

It seems no accident to me that so many Christians now embrace materialist self-help rather than ascetic self-denial—or that most Catholics, even regular churchgoers, have tuned out the hierarchy in embarrassment or disgust. Given this crisis, it is no surprise that the fastest-growing segment of belief among the young is atheism, which has leapt in popularity in the new millennium. Nor is it a shock that so many have turned away from organized Christianity and toward “spirituality,” co-opting or adapting the practices of meditation or yoga, or wandering as lapsed Catholics in an inquisitive spiritual desert. The thirst for God is still there. How could it not be, when the profoundest human questions—Why does the universe exist rather than nothing? How did humanity come to be on this remote blue speck of a planet? What happens to us after death?—remain as pressing and mysterious as they’ve always been?  That’s why polls show a huge majority of Americans still believing in a Higher Power. But the need for new questioning—of Christian institutions as well as ideas and priorities—is as real as the crisis is deep.

(vía livercake)

889 notas

Quieres jugar cartas gatita (aka @usaten)?
hjstory:

Love is… being silly!
If people around me finds out how much of a kid I am at heart when I’m with my wife, I think I’ll be so embarrassed to ever meet them again :)  Loving someone and being love sets your heart free to be the person you always wanted to be, brings out the silliness in you that you rarely show to anyone else!
Facebook | Twitter | Deviantart

Quieres jugar cartas gatita (aka @usaten)?

hjstory:

Love is… being silly!

If people around me finds out how much of a kid I am at heart when I’m with my wife, I think I’ll be so embarrassed to ever meet them again :)  Loving someone and being love sets your heart free to be the person you always wanted to be, brings out the silliness in you that you rarely show to anyone else!

Facebook | Twitter | Deviantart

(vía brok-lee)