Must be painting a children’s hospital
She’s so good with color! That’s some strong use of color theory right there
I hate you all and your fucking lore
27. Astrophysicist, writer, artist. Michigan. Business inquiries: kaijunobiz@gmail.com
Must be painting a children’s hospital
She’s so good with color! That’s some strong use of color theory right there
I hate you all and your fucking lore
So this has become a thing now. I’m making the Homework Help series, various playlists to help you get homework done, because homework is a lot easier if you imagine that you’re not doing homework at all.
In this playlist, imagine that you’re a detective filling out paperwork to solve a case.
In this playlist, imagine that you’ve just found alien life, or that you’ve found radio waves coming from a nearby planet, and you’re filling out paperwork on it. Note: Sounds from NASA are actually waves that the planets give off, the frequency has been upped and the waves have been condensed for human hearing
Also: feel free to request other playlist themes here!
certainkindofscientist asked:
Oka y
This is better than any found footage horror film ever made
I love :
1. How you can hear them all trying not to laugh
2. The shear amount of friends he had to get together to make this
3. The one who goes “you want a cripe sanberry?”
This is better than any found footage horror film ever made
I love :
1. How you can hear them all trying not to laugh
2. The shear amount of friends he had to get together to make this
3. The one who goes “you want a cripe sanberry?”
In light of Fall Out Boy’s GARBAGE cover of the song. Let’s learn about the original. Notice how they’re actually in chronological order instead of just random references 😒😒😒😒
“I heard my wife knock on the bathroom door, but then I remembered…. our bathroom doesn’t have a door”
I’m sorry, but the confusion of why your bathroom doesn’t have a door far outweighs any feelings of horror this might evoke.
can’t afford door.. the horror here is the realities of life
So what fuck was your wife knocking on
this dick
It’s not even 4 words???
“I heard my wife knock on the bathroom door, but then I remembered…. our bathroom doesn’t have a door”
I’m sorry, but the confusion of why your bathroom doesn’t have a door far outweighs any feelings of horror this might evoke.
can’t afford door.. the horror here is the realities of life
So what fuck was your wife knocking on
this dick
It’s not even 4 words???
Many classic horror icons, such as Giger’s Xenomorphs, Silent Hill’s Pyramid Head, and other disturbing creatures, share common characteristics. Pale skin, dark, sunken eyes, elongated faces, sharp teeth, and the like. These images inspire horror and revulsion in many, and with good reason. The characteristics shared by these faces are imprinted in the human mind.
Many things frighten humans instinctively. The fear is natural, and does not need to be reinforced in order to terrify. The fears are species-wide, stemming from dark times in the past when lightning could mean the burning of your tree home, thunder could be the approaching gallops of a stampede, predators could hide in darkness, and heights could make poor footing lethal.
The question you have to ask yourself is this:
What happened, deep in the hidden eras before history began, that could effect the entire human race so evenly as to give the entire species a deep, instinctual, and lasting fear of pale beings with dark, sunken eyes, razor sharp teeth, and elongated faces?
Pale skin and sunken eyes are synonymous with illness and death. You instinctively fear people who are ill or dead, as to not catch an illness yourself. As for sharp teeth and elongated faces: characteristics of predators. Sharp teeth means carnivorous. Long face (with front facing eyes) means good depth perception for hunting. The pale skin, sunken eyes, sharp teeth, and long face trope is a combination of those instinctual fears, producing a stronger fear/reaction.
Restored film of San Francisco’s Market Street version of a film shot on April 14, 1906, four days before the Great Earthquake, and the attempt to colorize and sharpen the video-converted film.
Oh wow that’s incredible
I love the guys at the end who are all like “Oh hey look, there’s a camera! Hello camera!”
Restored film of San Francisco’s Market Street version of a film shot on April 14, 1906, four days before the Great Earthquake, and the attempt to colorize and sharpen the video-converted film.
Oh wow that’s incredible
I love the guys at the end who are all like “Oh hey look, there’s a camera! Hello camera!”
I’ve seen these restored films going around, but without credit. The original 13-minute film is A Trip Down Market Street, which was shot and produced by the Miles Brothers. It was preserved in the Library of Congress and Prelinger Archives, and in 2018, Adrianne Finelli scanned and uploaded the footage for the Internet Archive. Now in 2020, Denis Shiryaev restored, upscaled and colorized the film. Shiryaev’s channel has even more restored footage, so check it out if you’re interested.
Remember to source and credit works that are not your own and respect the process and people that gave us this literal glimpse back in time.