I would like to wish everyone an uneventful new year
May we live in very uninteresting times
may you experience very precedented events
One Nice Bug Per Day
Fai_Ryy
taylor price
macklin celebrini has autism
đŞź
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
đ


ellievsbear

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
art blog(derogatory)

if i look back, i am lost

romaâ
Sade Olutola
tumblr dot com
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

tannertan36
wallacepolsom
NASA
seen from Colombia
seen from Ukraine
seen from India
seen from Indonesia

seen from TĂźrkiye
seen from Lebanon
seen from Lebanon

seen from Pakistan
seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from India
seen from Congo - Brazzaville
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Ukraine

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@scantily-plaid
I would like to wish everyone an uneventful new year
May we live in very uninteresting times
may you experience very precedented events

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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By Rene Magritte
Anticlimax
ok this is good
all the cozy commissions from 2020
Kofi/ Printshop / Instagram / Twitter URLs in my blog description!
The holy grail of searching through academic literature is coming across a string of publications that are like:
Hereâs An Idea. Smith et al. 2016
Terrible Idea; a comment on Smith et al. 2016. Johnson 2016.
Youâre Wrong Too; a response to Johnson 2016. Nelson 2016.
Guys Just Stop Fighting, None Of Us Know Whatâs Going On; a Review of the Current Literature. McBrien 2017.
Not even an exaggeration.
âIf We Knew What We Were Doing, It Would Not be Called Research, Would It?â
@muteparticulars

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Gay_IRL
The inherent homoromanticism of botanical gardens

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Itâs always âwhy did you get in the riverâ and âyour soaking wetâ and never How was the river The river looked fun was it fun
the inherent tension between the acronyms JFC, JFK, and KFC .......
kentucky fried christ
jesus fucking kennedy
john f. chicken
Old dude came in the shop and when I said "lemme know if you have any questions" he goes "what was the name of Alexander the Great's horse," thinking he was so funny. I told him Bucephalus, and he was so disappointed. Like his whole day was hanging on beating me at trivia. He says "you're only the second person who knew that" and I said "well, probably the third if you count Alexander the Great." He left without buying anything, and did not say goodbye. I think I honestly hurt his weird little feelings! Sorry I'm a bitch, old man!
Not all construction work is equally enjoyable. For example, enlarging a drilled hole is boring, but fastening pieces of metal together is riveting.
this joke would get the exact same reaction in 1870 that it gets in 2021 and I love that about it

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Concept: A streaming service releases a movie about a person caught in a time loop that ends not with breaking the time loop, but with the protagonist reaching peace with the new condition of their life, making a point of finding joy in small things and doing good works even if they donât last.
It was a pretty good movie, so when you have a friend over who you think would like it, you watch the movie again. About 2/3 way through the movie, something starts feeling off. You didnât exactly memorize the movie the first time, but it feels like some scenes are going differently. As the movie goes on, you become more and more certain that itâs not the same. The ending is definitely different. The protagonist still ends the film trapped in the time loop, but this time theyâre in despair about it. This ending emphasizes the futility of trying to change controlling systems and the way peopleâs fundamental natures trap them in destructive cycles.
 Youâre initially shocked not to see the movie you expected, but you realize that it must have two alternate versions, shown either randomly or in some designated order depending on how many times youâve viewed the film. You wonder if thereâs more than two versions, so you watch it again.
Broadly speaking, it seems like the same film you watched the first time, but even though you canât put your finger on any specific changes, it feels a bit different, like maybe the filmâs editor used different takes. In the jubilant final scene, you realize that the protagonist isnât wearing a snazzy leather jacket like you remember, but instead a button-down shirt with sleeves rolled up their forearms.
 The fourth time you watch it, you get the grim ending again, except this time in the final scene the protagonist isnât crying silently while staring into the distance, but wailing while covering their face with their hands.
 The fifth viewing, the protagonist goes mad by the end, though the film is clear that theyâre mad within a time loop rather than imagining a time loop due to madness. The sixth time, the mood of the ending is stoic resignation.
 You finally get online to look for information about this film. Thereâs plenty of people talking about the film and its different versions. The streaming service has implemented some super-advanced anti-piracy technology, so no one can save clips, and even trying to use another device to film a tv showing the movie seems to just result in weird static. That makes it impossible for people to compare footage from their versions and figure out exactly how many there are, but itâs clear there are lots.
The director and cast did some publicity before the film was released, talking about the characters and the setting, but there was no mention of alternate versions. They havenât done any press since the release. One person online claims to have run into the director at a Starbucks in Malibu and asked whether there were any alternate endings where the movieâs protagonist escapes the time loop.
âThe structure of storytelling, at least as we understand it in Western culture, always calls for an ending,â the director said with a wink, then slipped out the door, clutching a triple-shot hazelnut latte. The online person reporting this encounter didnât realize until too late that that wasnât actually an answer.
You watch the movie again and again, usually several times a week. You take notes each time so you can better spot the differences. You start changing how you watch it: different times of day, on different devices, with different settings. Maybe thereâs a trick to control which version youâll get. Itâs never exactly the same twice. (Just how long did they spend filming all these versions? You canât find any information about the lead actors working on any new projects.) The repetition and lack of resolution are maddening, but every time you decide youâre done with watching this movie you only make it a few days before you give in and watch it again. You keep hoping to find the ending where the time loop breaks, but it never happens.
Finally, in frustration, you open a document on your computer. You stay up until 4 am furiously typing. Eventually you have it: a new version of the latter half of the movie where the protagonist successfully breaks the time loop. Your ending is true to both with the filmâs worldbuilding and the protagonistâs character. Itâs big and triumphant. You canât remember the last time you felt so satisfied.
You go to sleep. The next day, you open up the streaming site. Your cursor lingers on the time loop movie youâve watched so many times before, but instead you select a teen rom com that looks like it will take absolutely no narrative risks. You feel free.
The day after that, you have an idea for how the time loop filmâs protagonist could break out of the loop in a super ridiculous way. Just thinking about it cracks you up. You donât want to forget any part of this hilarious idea. You open another document and type it out.
Three weeks later youâre sitting in a Starbucks. You have another idea for how the protagonist can break out of the loop but with absolutely heartbreaking consequences. Itâs painful to consider, but the idea wonât let you rest. You open your laptop and go to the folder already growing crowded with version after version of the protagonistâs escape from the time loop. You take a sip of triple-shot hazelnut latte and begin again.
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