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@superior-cereal
#1 frog

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wish my life was like a 90's movie where all my friends work in record stores and bookshops and coffee shops and we see really cool bands in small little clubs and get breakfast together and like hang out on roofs and shit
Not to be that guy on this post but whenever I see it it stresses me out. I know it's supposed to be a fun aesthetic but there's a reason things are not like that anymore. There are no record stores left in my town. There are no bookstores left in my town. There is one terrible gentrified cafe in my town. There is no where for the cool little bands to perform in my town. There are no more cool little clubs in my town. Hell we don't even have a bowling alley anymore. All of these things got bought up and knocked down and replaced with a Dunkin' donuts or some garbage and now we all just stay indoors instead of hanging out on rooftops. Capitalism took these things from us. We're not just romanticizing the '90s, we're romanticizing life before social media and COVID and the current stage of hyper capitalism we find ourselves in.
itâs that time of the year again
itâs that time of the year again
manifesting a good day. the twenty-second day of the second month of the twenty-second year of the second millennium. do you think the universe is proud of us for making it this far

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Minecraft Horse Plinko machine, but itâs overengineered and also actual plinko
perhaps we are all horses in the plinko of life
Fear.jpg
everyone's got that one buddy who's an imp who torments them with demonic energy
Soo Sunny Park (b. Seoul, Korea) - Unwoven Light at Rice Universityâs Rice Gallery in Houston, Texas. Composed of 37 individual sculptural units, the installation uses iridescent plexi-glass embedded in pieces of a chain link fence to cast shimmering, colorful reflections across the spacious gallery.Â

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Julius Caesar (March 14th, 44BC)
if you're asian and can't perfectly peel a tangerine, don't let your family find out or you'll be hunted for sport im sorry I don't make the rules
theyâre talking to each other omg (â:
This is my favorite video in all of world history I would die for these cats
There's a post going around about how Ancient Egyptian murals are being whitewashed while getting restored. Is there any truth to this?
If you mean this post, then no. Just no. 100x no.Â
You may have already seen @rudjedetâs response, which should tell you how the Egyptology gang is currently feeling about this. Iâm going to go through it bit by bit, though perhaps not the video because I think my blood pressure will go through the roof.Â
Letâs preface the whole ask with this: Conservators working on ancient art and artefacts, do not, and I repeat, do not, add paint where it is unnecessary. When they do make changes, as per conservation rules, everything is reversible. No conservator makes changes that cannot be undone. Paint or otherwise.Â
So, the tomb of Nefertari underwent conservation that began in 1988, and this is where the post says the âwhite washing occurredâ. Letâs put it this way, the tomb had already been open for 84 years at the point of restoration (discovered and opened in 1904). It had been extensively photographed and documented before work began by numerous people. Itâd be a really stupid thing to do to actively just paint over and then be like âlol nah those old photos of it are just wrongâ. You canât get away with stuff like that. Due to the nature of the limestone and surrounding water table, the tomb was already in a poor state. Sodium chloride, or table salt, had formed beneath the paint and plaster, thus causing it to flake off. Opening the tomb accelerated the process, and a fifth of the paintings were lost before work began. I will provide this quote from the man, Paolo Mora, former Chief Conservator at the Istituto Centrale del Restauro in Rome, whose team carried out the work: ââOur goal,â says Mr. Mora, âwas to stop deterioration and consolidate what was possible. We did not add color. Nothing. It was cleaning, consolidation, and stop.ââ (Source)
So the post presents this comparison image, with the one on the left supposedly being the âbeforeâ and the right being the âafterâ:
The claim is that the conservation team led by Mr Mora in 1988, painted over Maâatâs skin to make her appear âwhiteâ. *please just at this point imagine me pinching the bridge of my nose and sighing, because that is what I did on reading this* Â
Firstly, the image on the left has been darkened. Egyptian backgrounds are bright white, not a dirty yellow. So, I did a reverse image search for that particular image. That took me to this post from 2016 on Facebook, by @egypt-museum and provided this image:
This image is fairly obviously a facsimile/altered copy of a similar scene from the tomb of Nefertari. How do I know this? Well, for starters, the art is inferior to that of the tomb itself. If you look at the original comparison image more closely, you can see that there is far less detail in the image on the left. The hair is in the wrong place. The hieroglyphs are less detailed, and cruder. The image on the right looks like it has been painted onto plaster, as you can see variations in the colour, particularly on the dress of Maâat, wherein more paint has been applied in some areas than others. On the left image it is solid. If youâre not convinced by this particular set of information, then I can offer this:
This is an image of the original scene (highlighted on the right), taken in situ within the tomb of Nefertari. I took this screenshot from this video, from this website, which was a project to digitally scan every inch of the tomb to provide a VR experience. Since photography is not allowed in tombs in either the Valley of the Kings or the Valley of the Queens, unless academic, most people wouldnât know where the scene sits within the tomb. In this case, it is right at the front, mirrored either side of the entrance steps of the tomb. This means itâs high up. You can see that in the video itself, as in the top left corner you can see a white circle with arrows. If you pause the video you can actually move the video around to get a better look at it. This enabled me to take this screenshot:
You can see the image is over the stairs, on a small ledge, and has a niche before it, and the ceiling is covered in stars as in typical in Egyptian tombs. A clearer image is this one from Getty Images:
Now compare this shot of the scene in situ within the tomb, to the one that says itâs the âoriginalâ. The âoriginalâ looks like itâs in a corner, yes, but that corner seems to sit on the floor. There are no stars on the ceiling in the âoriginalâ image. There is no damage at all to the scene, even though this tomb is well documented to be damaged, and damage can be see on the in situ image. Youâll also note on the image deemed to be the âoriginalâ that the wall on the right comes out towards the viewer, marking the scene as one in a niche, whereas the scene shown in situ in the actual tomb is shown to be stepped out from the preceding scene. Theyâre not even remotely showing the same place.
Even if none of that persuades you, please know that the Egyptian gods were said, by the Egyptians, to have skin the colour of gold and hair made of lapis lazuli. Humans are shown to have dark skin tones, but Gods often do not. There are exceptions, usually the Anthropomorphic gods and always Osiris, but by and large they are depicted with golden (not white) skin tones for a reason.
The image purported to be the âoriginalâ is a copy that has changed the skin tones. It is nothing like the original that I have show here in its original context. So, thatâs the first falsehood in the post. Letâs move on to the next one.Â
This image, you kinda have to laugh at. The largest image shows a conservator from the British Museum doing work on the banquet scene from the tomb of Nebamun. What sheâs actually doing here is strengthening the edges, as these scenes were removed from the tomb and then the tomb was lost (I know, even Egyptologists think this was a shitshow). You can see the full image here:
(Source - The British Museum)
They donât look white to me. Am I missing something? Or do people seriously think Egyptologists and Conservators would take photos of themselves actively white washing paintings and put them on the internet? *bridge of nose pinch, sigh*
So, moving on to the top image in that set. This is a scene from the tomb of Thutmose IV:Â
(Source - Getty Images)
Youâll notice that the image presented by OP has been darkened ever so slightly in an attempt to present a stronger case. Thatâs not going to help you here. Firstly, you can see the brush strokes and how the paint has been soaked up into the plaster, secondly, if this was âwhite washingâ as is claimed, then the âwhite washersâ appear to have missed 6 figures in their attempt. Seriously, thereâs a nice close up of Thutmose IV and Osiris:Â
(source - Getty images)
Yeah, seems totally white. Not a black guy at all.Â
Hereâs another image from the same section of the tomb:Â
(Source - Getty Images)
Notice how itâs only the goddesses that are paler? Might there be an Egyptian art convention, and cultural reason for this to be happening? Yes!! Not only are the goddesses here portrayed with yellow/gold skin, as I said previously gods have golden skin, but it is typical within Egyptian art decorum for women, who typically spent more time inside to be depicted in a yellow colour, rather than the deep brown of the men. Theyâre not white! Far from it! If youâre seeing white people then you really know nothing about Ancient Egyptian cultural norms. Just look at this close up of one of the goddesses from that scene:
(Source -Getty Images)Â
This goddess (Hathor) isnât white. Nor has she been depicted as such, as you can see through the brush strokes in the paint by the original artisan.Â
Hereâs another image of one of the goddesses:Â
(Source - Getty Images)Â
Yeah, she looks white. I wonât deny that. But I can tell you that the Egyptians were not portraying her as a white woman. Again, this is the goddess Hathor for goodness sake. Can you see the red lines around the eye and eyebrow? Thatâs line art. When the Egyptians start a scene like this, they always do an ochre red line art, and then correct themselves as they move to the final product (except in the case of the tomb of Thutmose III, whose tomb is deliberately all in line art style). They change positioning etc. Notice how you can see it here? You wouldnât if someone had come along and painted this woman âwhiteâ.Â
 A really good book to read on the use of colour and how people are portrayed would be Heinrich Schäferâs âPrinciples of Egyptian Artâ, or you can freely âborrowâ Gay Robinsâ âThe Art of Ancient Egyptâ from this link (free account needed). Also, as a final note. Thutmose IVâs tomb has never undergone modern restoration. It was restored by Horemheb c.1319-1292, and thereâs graffiti in the tomb noting this restoration. You can read about that here.
Moving on to the final image in that segment:Â
Iâve done a reverse search on this image, and I cannot find the original papyrus it comes from, though I can tell you that the papyrus dates to the New Kingdom based on the womanâs mode of dress.Â
Edit: @sighinastorm found the original image, which is the Book of the Dead belonging to Heruben, dating to the 21st Dynasty, currently residing in the Cairo museum. Here she is:
(Source)
But it is on papyrus, and thatâs something I can talk about. Notice how her face skin tone is the same colour as the papyrus colour surrounding it? Thatâs because the face was never painted. Either because they forgot, or they didnât want to lose detail in the face. Itâs not been painted over to hide her blackness. They would have done a real crappy job, because the rest of her is still black. Are Egyptologists stupid or incompetent in these scenarios I wonder?
The next image Iâll discuss is the side by side comparison of the wooden Bust of Tutankhamun. Hereâs the image OP provides:
According to them, the lips and nose have been thinned to make Tutankhamun appear more âwhiteâ. The fun thing about Tutankhamun is that the Griffith Institute at Oxford University, have the entire collection of Harry Burtonâs original photographs from the excavation of Tutankhamunâs tomb, just out there for anyone to look at. So I went through the photos to find the bust from the original excavation. I cannot post the full pictures here as the Griffith Institute state that the photos must not be reproduced under any circumstances without express permission from them. However, I will link to both of the photos, with their Burton photograph numbers here:
Burton Photo No. P0325Â Burton Photo No. P0326
Both of those photos match the 2019 version, right down to the missing paint/varnish on the nose, and earring holes in the ears. Youâll notice the â1924Ⲡversion OP says is the original has neither of these. So, I did a little digging for the â1924Ⲡphoto. Reverse image search brought me to this image from Getty Images:Â
If you click the link to the source Iâve provided, youâll see the photo is entitled:
Restoration1924: An artist retouches paint on a statue from the tomb of Tutankhamen for the Egyptian exhibit at Wembley. (Photo by General Photographic Agency/Getty Images)
Now that struck me as odd, as Tutankhamunâs artefacts rarely leave Egypt, and have in fact only been to the UK three times: once in 1972 at the British Museum in London, the 2007 exhibition at the O2 Arena in London, and then again in 2019 at the Saachi Gallery in London. So I looked for a 1924 exhibition, and low and behold I found that there had been an exhibition in 1924 of Tutankhamunâs treasures as part of a âBritish Empire Exhibitionâ at Wembley. This was an exhibition that recreated the entirety of Tutankhamunâs tomb in replicas to show visitors what had been found. The above image, and the one that is purported to be the âoriginalâ is actually a photo of an artist finishing up a replica of the wooden bust from the tomb of Tutankhamun not the actual original bust.
The final image Iâll discuss is this one:
Honey, thatâs a shitty banana leaf âpapyrusâ replica of a scene from the tomb of Nebamun. The original remains untouched, and you canât yell at Egyptologists for shitty racist copies of original art shops sell to people. The Nebamun image exists, and is on display in all its original glory. In fact, if you scroll back up to the section where I mention Nebamun in this post before, youâll see these two guys just chilling and enjoying their banquet. This scene is on display at the British Museum. If weâre white washing weâre doing a terrible job of it by just having this where everyone can see it.Â
The other two images are of Egyptologists and Archaeologists doing conservation work on tombs. Unless someone can point me to specific white washing in those photos, then theyâre just there for nonsensical reasons.Â
The video is hilariously bad. Itâs painfully obvious that itâs an early 2000â˛s production, using actors to pretend to be Egyptologists, while saying terrible racist things. I mean just look at this womanâs face as she says âreplace african names with arabic and european namesâ
Thatâs some really bad acting there bud. Everyone is looking shifty and pulling their best âevil plot faceâ and I just cannot take it seriously.Â
So, yeah, that post is bunk. If youâre not convinced by the evidence presented, then thatâs fine. Just please look into it more, and ask yourself âdo I believe that a very narrowly defined infographic by an unknown author is telling me the absolute god honest truth?â Think critically, not reactionary.Â
[I have a ko-fi for people whoâve enjoyed my posts. This one took 5 hours]
things are heating up in the bread fandom

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do you have those people that youâd go anywhere with unconditionally, like they could say âlets go check out that dumpsterâ and youâd be like âim inâ
you can tell the writers had a lot of fun on this episode there are so many good and iconic gags i couldnât upload them all at once and decided to compile them together