If anyone ever tells you you put too much Peanut Butter on your bread, stop talking to them. You don’t need that kind of negativity in your life.
(via itscoldasatomb)
CAN WE TALK ABOUT JOHNNY BRAVO FOR A SECOND?
- utilizes rule 63
- drives home the point that street harassment is not flattering
- johnny bravo appreciates being a woman and doesn’t question his masculinity
(via ruinedchildhood)
Here’s a weird thought. If something crashed into the moon, like an astroid or comet that was big enough to rip a fat chunk out or destroy it completely, because of space being the vacuum that it is, WE WOULDN’T HEAR A THING.
0.0
(via werollmaddeepyo)
(via lkjslain)
Reasons you should date me: Id make you cool mix CDs
hi i’ll date you omg
I volunteer as tribute to date you
This is more action than I’ve gotten the past 16 years
Only if its all Brand New songs
What’s wrong with old songs???
Loll
You had to have seen that coming. Especially with me.
Reasons you should date me: Id make you cool mix CDs
hi i’ll date you omg
I volunteer as tribute to date you
This is more action than I’ve gotten the past 16 years
Only if its all Brand New songs
What’s wrong with old songs???
What if one of the most important street photographers of the 20th century was a 1950s children’s nanny who kept herself to herself and never showed a single one of her photographs to anyone?
Decades later in 2007, a Chicago real estate agent and historical hobbyist, John Maloof purchased a box of never-seen, never-developed film negatives of an unknown ‘amateur’ photographer for $380 at his local auction house.
John began developing his new collection of photographs, some 100,000 negatives in total, that had been abandoned in a storage locker in Chicago before they ended up at the auction house. It became clear these were no ordinary street snaps of 1950s & 60s Chicago and New York and so John embarked on a journey to find out who was behind the photographs and soon discovered her name: Vivien Maier.
(via ladycatstrike)