TRANSFORMERS ROBOTS IN DISGUISE! Here is an all-new KIDS REACT featuring the 80s version of TRANSFORMERS!
This is the face of manchild fuckboy tears.
TRANSFORMERS ROBOTS IN DISGUISE! Here is an all-new KIDS REACT featuring the 80s version of TRANSFORMERS!
This is the face of manchild fuckboy tears.
I was reading a book (about interjections, oddly enough) yesterday which included the phrase “In these days of political correctness…” talking about no longer making jokes that denigrated people for their culture or for the colour of their skin. And I thought, “That’s not actually anything to do with ‘political correctness’. That’s just treating other people with respect.”
Which made me oddly happy. I started imagining a world in which we replaced the phrase “politically correct” wherever we could with “treating other people with respect”, and it made me smile.
You should try it. It’s peculiarly enlightening.
I know what you’re thinking now. You’re thinking “Oh my god, that’s treating other people with respect gone mad!”
Happy Valentine’s Day.
It feels like it’s time to repost this.
Blazing Saddles [1974]
This line was improvised, so Little’s reaction is 100% genuine here.
Lucy from Peanuts vs Goku. On one hand, Goku could obliterate any child. On the other, he would absolutely fall for the football thing
“So what can we learn from this study? On the data side, we see that everything is proceeding as planned. Nobody’s paying $50 for a burger at McDonald’s, or $16 for a can of tuna at Safeway. Employers wish their profits were higher, and workers are glad they got a raise, but they wish they made more money. Three years after Seattle started down the road to $15, everything is as it should be. Those apocalyptic claims of destruction and business closures haven’t been proven true. One thing the study didn’t explain was why the sky didn’t fall as promised. Why weren’t workers laid off in droves, or replaced with robots? Why didn’t prices skyrocket? Why does Seattle have more restaurants now than at any point in its history? It’s because those workers who saw a raise now have more money to spend in the city around them. Those restaurant workers are eating in more restaurants. They’re buying more groceries. They’re buying more clothes and cars. That increased consumer demand is creating jobs, and more than paying for the increased minimum wage. The $15 minimum wage established a positive feedback loop that created growth in Seattle by including more people in the economy. In other words, it worked exactly as intended.”
— Seattle’s $15 Minimum Wage Experiment Is a Success
(via allthecanadianpolitics)
I’m gonna leave this right here.
When you give consumers money, they spend it. When you give old, rich, white men money, they hoard it.
Night
of the Ghouls is a film with a troubled history. It was intended as the sequel to Bride of
the Monster, and it includes some familiar faces such as Paul Marco as
Officer Kelton and Tor Johnson returning as Lobo. Apparently Ed Wood shot it and sent it to be
developed, but the people at the lab (perhaps wisely) wouldn’t let him pick it
up until he’d paid for it in full. He
couldn’t afford that, so it just sat there accruing late fees until producer Wade
Williams came across it and decided to release it on video in 1984. I don’t know why, but it seems oddly fitting
that a lost Ed Wood movie should be rescued by a guy who is almost, but not
quite, Deadpool.




