no but women are so badass okay
because there will inevitably come a point in every woman’s life where she wakes up in a pool of her own blood and her reaction will be dammit now i have to do laundry
that is some suave superhero shit and you won’t ever be able to convince me otherwise
(via angels-have-the-tardis)
You know what? I’m going to do an experiment.
I’m going to leave this track here, completely unmarked, and tag it with everything I can. If you like it, reblog it, give it some notes. If you don’t, ignore it and move on with your life. I’ll tag it with a bunch of fandoms, so people can hear it.
Just out of curiosity. Press play and see what happens.
I’ll give you one hint: I consider it beautiful.
love<3
(via the-internet-addict)
mrs-freebatchof221bbakerstreet:
Benedict Cumberbatch has mastered the art of making you laugh and sob miserably an indefinite amount of times in the span of one film.
NO
NO
NO THIRD STAR FEELS NO
(via raggedy-spaceman)
In the scene in The Incredibles where Helen (Elastagirl) is flying the plane, her use of radio protocol is exceptionally accurate for a movie. The terminology used hints that she has had military flight training. In the director’s commentary Brad Bird says that actress Holly Hunter insisted on learning both the lingo and its meaning.
- “VFR on top” means she is flying in the regime of Visual Flight Rules ‘on top’ of a cloud cover.
- She requests “vectors to the initial”, or directions on how to get to the initial landing approach.
- “Angels 10” is her altitude call, ten thousand feet. This is a military term. Civilian flights use the term “flight level”.
- “Track east” is her direction of travel.
- “Buddy spike(d)” is a US military brevity code meaning “friendly anti-aircraft radar has locked on to me, (please don’t shoot)”.
- “Transmitting in the Blind Guard” is a call on the emergency frequency where 2-way communication has not been established.
- “Abort” is also a military brevity code, a directive meaning “stop the action/mission/attack”.
god i love when actors/ voice actors are intent on using correct lingo for things like this
its so easy to BS this sort of thing and sometimes it might work but it’s vastly more impressive when they actually use correct terminology
the same thing goes for when they do their research on science/medical terms. really makes the experience that much richer
Fallen Princesses by Dina Goldstein
We’ve got our candelstick makers:
our busy guys:
our romantic imbecile
our lesbians:
…and then there’s Jared
(via angels-have-the-tardis)
(via scraftynoodle)
What you’ll need:
- sharp knife
- popsicle stick
- q-tip
-dental floss
I need this for class
Welp people are going to hate me now more than they already do
(via angels-have-the-tardis)