All posts by jemurdock

sskuvira:

munadoodlesnonsense:

korrainasamisjacket:

sskuvira:

kuviraforevergirl:

headcanon that Asami takes apart most of her appliances and tries to fix them and make them better. Even if they don’t need to be fixed.

Like Korra walks in to see Asami taking apart their toaster and she’s just like ‘wtf’ and Asami is like ‘I can make the toast pop up faster’

She does this with just about everything and after awhile Korra gets used to it because at least the toast pops up faster

with munadoodlesnonsense‘s satoaster!

The Satoaster lives on.

re-blogged mainly for the “pew pew

nnaupari:

itsokaysammy:

The Impala, of course, has all the things other cars have… and a few things they don’t. But none of that stuff’s important. This is the stuff that’s important. The army man that Sam crammed in the ashtray – it’s still stuck there. The Legos that Dean shoved into the vents – to this day, heat comes on and they can hear ‘em rattle. These are the things that make the car theirs – really theirs. Even when Dean rebuilt her from the ground up, he made sure all these little things stayed, ‘cause it’s the blemishes that make her beautiful.

@a-tall-hobbit @theatregeek217

delsinsfire:

Outlast 2

Outlast 2, the sequel to the acclaimed survival horror game Outlast, is a
twisted new journey into the depths of the human mind and its dark
secrets.

No conflict is ever black and white. But once the dust
has settled, the victors get to decide who was right and who was wrong.
Who is good and who is evil. Human nature pushes us to extremes of
violence and depravity, which we then justify by divine inspiration and a
promise of paradise to come. Horror rises from desperation and blind
faith. OUTLAST 2 will test your faith, pushing players to a place where
going mad is the only sane thing to do.

btrgotthatonething:

doctorkane:

In the dry lakebed of Racetrack, Death Valley stones as big as 700 pounds mysteriously slide across the surface of the earth without any notable external forces acting upon them. While some researchers believe a combination of natural events, such as wind and ice, cause these stones to “sail”, others question this theory pointing out that the stones don’t follow a predictable path and change directions abruptly.

image

THE PIONEERS USED TO RIDE THESE BABIES FOR MILES