Awesome stuff you see on the internet
-
-
-
@antipodean said in Awesome stuff you see on the internet:
Actually been to a function at the XXXX Brewery for Bled III 2014 (Fekitoa's last minute try) with thst guy MCing.
Told that same joke.
Still funny.
Still true.
-
@antipodean my son plays in the front row, but aspires to be a loosie, so all good either way
-
damn this woman is stunning
-
@taniwharugby said in Awesome stuff you see on the internet:
damn this woman is stunning
I can't tell.
I try looking up at her face but my eyes won't move.
-
Starts here
https://www.gofundme.com/fried-chicken-addiction
And then because there are people who are in a state of perpetual outrage and feel the need to tell the world about it.
-
@Catogrande that reminds me of that Churchill quote.
-
Not sure where to stick thIs one. It's awesome - but crazy. Fairly certain this isn't what was being advertised for sale to kids in American comic books in the 60s/70s...
13 AUGUST 2017
Submarine that police expected to find body in is EMPTY: Final picture emerges of missing journalist on board doomed vessel as police pull it from the deep in search for her
Journalist Kim Wall, 30, was last seen boarding submarine built by amateur enthusiast Peter Madsen on Thursday night
Submarine sank on Friday morning and Madsen was rescued by Danish navy
Miss Wall has not been heard from since and Madsen is now under investigation for negligent manslaughter
Police raised the submarine on Sunday and failed to find Miss Wall's body, but say there is evidence craft was scuttled deliberately
-
Goddamn I wanted one of these. "FIres Rockets and Torpedoes"...?!!! Holy crap. "Product not available in NZ." Fuck!!
-
An image of the New Zealander, from 'London: a Pilgrimage' by Blanchard Jerrold and Gustave Doré, 1872.
This image of the New Zealander became a popular symbol for describing the fall of the capital. Already something of a cliche by 1872, Jerrold and Doré nevertheless make use of the image as they survey the Thames and reflect on the end of their 'pilgrimage': 'Now we have watched the fleets into noisy Billingsgate; and now gossiped looking towards Wren's grand dome, shaping Macaulay's dream of the far future, with the tourist New Zealander upon the broken parapets, contemplating something matching - "The glory that was Greece - The grandeur that was Rome".'Thomas Babington Macaulay (1800–1859) was a British historian, writer and politician. In 1840 he wrote: “And she [meaning the Catholic Church – see below] may still exist in undiminished vigour when some traveller from New Zealand shall, in the midst of a vast solitude, take his stand on a broken arch of London Bridge to sketch the ruins of St Paul’s.”