2/2 pic.twitter.com/V2RtDmvTIz
— Rick (@combattlerRickV) May 2, 2021
Sunday, May 2, 2021
A Darkseid story by John Paul Leon
Today's funny posts
There's no way Aaron Rodgers should be allowed to fire Brian Gutekunst. That's too much power.
— Bill Barnwell (@billbarnwell) May 1, 2021
Aaron Rodgers should be allowed to nominate a younger, more athletic replacement for Gutekunst who can take over in a couple of years to keep the Packers operating at a high level.
Three strange stories about art
2. Notice the antebellum-style portrait behind Kemp as he signs the suppression law? Thanks to Twitter crowdsourcing and particularly @TheSeaFarmer, I can report the measure to limit Black voting was signed under the image of a notorious slave plantation in Wilkes County, GA
— Will Bunch Sign Up For My Newsletter (@Will_Bunch) March 26, 2021
(Link.)
This attempted murder-suicide (but everybody recovered, incredibly, from wounds from a .357 Magnum) at Charles Schulz's studio in the nineties is quite the tale.https://t.co/nh5cje5JJi
— Paul Chadwick (@PaulHChadwick) April 3, 2021
Am now rabbit holeing on this SoHo artist certification thing, possibly the most insane residential zoning story in a city that specializes in them. The city rejects certification for artists whose work has shown insufficient development over time! https://t.co/sLiGrELzEv pic.twitter.com/CwFqI9va6t
— Tom Gara (@tomgara) April 5, 2021
Saturday, May 1, 2021
An increasingly popular dish in China is flavored with snails and emits a foul smell so strong that "it can fill an entire restaurant and the surrounding streets"
In November, 2019, a Chinese student in Italy was fined 40 euros (US$48) for cooking luosifen at home after his neighbour called the police suspecting there was a bioweapon in the house, the Beijing Evening News reported....Last year, the revenue from pre-packed luosifen made by factories in Liuzhou reached 11 billion yuan (US$1.7 billion), state media CCTV reports.
Today's funny posts
This is the worst misspelling of my name ever pic.twitter.com/IasprUOHbo
— philip lewis (@Phil_Lewis_) April 25, 2021
NFT necklace; Really good magazine name; Longhorns logo in the Shimmer
My 1st Jewelry Design. I call it the “Ethereum Block Chain”. I wanted to make a cool way to display NFTs. Digital x Physical Assets. #NFT #nftart pic.twitter.com/tLTN73XFCK
— NFT Jeweler 💎 (@Gambitvvs) March 31, 2021
— it's trevor barnes (@iamtrevorbarnes) April 29, 2021
While @UTAustin athletes have been called "Longhorns" since 1904, the football team began to wear blankets with the name in 1913, donated by recent UT graduate (and future regent) Lutcher Stark. One is on display in the Stark Center for Physical Culture in the stadium. pic.twitter.com/oL1QCKtHCB
— Jim Nicar (@JimNicar) April 29, 2021
The only 100% effective mask pic.twitter.com/OLGzrmDlcr
— Carl Gonzaga (@gonzaga_carl) March 8, 2021
NFTs are cool because they let rich people feel like they own a 10 year old meme
— Ken Klippenstein (@kenklippenstein) April 30, 2021
Blue Screen of Death chair; Typographic fail?; John Singer Sargent’s scandalous “Madame X”
Celebrating errors II. pic.twitter.com/qEpEUr2lze
— Six N. Five (@sixnfive) April 4, 2021
....but no. pic.twitter.com/35v4czJ0fl
— Reuben Easey (@reubeneasey) April 29, 2021
This is John Singer Sargent’s “Madame X” (1884). Although it doesn’t look remotely controversial today, when it was exhibited at 1884 Paris Salon, the public were so shocked & disgusted that Sargent moved out of the country, and his model’s reputation never recovered.
— Whores of Yore (@WhoresofYore) January 3, 2021
Thread! pic.twitter.com/CicxoxPW8w
illustration done some years ago for a book that never got released #Mar10Day pic.twitter.com/7IERPY0jMd
— elliott (@elliottgray) March 10, 2021
so today my dentist asked me about what i do, and when i mentioned that i was a digital illustrator, she exclaimed “my child is too!!!” and proceeded to show me the most beautifully drawn furry art ive ever seen
— 🌱 MK/RET (@retquits) April 19, 2021