Mask, mask, seatbelt, seatbelt, front, front, back,…
*, kristen bell, perfect human, popular



Mask, mask, seatbelt, seatbelt, front, front, back, back.
Kristen Bell shows off her dance move, ‘The Stewardess’ [x]




Mask, mask, seatbelt, seatbelt, front, front, back, back.
Kristen Bell shows off her dance move, ‘The Stewardess’ [x]

Tips from an expert on how to master the chaos of smartphone app placement. Your fingers (and brain) will thank you. Read on—>

No Translation Necessary of the Day: Bill Murray hanging out backstage at Letterman with Korean pop group Girls’ Generation.
[@alex_ogle.]

No Translation Necessary of the Day: Bill Murray hanging out backstage at Letterman with Korean pop group Girls’ Generation.
[@alex_ogle.]
“When you read this sentence to yourself, it’s likely that you hear the words in your head. Now, in what amounts to technological telepathy, others are on the verge of being able to hear your inner dialogue too. By peering inside the brain, it is possible to reconstruct speech from the activity that takes place when we hear someone talking. Because this brain activity is thought to be similar whether we hear a sentence or think the same sentence, the discovery brings us a step closer to broadcasting our inner thoughts to the world without speaking. The implications are enormous – people made mute through paralysis or locked-in syndrome could regain their voice. It might even be possible to read someone’s mind. Imagine a musician watching a piano being played with no sound, says Brian Pasley at the University of California, Berkeley. “If a pianist were watching a piano being played on TV with the sound off, they would still be able to work out what the music sounded like because they know what key plays what note,” Pasley says. His team has done something analogous with brain waves, matching neural areas to their corresponding noises.”
– Telepathy machine reconstructs speech from brainwaves – health – 31 January 2012 – New Scientist (via wildcat2030)
A new “Sh*t Photographers Say” vid!
Definitely have said a few of these.

This simple, direct, colorful, anti-drug ad (featuring what most experts by now have agreed is some kind of “cat-toad hybrid”) was created in 30 or 40 seconds by an unpaid intern for Drug Abuse Reinforcement Education (better known as D.A.R.E.) in 1999, one year after the program was disqualified from receiving federal funding because they “failed to meet federal guidelines that they be both research-based and effective,” according to Wikipedia. The ad was widely appreciated for its minimalism and relatively creative approach; it was disastrous, however, in terms of its actual function. In all but one of the targeted demographics drug use increased drastically—by 36% for pre-K to 2nd grade, 38% for 7th grade to 12th grade, 44% for college students. The only demographic registering a decrease, of an almost negligible 4%, was 3rd grade to 6th grade, perhaps because children of that age group are especially afraid of being shunned or harassed for their appearance.
Previously - Party Cat

Fun guy chillin’ in South American rainforest finds plastic-eating fungi
Seriously, though this is kind of a big deal. Know that big problem we have? You know, the one involving a crapload of used plastic hanging around in landfills with nowhere to biodegrade for a couple million years? Well, Jonathan Russell might’ve solved that problem. See, Russell and his fellow Yale students went to Ecuador, where they found a new kind of fungus they’re calling Pestalotiopsis microspora. Big deal, you’re thinking. Anyone can find fungus anywhere! Well, something his fellow students found out after the fact is that this fungus can live on a diet of polyurethane alone — and even crazier, it doesn’t even need air to do so! In other words, we could potentially put it at the bottom of a landfill and cover it with plastic, and it would do the rest of the work. This might be game-changing if it works as advertised. (photo via Flickr user dbutt; EDIT: Updated with link to research abstract) source



5,000 guitar picks form the face of Jimi Hendrix. Ed Chapman.