The Bunny Aries

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  • May 16, 2013 12:15 pm

    silvermoon424:

    soundlesswind:

    Kind of turned out different than I originally intended but anyway, bam! I am finished this drawing so I now I may sleep. 

    o<—< For all of eternity.

    *drooling*

    (via thebestfemale)

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  • May 16, 2013 11:51 am
    reducto1:

I did this a month ago wonder when should I put it up…
After watching SPN season 8 finale…it makes sense now…

    reducto1:

    I did this a month ago wonder when should I put it up…

    After watching SPN season 8 finale…it makes sense now…

    (via bnkn62)

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  • May 16, 2013 2:27 am

    toxcatl:

    splashmama:

    catbountry:

    racebentdisney:

    coelasquid:

    snoozlebee:

    leidis:

    penciltests:

    “Lilo and Stitch” 2002

    Deleted Scene

    Lilo plays a trick on the tourists.

    IF YOU LIVED HERE YOU’D UNDERSTAND

    I desperately need to understand

    WHY

    WHY WHY WHY WHY WHY WHY

    Was this scene cut from the movie??!!

    Fucking christ, do you know what this would have done? What this would have meant to SO MANY people??  The truth of this is devastating. And to think it almost found it’s way into a DISNEY film??

    The inclusion of this scene alone would have made it the greatest animated feature the company ever produced. Easily. And if you think that’s hyperbolic clearly you don’t understand.

    No, really, if anyone knows why this was cut PLEASE let me know. 

    oh man WHY WOULD they cut this, this is so great, holy MOLY

    It was clearly something the crew was very reluctant to get rid of if it made it all the way to rough-clean (and in a few scenes clean!), fully inbetweened animation. That is like, thousands and thousands of dollars and weeks (months?!) of labour. Maybe a reluctant producer decided they would alienate their white middle-class American audiences by making them feel “too guilty” and pressed them to drop it? It’s unfortunate, it’s one of the most honest accounts of racism in a Disney movie (which is why it’s believable that someone got uncomfortable and made a case to get it chopped)

    Designing entertainment by committee for maximum marketability is probably the most heartbreaking process in Hollywood.

    I’ve been seeing this around my dash and think it deserves some more recognition!

    This shit is hilarious, too.

    NO WAIT SHIT

    I GET IT NOW

    I GET WHY SHE WAS PHOTOGRAPHING TOURISTS AS A HOBBY

    SHE WAS BEING FUCKING SATIRICAL AND OBJECTIFYING

    IT’S NOT BECAUSE SHE’S A DUMB KID WITH A WEIRD HOBBY IT’S BECAUSE THEY DO THAT TO HER AND HER FRIENDS AND FAMILY LIKE SHE’S SOME KIND OF FUCKING THEME PARK CHARACTER AND SHE WANTS THEM TO KNOW HOW IT FEELS

    HOLY FUCKING DICKS DISNEY WHY WOULD YOU CUT THIS

    i’ve seen a lot of ads for a disney theme park in hawaii recently too…

    (via thebestfemale)

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  • May 16, 2013 2:22 am
    imablackbarbiedoll:

pancakesteak:

xwidep:

Perspective.

THIS GIF IS PISSING ME OFF RIGHT NOW

Whatttt&#160;!!!!!

    imablackbarbiedoll:

    pancakesteak:

    xwidep:

    Perspective.

    THIS GIF IS PISSING ME OFF RIGHT NOW

    Whatttt !!!!!

    (via rainygrace)

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  • May 16, 2013 2:20 am

    (via thebestfemale)

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  • May 15, 2013 8:58 pm
    kuroko-no-buttsecks:

Artwork By: 鈴 | 35372608

    kuroko-no-buttsecks:

    Artwork By: 鈴 | 35372608

    (via tsukuro)

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  • May 15, 2013 8:58 pm
    
 ღ

    ღ

    (via nanazumi)

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  • May 15, 2013 8:56 pm

    fotojournalismus:

    Not So Long Ago, In Iraq

    (via Vanity Fair)

    “It hasn’t taken long for the Iraq war to feel like a relic of history. Although U.S. troops withdrew from the conflict a mere 17 months ago, the story of the war already seems set in a bygone era—circumstances that have quickly been buried under an avalanche of newer crises. Photojournalist Michael Kamber, who covered the war for The New York Times from 2003 to 2012, noticed America’s desire to tune out the war while the battles were still raging. Visiting home while on leave during the war’s early years, Kamber grew frustrated that Americans were ill informed about the conflict, leading, he felt, to a public that didn’t care enough about the bloodshed he was documenting. His frustration grew as the conflict wore on, as the U.S. military took an active role in encouraging public indifference by censoring what could be photographed.

    Now Kamber has responded with Photojournalists on War: The Untold Stories from Iraq, a riveting account of the conflict as told by three dozen of the war’s most prominent photographers. Kamber’s interviews with his colleagues cover the war as they saw it—their passion for the story, their fears and daily complications, and the trauma they live with still today. Some of their images are among the most iconic of the war, some are previously unpublished, and many are gruesome, shocking, and utterly dispiriting. 

    The book is out on May 15, 2013, via University of Texas Press.”

    Photographs : 

    1. Six weeks before the start of the war, a man sits drinking tea at the Al Zahawi cafe on Rashid Street, Baghdad, February 12, 2003. (Bruno Stevens)

    2. An Iraqi woman walks through a plume of smoke rising from a massive fire at a liquid gas factory as she searches for her husband. The fire was allegedly started by looters picking through the factory. Basra, May 26, 2003. (Lynsey Addario)

    3. An Iraqi child jumps over remains of victims found in a mass grave south of Baghdad. The victims were killed by Saddam Hussein’s government during a Shiite uprising here following the 1991 Gulf War. Al Musayyib, May 27, 2003. (Marco Di Lauro/Getty Images)

    4. Samar Hassan,5, screams moments after her parents were killed by U.S soldiers from the 25th Infantry Division. The troops fired on the Hassan-family car when it unwittingly approached during a dusk patrol in the tense northern town. Tal Afar, January 18, 2005. (Chris Hondros/Getty Images)

    5. Soldiers of the First Armored Division swim at Uday Hussein’s abandoned palace. Baghdad, July 11, 2003. (Ed Kashi/VII)

    6. 1,215 U.S.-military personnel pray during a massive re-enlistment ceremony in Al Faw Palace, one of Saddam Hussein’s former luxurious homes. Baghdad, July 4, 2008. (Ashley Gilbertson/VII)

    7. A U.S. soldier watches an Iraqi man who collapsed while being arrested during a raid. Ramadi, January 24, 2006. (Guy Calaf)

    8. A man is arrested by U.S. soldiers on suspicion of corruption and complicity in working with anti-coalition insurgents. Baiji, February 8, 2008. (Eros Hoagland/Redux)

    9. A U.S. soldier marks the back of a man’s neck with numbers denoting his neighborhood and home, a system designed to help troops determine if people were moving around the village of Qubah despite a lockdown following a U.S. attack on insurgents. Qubah, March 24, 2007. (Yuri Kozyrev/Noor) 

    10. Rena was nine months pregnant and walking with her youngest sister in Sadr City one day in 2008, when a U.S. air strike tore off her leg, killing her unborn infant and her sister. Sadr City, February 2009. (Farah Nosh)

    (via starbottled)

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  • May 15, 2013 8:32 pm

    death-by-lulz:

    olgie13:

    “This gorgeous Hälssen & Lyon calendar is made of brewable tea. Each day is made of fine pressed wafer thin tea leaves.” 

    This post has been featured on a 1000notes.com blog.

    (via starbottled)

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  • May 15, 2013 8:30 pm

    nintendonut1:

    periwonkles:

    UAAAAAAAAH

    IM GOONA DIUE

    (via lapinquin)

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  • May 15, 2013 8:27 pm

    (via baiko)

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  • when referring to people as 'my babies'

    May 15, 2013 8:25 pm
    • Other People:

      boyfriends, crushes, their actual babies.

    • Me:

      celebrities, fictional characters, OTPs, my followers.

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  • May 15, 2013 3:08 am
    thatfunnyblog:

 

his attitude changed so quickly aw

    thatfunnyblog:

     

    his attitude changed so quickly aw

    (via mushroompietroopers)

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  • May 15, 2013 3:05 am
    tastefullyoffensive:

[via]

    tastefullyoffensive:

    [via]

    (via periwinkleimp)

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  • May 15, 2013 3:03 am

    gryzio:

    d-hizzle:

    oh my god two words in that just UNIVERSAL LANGUAGE

    All hope is lost so quickly I can’t stop laughing.

    (via selunari)

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