I am a cosplayer, a writer, a breakdancer, a computer science student, and some other things too. But this blog is mainly just going to be me reading things about shows I like.
Sea of fans clapping at #apocalyptour (Taken with instagram)
a creative tag in pike place (Taken with instagram)
One prawn in a sea of many (Taken with instagram)
fun with tilt shift and universals new mini golf (Taken with instagram)
a sight I don’t often see! (Taken with instagram)
My, Bambi, that’s quite the expression! (Taken with instagram)
Are you all following Gingerhaze yet?
You should be.
(Source: benditlikebeifong)
I’m reblogging this because I forgot that I wrote all this. Twitter can do that.
I don’t read one-dimensional crap, is the message comics people need to take home.
(via infraredphaeton)
Maki wants to know why grandma never feeds her the good stuff (Taken with instagram)
I think there’s an appeal to a lot of those movies, like Escape from New York or Maniac Cop, a view of Manhattan covered in garbage and graffiti.
The graffiti was sickening! I never extolled graffiti as a new art form—that’s bullshit. Put it in your house, but not in my house, and not on the subways.That’s what those films tapped into—that fear.
Yeah, there’s no question about that. Particularly in the subways. Let me be maybe too bold about it. Can I tell you a little anecdote?Do it.
I wanted to get rid of New York’s graffiti problem, but I wasn’t in charge of the subways, the MTA was. I called the MTA into City Hall and told them they had to get rid of the graffiti. I presented them with a plan to do it: Kids were spray-painting train cars in the yards at night because there weren’t any fences. I told them, just put up a fence and put some dogs inside. They got scared, worried that the dogs would bite people, so I said, “OK, if you don’t want any chance of dogs biting people, get wolves.” That’s the problem with the new Liam Neeson movie, The Grey. There’s no recorded case of a wild wolf ever having bitten or attacked a single human being in North America.I don’t believe that.
Well, it’s true. The next day Clyde Haberman of the New York Times came to me and told me he’d checked my statement and that there are records of domesticated wolves biting humans. I said, “I know that! I’m not talking about a domesticated wolf. I’m talking about wild wolves. Let’s have wild wolves protect the trains. If the wild wolves become tame, replace them with more wild ones.”So you recommended that the MTA fight graffiti with wild wolves?
Yes.—ED KOCH ♥S MOVIES - AND HE RECOMMENDED THAT THE MTA USE WILD WOLVES TO STOP GRAFFITI