(Source: kazzg, via harold-potter)

(Source: yencid, via ashtondrew)

(via zerray)

blackkolors:

youcunt-lol:

nintendoggystyle:

what if your life is just a movie and billions of people in another dimension are watching it right now

they’re begging for a refund.

at least the soundtrack is awesome.

(via turnthepageandkeepwriting)

Israeli troops (in the background) and Palestine protesters, whose thrown stones can be seen strewn across the street, briefly pause from their fighting in the shuafat refugee camp to allow an unfazed Palestinian girl to walks to school. March 17, 2010. Photo Ammar Awad.

(Source: awkwardsituationist, via yall)

Timestamp: 1369269632

Israeli troops (in the background) and Palestine protesters, whose thrown stones can be seen strewn across the street, briefly pause from their fighting in the shuafat refugee camp to allow an unfazed Palestinian girl to walks to school. March 17, 2010. Photo Ammar Awad.

(Source: awkwardsituationist, via yall)

i-dont-understand-that-reference:

lost-carcosa:

Mandy Patinkin considers Inigo to be his favorite role of all time, and one can hardly blame him; in the midst of such a hilarious yarn, Inigo’s fight to avenge his father is perhaps the most moving subplot of the film. But there’s another layer to this tale: it turns out that not long before taking the part, Patinkin’s own father had died of cancer. He said that while filming the final duel between Inigo and Count Rugen, he imaged it as a fight between himself and that cancer. That whole habit of art imitating life allowed Patinkin the opportunity to truly mourn his father. So if watching that scene doesn’t already make you tear up, it probably will next time. If it already had you crying, you’ll be weeping into buckets from now on.

(source)

I remember that he also accidentally stabbed the Count.

(via lifelongwaitforahospitalstay)

Timestamp: 1369269325

i-dont-understand-that-reference:

lost-carcosa:

Mandy Patinkin considers Inigo to be his favorite role of all time, and one can hardly blame him; in the midst of such a hilarious yarn, Inigo’s fight to avenge his father is perhaps the most moving subplot of the film. But there’s another layer to this tale: it turns out that not long before taking the part, Patinkin’s own father had died of cancer. He said that while filming the final duel between Inigo and Count Rugen, he imaged it as a fight between himself and that cancer. That whole habit of art imitating life allowed Patinkin the opportunity to truly mourn his father. So if watching that scene doesn’t already make you tear up, it probably will next time. If it already had you crying, you’ll be weeping into buckets from now on.

(source)

I remember that he also accidentally stabbed the Count.

(via lifelongwaitforahospitalstay)

radhauswife:

This is amazing.

(Source: vongruby, via lifelongwaitforahospitalstay)

[AGGRESSIVELY CARES FOR YOU FROM A DISTANCE BECAUSE I DON’T KNOW HOW TO MAKE YOU FEEL BETTER]

(Source: andyglassismymom, via lifelongwaitforahospitalstay)

do you ever have those people you just like a lot? like if someone asked you about them, you’d have nothing but good things to say about them? i do.

(Source: c0smic-summer, via child-hood-child-good)

fakeyouout:

“money doesn’t buy happiness”

let me test this hypothesis

(Source: tvspecial, via zerray)