Baby gorilla #skeleton.
#taxidermy #skull #specimen (at Booth Museum of Natural History)

Way to go; give the industrial magnifying glass to the girl with horrendous depth perception.
#rat #skull #skeleton #taxidermy  (at Booth Museum of Natural History)

Real horrorshow.
#nofilter (at New England House)

» 1920s Pre-radio Radio Network

bloodoftheyoung:

nofunpress:

Our new EAT SHIT crew socks are up in the shop and yours for the taking.No Fun logo on the soles. Woven in the USA.

Fuck you if you ain’t rocking these!

delisandwich:

Andy Warhol • themirrorofcassiopeia:
Gristede’s supermarket, New York, 1962

» ASMR, the Good Feeling No One Can Explain

ASMR is a tricky feeling to describe, and I can only talk about it secondhand. From what I understand from conversations with ASMRers, it’s a tingle in your brain, a kind of pleasurable headache that can creep down your spine. It’s a shortcut to a blissed-out meditative state that allows you to watch long videos that for someone who doesn’t have ASMR are mind-meltingly dull. Not everyone gets this feeling, and though some people can get the tingles through sheer force of will, most depend on external “triggers” to set them off. Triggers can include getting a massage or a haircut or a manicure, or hearing someone talk in a soothing tone of voice (Bob Ross, the “let’s put a happy tree right here” painter from PBS, is a common trigger), or even just watching someone pay extremely close attention to a task, like assembling a model. It’s not usually sexual—everyone who talked to me about ASMR mentioned that right off the bat—but like sexual turn-ons, different people have different things that set them off: the sound of lips smacking together, a cashier’s fake nails tapping on the register, your friend drawing on your hand with a marker.

thedeathoftheauthor:

applecocaine:

The Birth Of Suburbia- Take One (by Rosaleen Ryan)

YES YES YES