Amazing use of movie clips to recreate lyrics to a Lionel Richie song #Hello
Its a good thing that my college days are far behind me. #BattleShip meets #BeerPong behold, #BattleShots
I want this Tshirt. #WhereTheWildThings are hunted
So hungry you could eat a…. Score Into the Wild Things by Alvaro Arteaga Sabaini now.
Image description: This high-resolution image of the Earth was taken from the Visible/Infrared Imager Radiometer Suite aboard NASA’s most recently launched Earth-observing satellite - Suomi NPP. This composite image uses a number of shots of the Earth’s surface taken on January 4, 2012.
Suomi NPP is NASA’s next Earth-observing research satellite. It is the first of a new generation of satellites that will observe many facets of our changing Earth.
Suomi NPP is carrying five instruments on board. The biggest and most important instrument is The Visible/Infrared Imager Radiometer Suite or VIIRS.
Read more about NASA’s Suomi NPP.
Photo by NASA
Quite possibly the most AMAZING kill cam EVER! #ATeam music sells it. #Battlefield3 via @ajamison
This made me “lol” pretty hard. #JustDance
(Source: meme4u)
This makes me go ha ha ha #ConanObrien #GOP
I love that in the 40s & 50s people actually thought the food of the future would be consumed in pill form.
A futuristic feast from Conquest Of Space by George Pal, 1955
[via James Vaughan]
We hope those shiny red capsules are the bacon pills. Only a (hungry) fool travels to outer space without some form of bacon.
How well could you sleep on this bedding? #Zombie
I never sleep alone
Screen printed Zombie arms with hand painted details, along with appliquéd hands on pillows.
Designed by me :D
Saturn’s Moons
Past Night
Saturn’s moon Mimas peeks out from behind the night side of the larger moon Dione in this Cassini image captured during the spacecraft’s Dec. 12, 2011, flyby of Dione. Dione is 1123 km across and its day side dominates the view on the right of the image. Smaller Mimas is on the left and measures 396 km across. The image was taken in visible light with the Cassini spacecraft narrow-angle camera from a distance of approximately 94,000 km from Dione.