iu2:
Snoop Dogg’s smokable songbook.
Each page is a rolling paper with Snoop’s greatest songs and lyrics written on them in non-toxic ink for your rolling pleasure. The pages are perforated making them easy to detach.
wants haha
Sick
Oh my fucking god lol
I don’t even smoke but this is brilliant.
that nigga is a genius
—YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAASSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS..!!
This fawn and bobcat were found in an office together, cuddling under a desk after a forest fire
(Source: a-harlots-progress)
Jamaican born painter and mixed-media artist Tamara Natalie Madden.
Reading up on the history of black women and the critique through photography and literature… This book should be interesting :-)
Distribution of Wealth - Short Video
😳😮😑👈 (my reaction to this video)
If perception wasn’t bad enough then check out the facts… Yikes…
Miguel Endara
“The portrait took nearly 138 hours to complete, and at a rate of 4.25 dots per second, he estimates the piece contains roughly 2.1 million of them”
In 2004 an unconscious man was discovered behind a fast food restaurant in Richmond Hill, Georgia. He had no belongings, severe sunburn, and was nearly blind from cataracts. The man also had absolutely no idea who he was. After months of ongoing evaluation from doctors and psychologists it was determined he was suffering from dissociative amnesia. He adopted the pseudonym Benjaman Kyle and has embarked on a search for his true identity sparking massive amounts of media coverage and even a short film, Finding Benjaman, by John Wikstrom. He is the only citizen in the United States officially listed as missing despite his whereabouts being known. One strange aspect of this predicament is that Kyle now lives completely in limbo: for the past 8 years he has been denied the ability to obtain a new social security number which in turn prevents him from opening a bank account or having a credit card. The government argues that he already has one, but despite the efforts of fingerprint matching, DNA tests, and exposure on television, he simply cannot determine his true identity.
After catching a screening of Finding Benjaman at the Tribeca Film Festival artist Miguel Endara (previously) was inspired to help in any way he could, which meant making art. Endara embarked on this portrait of Benjaman using stippling, a tedious technique which involves a pen, patience, and an obscene amount of dots. The portrait took nearly 138 hours to complete, and at a rate of 4.25 dots per second, he estimates the piece contains roughly 2.1 million of them. The hope is to spread awareness for Bengaman’s plight and to help raise money through the sale of prints to support a petition to get him a new social security number.Wow. Our gubment y’all…
NASA recently released imagery showing the deforestation of America …in just 34 years.
We are killing the Earth
Forever reblog.
this is actually so scary
scary
(Source: travelerschecks)