carefulwiththatoxygen:

plot twist: i’m actually Herbert West (Taken with instagram)

One of my favorite little things about this campus.
I always had this image of the Miskatonic Medical school as being some kind of defunct, but still operating lab underground in the tunnels that featured a concentration in the splicing of animals and humans, both on the genetic and physical level. As well as human energy-electricity conversion.
Then I found out it was a Lovecraft thing…..

carefulwiththatoxygen:

plot twist: i’m actually Herbert West (Taken with instagram)

One of my favorite little things about this campus.

I always had this image of the Miskatonic Medical school as being some kind of defunct, but still operating lab underground in the tunnels that featured a concentration in the splicing of animals and humans, both on the genetic and physical level. As well as human energy-electricity conversion.

Then I found out it was a Lovecraft thing…..

Reblogged from carefulwiththatoxygen, 1 note, May 10, 2012

iamtakien:

Delirium photoset

Reblogged from conjuringseed, 41 notes, May 6, 2012

"

A student blows up at a teacher, drops the F-bomb. The usual approach at Lincoln – and, safe to say, at most high schools in this country – is automatic suspension. Instead, Sporleder sits the kid down and says quietly: “Wow. Are you OK? This doesn’t sound like you. What’s going on?”

He gets even more specific: “You really looked stressed. On a scale of 1-10, where are you with your anger?” The kid was ready. Ready, man! For an anger blast to his face….”How could you do that?” “What’s wrong with you?”…and for the big boot out of school. But he was NOT ready for kindness.

The armor-plated defenses melt like ice under a blowtorch and the words pour out: “My dad’s an alcoholic. He’s promised me things my whole life and never keeps those promises.” The waterfall of words that go deep into his home life, which is no piece of breeze, end with this sentence: “I shouldn’t have blown up at the teacher.” Whoa.

"

Lincoln High School in Walla Walla, WA, tries new approach to school discipline — suspensions drop 85% (via mchotdog)

what a radical idea yo

(via matthewdgold)

Bam. Kids “misbehave” for actual, real, valid reasons. And have feelings.

(via amydentata)

I, for one, am astonished at the idea that children are people. 

Also, I love this. I want to found a school based on this principle.

(via bigfatfeminist)

Wish that this was a more common occurrence. Older people are much more apt to push off the anger and frustration of kids and teens and blame it on hormones, rather than trying to believe that they may have a valid reason to feel the way they do.

Reblogged from los-logos, 15,440 notes, May 2, 2012

(Source: silvermedallion)

Reblogged from zachthezombie, 2,402 notes, April 16, 2012

ah yes…..
This is how family gatherings end for me.

ah yes…..

This is how family gatherings end for me.

(Source: brainparticlesinmysoup)

Reblogged from yepimcool, 3 notes, April 9, 2012

(Source: pathsofrhythm-)

Reblogged from pathsofrhythm-, 35 notes, April 5, 2012

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

joeendozo:

song a day #4, ”End of the Old”

Alone he is left with
Something to need
Scattered into pieces
For a pigeon feed
He hangs onto the curbside
Waiting for a ride
but the wind picks him up
And he starts to take flight
Alright, here we go 
Alright, here we go
Alright, here we go
The end of the old
Lil broken bottles
Buried in the dirt
He’s dug up his hole
And sealed in the hurt
Goodbye to the mother
Goodbye to the sun
Tonight he’s gonna leave
Everything he once loved
Alright, here we go 
Alright, here we go
Alright, here we go
The end of the old
Gonna build himself a home
A temple at best
Live like a bluebird
But free to leave the nest
Gonna wake up in a new light
An unlimited shine
Breath isn’t a burden
Or wasted time
Alright, here we go 
Alright, here we go
Alright, here we go
The end of the old
This guy! He’s a cool dude, I’m very happy to call him my bandmate and friend. He’s undertaking a challenge for himself: Write a song a day for 100 days. Check him out, support him. He’s good people!!

Reblogged from joeendozo, 2 notes (0 plays), March 24, 2012

timeclopslives:

By Jon S.

TIMECLOPS!!!!!! HE KNOWS YOUR FUTURE AND YOUR PAST< BUT HE”LL DESTROY YOUR PRESENT!!

Reblogged from zachthezombie, 5 notes, March 23, 2012

los-logos:

ginandphonics:

“Well, okay. I’m just gonna say it. There’s a scene at the end of the movie when George Clooney’s character, myself, my cousin and the opossum, Kylie, are all on a little motorcycle driving back to our home. And we’ve just rescued my cousin. And we stop and we see a wolf on a distant hill, and it’s a really beautiful, beautiful scene. It’s like so heart-warming because it’s just a beautiful moment between these foxes and little animals and this really like mysterious wolf who we’ve heard about the entire movie and who doesn’t talk in this scene and he’s not wearing clothes. He’s kind of, he represents I guess, the wild. He’s a wild wolf and animal, and it’s a beautiful moment where they have this great connection, and in that moment, it really like to me the point of that scene is let’s keep on being free. Let’s keep on being animals. And it’s such an uplifting moment, and like when I’ve seen it with audiences, a bunch of people break into huge cheers and hooting. It’s such an awesome, awesome scene. It really just blows my mind.
And actually, when we did the movie, you know, we did the movie basically live together as a cast. We didn’t do the scenes, none of us really did it separately in recording booths, which is how typical animated movies are done. This one, Wes Andersen had us literally go and move onto a farm together and we all lived together. And we’d wake up in the morning, have breakfast and then if there was a scene, for instance, that took place underneath a tree, George Clooney and Bill Murray, everyone, would walk over to the tree that we’d find, we’d take our scripts out and we’d just start acting out the scenes. And it was basically like doing a movie just with no cameras. So there were actors, the director, Wes, and a sound man. And we were running around, growling and hooting and hollering, and if we had to eat a bunch of food like in the movie we always are eating like French toast or biscuits, we would literally be eating French toast and biscuits and toast, I mean it was so much fun.
Anyways, one day when we were doing this particular scene with this wolf, we were all about to shoot it and then Wes said, you know we should really get someone to play the wolf so that the guys have someone to act opposite, and we looked around and Bill Murray was standing there with his hands in his pockets. He took his hands out and said, “I can be the wolf.” And Bill Murray just took off running, or I guess trotting. And he ran, ran, ran, ran really far away until he was tiny. And he turned around and actually became the wolf, like he, it’s almost as if he embodied the wolf. And he acted it out for us, and it was so inspiring and so beautiful. And Wes actually took out his camera phone, filmed it, and then sent that footage to the animators to base the wolf off of Bill Murray, so Bill Murray is the uncredited wolf in this movie. And he actually, it was so good, it was as if he practiced it. I mean, it was incredible, his wolf performance. So, I think because of what the scene means, what it represents in the movie and the great warm message that it has in the scene, plus knowing the behind the scenes, what went into that scene, I think that’s my favorite scene in the movie.”
-Jason Schwartzman

what i wouldnt give for that camera phone footage

Bill Murray is a boss.

los-logos:

ginandphonics:

“Well, okay. I’m just gonna say it. There’s a scene at the end of the movie when George Clooney’s character, myself, my cousin and the opossum, Kylie, are all on a little motorcycle driving back to our home. And we’ve just rescued my cousin. And we stop and we see a wolf on a distant hill, and it’s a really beautiful, beautiful scene. It’s like so heart-warming because it’s just a beautiful moment between these foxes and little animals and this really like mysterious wolf who we’ve heard about the entire movie and who doesn’t talk in this scene and he’s not wearing clothes. He’s kind of, he represents I guess, the wild. He’s a wild wolf and animal, and it’s a beautiful moment where they have this great connection, and in that moment, it really like to me the point of that scene is let’s keep on being free. Let’s keep on being animals. And it’s such an uplifting moment, and like when I’ve seen it with audiences, a bunch of people break into huge cheers and hooting. It’s such an awesome, awesome scene. It really just blows my mind.

And actually, when we did the movie, you know, we did the movie basically live together as a cast. We didn’t do the scenes, none of us really did it separately in recording booths, which is how typical animated movies are done. This one, Wes Andersen had us literally go and move onto a farm together and we all lived together. And we’d wake up in the morning, have breakfast and then if there was a scene, for instance, that took place underneath a tree, George Clooney and Bill Murray, everyone, would walk over to the tree that we’d find, we’d take our scripts out and we’d just start acting out the scenes. And it was basically like doing a movie just with no cameras. So there were actors, the director, Wes, and a sound man. And we were running around, growling and hooting and hollering, and if we had to eat a bunch of food like in the movie we always are eating like French toast or biscuits, we would literally be eating French toast and biscuits and toast, I mean it was so much fun.

Anyways, one day when we were doing this particular scene with this wolf, we were all about to shoot it and then Wes said, you know we should really get someone to play the wolf so that the guys have someone to act opposite, and we looked around and Bill Murray was standing there with his hands in his pockets. He took his hands out and said, “I can be the wolf.” And Bill Murray just took off running, or I guess trotting. And he ran, ran, ran, ran really far away until he was tiny. And he turned around and actually became the wolf, like he, it’s almost as if he embodied the wolf. And he acted it out for us, and it was so inspiring and so beautiful. And Wes actually took out his camera phone, filmed it, and then sent that footage to the animators to base the wolf off of Bill Murray, so Bill Murray is the uncredited wolf in this movie. And he actually, it was so good, it was as if he practiced it. I mean, it was incredible, his wolf performance. So, I think because of what the scene means, what it represents in the movie and the great warm message that it has in the scene, plus knowing the behind the scenes, what went into that scene, I think that’s my favorite scene in the movie.”

-Jason Schwartzman

what i wouldnt give for that camera phone footage

Bill Murray is a boss.

Reblogged from los-logos, 2,401 notes, March 19, 2012

carefulwiththatoxygen:

orioleorgans:

sometimes i dream of summoning cthulhu since he seems like a r’lyeh cool guy

at the bonfire last night we spent several minutes making fun of how racist h.p. lovecraft was

lulz were had

GAhh There was a good bonfire and I missed it ?! fackk

Reblogged from carefulwiththatoxygen, 10 notes, March 18, 2012