Video
So fluid, love the way rotates the bone out.
instagram
İşte kuzu kuzu geldim dedi
2K notes
·
View notes
Photo
482K notes
·
View notes
Photo
300 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Bradley Cooper looks like a culinary star in the first poster for Burnt
247 notes
·
View notes
Photo
9 New York Tattoo Artists Work Their Magic On Some Rather Unusual Canvases
Brooklyn-based photographer Peter Garritano wanted to capture the vibrant spirit of the NYC tattoo scene in a way no one else had. So, he visited The Meat Hook, a Brooklyn-based butcher shop, and got himself some rather unusual canvases.
256 notes
·
View notes
Photo
27 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Close up of ‘The Cycle Of Futility”
Redchurch Street, London 2014
533 notes
·
View notes
Photo
New Zealand has electroshock steaks. Since the ‘70s, the Kiwis have been zapping fresh cuts of beef with low-voltage currents to fend off the posthumous oxidization that generally renders meat brown and chewy upon refrigeration. Originally, this technique was used on only a few muscles, but like in any successful scientific venture, the next step was to turn it up to 11 – or to 25,000, since that’s the amount of volts researchers recently decided to start testing on meat. And shoc– uh, surprisingly (pun averted), it worked. By exposing meats to Soviet interrogation techniques, Kiwi scientists at Otago University achieved a 25-percent improvement in tenderization rates. Nobel Prize, anyone?
5 Annoying Food Problems Science Will Soon Get Rid Of
259 notes
·
View notes
Photo
132 notes
·
View notes
Photo
102 notes
·
View notes
Photo
468 notes
·
View notes
Text
A Message to Canadians (specifically those over 18)
FUCKING VOTE
We have, as you might have heard, an federal election coming up this year, and Canadian democracy is in jeopardy. We’ve been given a C overall by the Samara institute, and our voter turnout is in the bottom fifth of world democracies. In fact, voter turnout at our last federal election was only little over 60%. Most of this is due to young people like us, who’ve become more and more disinterested in politics. However we are the ones this coming election effects most. Us youth are more liberal, more open-minded, and more focused on long term effects (cause you know, it is our future at stake). Us bothering to vote will be a deciding factor in this coming election, and it could stop Harper from winning yet again, or god forbid winning another majority. If we actually use our right to vote we could stop intrusive bills such as bill C-51, we could stop the Harper government from muzzling scientists, we could save our environment from it’s destruction at the hands of oil companies, and we could start acknowledging human rights disasters such as what’s happening to aboriginal women right now.
Don’t take this as me forcing you to vote NDP, Liberal, or Green, just take it as a friendly reminder of what happened the last time we decided to stop caring about politics. Canadian elections may be smaller and less covered in media than the American one coming up in 2016, but we still matter and it’s important for us not to leave our fate in the hands of people who won’t have to live to face the consequences of their actions. Take the time, however boring it may be to research political parties and what they’ve done in the past/plan to do in the future, and to find the one that accurately represents you and your opinions. Then, take a bit of time out of your day this October to vote for your representative from that party. Do it for the good of the country, for the good of democracy, and for the good of yourself.
New Democratic Party Website
Liberal Party Website
Conservative Party Website
Green Party Website
Bloc Quebecois Website
3K notes
·
View notes
Photo
Yeah that’s not the right direction…
I can count to potato part 2!
3K notes
·
View notes