Note
can we get a Kryvda wiggling legs GIF? pls 🙏 it's my personal favorite scene 🤭
Looks like she's quite comfy right where she is ^^
37 notes
·
View notes
Text
youtube
Now with english subtitles!!!! Go watch it! It's so good
two halves of a whole idiot :) 💖
142 notes
·
View notes
Text
"Pravda & Kryvda" first ep has English subtitles now! Go watch it! :)
Watch here
261 notes
·
View notes
Text
"stress" by yoan capote - made of bronze and concrete
95K notes
·
View notes
Text
do not start your day. fuck all of this.
[Image ID: A cartoon smiling blob with a cup of coffee in its hand. The picture has a grayscale filter on it, and in the eyes of the depicted creature only existential emptiness can be seen. The Ukrainian text says: "Do not start your day. Fuck all of this." /End ID]
917 notes
·
View notes
Text
(if you're seeing this post directly from apolladay just reblog DON'T VOTE as I think it will skew the answers. i didn't have enough followers to justify posting it myself lol)
I frequently realize I've been following someone for a while, but actually don't know what their profile picture depicts.
12K notes
·
View notes
Text
Adobe is going to spy on your projects. This is insane.
127K notes
·
View notes
Text
Velvette:
Valentino:
Vox:
Vox is clearly the CEO of manspreading
1K notes
·
View notes
Text
429 notes
·
View notes
Text
#hazbin hotel#the vees#hazbin hotel vox#hazbin hotel valentino#hazbin hotel velvette#hazbin hotel the vees
479 notes
·
View notes
Text
Americans joking about fictional characters being from Ohio have nothing on me укртумбочка лайк якщо так робили і Флаттершай із святої Галичини або Полтави
324 notes
·
View notes
Text
I don’t understand why people who cannot accept any moral grayness or complexity decide to join fandoms for the most emotionally complex stories and then try to shame everyone there who actually is able to understand the material.
45K notes
·
View notes
Text
This is frustrating.
I love the comparison, but I hate how they are comparing.
They are acting like she is using optics to give herself an advantage. But the device she is wearing is just for comfort and essentially does the same thing as closing one eye and squinting the other.
The little thing over the left eye is basically like an eye patch.
And the thing over her right eye is a mechanical iris, like in a camera lens, but it is NOT a lens.
Different lighting environments are going to be brighter or darker and you may have to squint more or less to let in the same amount of light into your eye. Squinting allows the shooter to get the sharpest possible vision in order to shoot a bullseye the size of a 12-point Times New Roman period.
But if you have to squint for hours for practice and in competition, this can strain your face muscles and become uncomfortable. So this iris basically squints for you.
It's more like wearing comfortable shoes so your feet do not hurt than a lens magnifying the target and giving an advantage.
Both athletes have access to these items. One felt more comfortable without them. The other didn't feel like getting a muscle cramp from squinting all day.
Either would have shot the same if they had or had not used these devices.
Just a funny difference in gear preference.
I should also add, the Turkish dad is the only one using lenses.
138K notes
·
View notes
Text
It's interesting to me that growing up Jewish seems to have given me a fundamentally different understanding of religion from my Christian friends. For me, I think that your religion (or ethnicity, since Judaism is an ethnicity) is not something you can get rid of. You can convert to another religion, but I never understood friends of mine who said that they weren't Christian, but Atheist.
"But you celebrate Christmas, right?" I asked them.
"Well, yeah," they said, "but we don't celebrate Christian Christmas. I'm atheist."
That didn't make any sense to me. Sure, maybe the version of Christmas they celebrated in their house looked more like treats and presents and less like nativity scenes and prayers, but it was still the same holiday.
So, I came up with the concept of the difference between "Not Christian" and "non-Christian". Which of course my "not christian" friends didn't understand. But my idea was that there are people who are "not christian" - mainly culturally christian atheists - and people who are "non-christian", like Jews, Hindus, Muslims, or others.
Because while both groups generally don't identify as Christian, we have different experiences. As a Jew, my experience as a religious minority is not the same as that of a culturally Christian atheist. They're not Christian, and I'm not Christian, but in different ways.
2K notes
·
View notes