#i laughed at them in my head
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
jakemyboy · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
Rerun pic from last year because I like it. Today is about chocolate, good chocolate, and if chocolate is not your thing go out and get that something special that you go crazy for. ❤️
4 notes · View notes
avenoire · 8 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
personal headcanons :D
7K notes · View notes
mellosdrawings · 6 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
So... heat waves are fun (not)
(Bonus : Mama Jamil)
Tumblr media
3K notes · View notes
ninyard · 9 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
fox tweets (pt.2)
3K notes · View notes
lotus-pear · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
every time i think abt their canon height difference i want to eat drywall
6K notes · View notes
demigods-posts · 11 months ago
Text
i have this headcanon that percy and annabeth are raging accidental flirts. but not with each other. like. they'll go to the coffee shop on fifteenth street. and compliment the barista on his hair and clothes and tip really well. but only for him. and they have no idea this boy is absolutely swooning over them. or. each time they to go the bakery downtown. they take the time to converse with the waitress at the counter as they eat her homemade muffins. and are incredibly vocal about how she's their favorite server. and how much they enjoy seeing her. and suddenly they're the only two customers that can get her services for free. except, they just think she's like that with everyone.
1K notes · View notes
tzarrz · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
This came to me in a dream - PART 2
3K notes · View notes
ladybeug · 2 years ago
Text
I drew the same comic twice because I didn't think the first one was funny enough. I don't know if the second comic is funnier though??
Here's both of them
Side by side because i couldn't decide which one to put first - knowing the punchline changes the experience?? pick your adventure. read either one first.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
which ones funnier i honestly can't tell
6K notes · View notes
bluury2 · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
This is how I imagine fours mind
693 notes · View notes
ffverr · 10 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Process
A silly polaroid of Kitty and Illyana at a random New Mutants hang out!
726 notes · View notes
dreamdripdistance · 8 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
doodle inspired by this goofy ass meme from @an-inspired-eternity
Tumblr media
544 notes · View notes
juniemunie · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Anyways *blasts yosuke with the genderbend beam*
380 notes · View notes
brodorokihousuke · 2 months ago
Text
I’ve posted these before. At least twice. But by god am I going to continue occasionally posting them because they are awesome
Tumblr media
I think about “Egypt power” at least three times a week. What does that mean. Help. Also eyepatch+trenchcoat Apollo lowkey cooks as a design
Tumblr media
Symbol of the organization… what organization? Oh, ya know. The organization. That one. Sure. Also sunglasspollo my beloved.
Tumblr media
Rare hair-down Apollo! I never really paid that design much mind but it’s kinda cool to look at now.
Tumblr media
You sure did, little buddy.
153 notes · View notes
valeovalairs · 5 months ago
Text
I hate them actually <3
Tumblr media
anyway my shitty rendition of the purps
215 notes · View notes
satans-knitwear · 11 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
From the drafts!!! Bc im STILL a little plague rat 🤧😷🐀✨
Treat me ~ Tip Me ~ More of me
528 notes · View notes
hussyknee · 2 months ago
Text
TIL the Australian guy that put on the single greatest piece of improv theater ever caught on camera during his wrongful arrest passed away this August from cancer.
youtube
For those who don't know: in 1991 an investigator who suspected this man of credit card fraud called the cops on him at the Chinese restaurant where he was dining with a friend. To expedite the arrest, he led the police to believe they were arresting a high profile criminal of some sort.
Police surrounded the restaurant, corralled the waiting media (who had somehow gotten wind), and interrupted Karlson's lunch.
"He was as calm as anything," former police detective Adam Firman says of the moment he arrested Karlson in the restaurant.
"He was happy to go with us. Well, as happy as you can be, to be arrested. Until he saw all the media. And that's when he just went berserk."
The lines Karlson delivered have since become classic quotes in internet culture.
"Gentlemen, this is democracy manifest!" Karlson declares to the cameras as he's wrestled into the police car.
...
"As soon as we drove away, he stopped and he said, 'That was fun,'" Firman says.
"There was no fight getting him out of the car. Nothing. It was all put on for the cameras."
The drama behind the rant
The Brisbane police who arrested him that day didn't know that Karlson had been a criminal and a serial prison escapee. He was also a part-time actor.
By the time he was 34, Karlson had spent most of his life in homes and prisons.
His first escape was in 1966. He was on a train going from Boggo Road Gaol to face a breaking, entering and stealing charge at Maryborough Magistrates Court. He got out of his handcuffs and jumped off.
Two years later, after he had been locked up in McLeod Prison Farm on Victoria's French Island for another theft, he convinced a local fisherman to give him a lift to the mainland.
Three months after that, he was picked up in a stolen car carrying safe-breaking tools in Parramatta. Just before his trial, he impersonated a detective and walked out of his court cell. Finally, he was captured in an apartment on Sydney's North Shore.
That's when his life took a dramatic left turn.
Sentenced to eight years in Parramatta Gaol, Karlson was put in an unusually large cell with an inmate named Jim McNeil.
This chance encounter would become destiny manifest.
McNeil had heard about Karlson impersonating a detective, and he thought it was hilarious.
He welcomed Karlson into his cell. The two men bonded over making foul-tasting alcohol in the cell's washbasin from raisins and yeast, and shared histories.
They had both grown up poor, even by the standards of their rough-and-tumble neighbourhoods. Adults had abused them physically and sexually. And they'd both stolen and scammed a few shillings for their families when they saw the chance.
After encouragement from Karlson, McNeil wrote a play about cellmates who brewed grog. They put it on in prison, and Karlson played a leading role.
Both had discovered talents they didn't know they had. McNeil kept writing on his smuggled typewriter, and Karlson kept acting. The plays became a hit among young Sydney intellectuals, many who had been campaigning for prisoners' rights.
Within four years, their work got them out on parole a combined 13 years early.
Best friends
Karlson and McNeil's friendship continued outside the prison gates and they moved into a house in Richmond together.
The two men stuck out like sore thumbs in their new-found scene of artists and intellectuals.
Neither man had set foot in a theatre, but McNeil's plays were already being performed across Australia. He felt that, with the success of his plays, he'd never need to resort to crime again. On radio and in the press, he would give didactic rants about the brutality of the justice system.
Karlson, meanwhile, got parts in the prime-time crime dramas Homicide and Matlock Police.
They remained close.
"The lovely bloke. I love him," McNeil told an interviewer around the same time Karlson named his son Jim McNeil Karlson.
Karlson described them as best friends.
But McNeil's alcoholism killed him in 1982.
Karlson couldn't travel to the funeral in Sydney for legal reasons.
"I … with a bodgie [fake identity], booked up hundreds and hundreds of dollars worth of flowers and wreaths," he says.
Final days
McNeil's plays weren't subtle. They were screeds aimed at a society that arrested and tormented unfortunate men for petty crimes.
"The message is: look what you're doing to people," he told one interviewer.
He went on to tell a story about an Aboriginal cellmate. "He was illiterate, he was poor. He had nothing. And he stole thruppence ha'penny. And then he got three and a half years. That's a penny a year.
"Prison is the best way to show what's wrong with the outside."
His final play was about two cellmates in Parramatta. He named it 'Jack', and finished it in a drunken haze.
"Do you know I'm here?" shouts Jack the character. "Do you give a f*** where I am? No. No, you don't give a f*** where I am. Pricks. Democrats."
Fifteen years later, Jack Karlson declared "Gentlemen, this is democracy manifest!" to the waiting cameras and an enduring audience.
It would be his most unforgettable performance.
From 7news:
So how did Karlson improvise a performance so poetic, so theatrical and so amusing?
“Of course, I was somewhat influenced by the juice of the red grape."
Karlson spent his last years as a painter, incidentally selling many paintings of his own infamous arrest, and helping make a documentary about his life that's yet to be released. He died aged 82, surrounded by family and was widely mourned.
"Tata and farewell" legend. Hope the internet never forgets you. ACAB forever.
129 notes · View notes