6K notes
·
View notes
Saw this on a door at work.
374K notes
·
View notes
Backstage interview 🎤
2K notes
·
View notes
꧁★꧂
222 notes
·
View notes
More stories from hell (retail) today I was ringing up this lady and she goes oh I want to do part of this on a gift card and the rest on normal card and I go ok and then she hands me a folded piece of paper. I think oh OK it must be folded around the gift card, right? Wrong. It is a folded sheet of 8×11 printer paper with "$40" written on the inside in ballpoint pen. I go what is this. She says a gift card. I say this is not a gift card. She says yes it is. I say this is a piece of paper with "$40" written on it. She says "well it's a gift card." I say it absolutely is not. I am grinding my teeth. She says well I want to use it. I say you physically cannot do that bc it is a piece of paper. I cannot scan or swipe it. I apologize, as if this is my fault, and not because she is completely insane. I hate it here
164K notes
·
View notes
Sorry for tagging your art with just # oogh or # oh. Just know this means im profoundly moved
17K notes
·
View notes
32K notes
·
View notes
better than drugs
36K notes
·
View notes
that cool piranha(?) from riot act. i call her jules (for now till she gets an official name if nintendo gaf enough to do that LMFAO)
198 notes
·
View notes
Behold the black and rufous elephant shrew (Rhynchocyon petersi)! Despite its diminutive size, this critter is more closely related to elephants than it is to shrews. It’s also distantly related to manatees, dugongs, and hyraxes. It uses its long snout to scoop up worms, ants, termites, roots, berries, and shoots to eat. To move around its territory, this fast-moving mammal creates networks of foraging trails, which also serve as escape routes from predators.
Photo: B kimmel, CC BY-SA 4.0, Wikimedia Commons
218 notes
·
View notes
A type of flu virus that used to sicken people every year hasn't been spotted anywhere on Earth since March 2020. As such, experts have advised that the apparently extinct viruses be removed from next year's flu vaccines.
The now-extinct viruses were a branch of the influenza B family tree known as the Yamagata lineage. Scientists first reported the apparent disappearance of Yamagata viruses in 2021. At that time, experts speculated that precautions taken to stop the spread of COVID-19 — such as masking and social distancing — had not only driven the overall number of flu cases to historic lows but may have completely snuffed out this type of flu virus.
Continue Reading.
20K notes
·
View notes
Throwback to when I took painkillers and woke up with Photoshop open on my computer to this image I had made
203K notes
·
View notes
Potions
11K notes
·
View notes