The Evil Within 2 Original Soundtrack
Came in from a rainy Thursday
on the avenue
Thought I heard you talking softly
Turned on all the lights, the TV
and the radio
Still I can't escape the ghost of you
What has happened to it all?
Crazy, some would say
Where is the life that I recognize?
But I won't cry for yesterday
There's an ordinary world
somehow I have to find
And as I try to make my way
to the ordinary world
I will learn to survive
Passion or coincidence
once prompted you to say
"Pride will tear us both apart"
Well now pride's gone out the window
'cross the rooftops run away
Left me in the vacuum of my heart
What has happened to me?
Crazy, some would say
Where is my friend when I need you most?
But I won't cry for yesterday
There's an ordinary world
somehow I have to find
And as I try to make my way
to the ordinary world
I will learn to survive
What has happened to it all?
Crazy, some would say
Where is the life that I recognize?
But I won't cry for yesterday
There's an ordinary world
somehow I have to find
And as I try to make my way
to the ordinary world
I will learn to survive
I will learn to survive
7 notes
·
View notes
The Evil Within 2 - Ending Song - ''The Ordinary World'' by The Hit House
Люблю больше оригинала.
2 notes
·
View notes
I have never met a single cishet who knows the term lipstick lesbian. Dr House do you mind answering a few questions
34K notes
·
View notes
Prompt:
Tim is the first to find out the Red Hood’s identity and from then on sticks to Jason during patrol like glue (much to Jason’s chagrin, dammit, it would feel wrong to beat up Robin when he’s that starry eyed…)
Cue: PANIC from the rest of the Batfamily, who still think Hood is a forty-something year old crime lord and now assume they’re dating.
3K notes
·
View notes
please put the secret 5th option in the tags— optional you can reblog and say who your guy is and what you voted
3K notes
·
View notes
Historical house tours are so confusing. They’ll be like, “When we head upstairs, pay special attention to the Blue Room, where Colonel Thomas J. Shmoshington carved a suggestive message on the bedpost.”
And you’ll walk into a room with bright blue walls and be like, “Oh, I guess this is the Blue Room?”
And they’ll be like, “NO! This is the Red Room! It’s called the Red Room because of the red velvet curtains and canopy bed!” Then they take you into a white room with yellow floral wallpaper trim and go, “THIS is the Blue Room!”
And when you humbly ask why it’s called the Blue Room, they’ll scoff at you like you were born yesterday (rather than in 1789) and be like, “It’s called the Blue Room because it USED TO BE blue! The entire mansion is painstakingly restored to its appearance in the year 1812, which happens to fall during the two-year span in in which Abigail Shmaddison redid the room in white and yellow in a flight of fancy. After spending some time away in a sanitarium, she regained her senses and changed it back to blue. An archaeologist found an original scrap of the yellow wallpaper beneath 13 layers of paint and we were able to match it perfectly with this pattern, which was of course developed by Q.B. Zippitydoo & Sons in London and available for purchase only in 1812. Any more questions?”
So you hold your tongue until you enter a big green room that is so incredibly green that it can’t possibly be anything but the Green Room. It has acid green walls. It has bright green curtains. It has forest green tablecloths. There are ivy motifs carved in the ceiling. Cautiously, you venture, “So this is the Green Room?”
And they say, “NO! This is the parlor!”
14K notes
·
View notes