“A little talent is a good thing to have if you want to be a writer. But the only real requirement is the ability to remember every scar.”
Rachel: What was that?
Ross: Monica knows.
Monica: It’s this dumb thing that Ross made up just to try to fool our parents. It’s a way of giving the finger, without actually having to give it.
(via thebluthcompany)
“Directly, or indirectly, everything we write is for someone.”
(via aleatoryalarmalligator)
Handwritten page of the classic children’s book The Little Prince by French writer Antoine de Saint-Exupery
(via thegirlandherbooks)
We raised $1,000 (CAD) in under 12 hours. That’s more than amazing, and I’m still floored. That would have given us enough to print 200 Victory Bandanas.
Now we’re going for $2,000, which will get 500 bandanas delivered to the Global TV offices—and more yet if your generous donations continue.
Anything above what we need for our maximum of 1,000 Victory Bandanas will be donated to the Ajax Bomb Girls Legacy Campaign charity, which is partnered with Bomb Girls, the TV show.
In short: Keep it up! It would be really, really great if we collected enough to have leftover money for the Ajax Legacy Campaign. It’s all up to you!
For more details why, how and where to donate, please go to our Victory Bandanas webpage.
(via fyeahbombgirls)
(via mymomthinksimfunny)
Go to the Netflix’s Arrested Development page and check out all the great cast photos they have.
(via degenerossia)
(via teachingliteracy)
Come here…or don’t.
(via laughingsquid)
99 Life Hacks to make your life easier!
(via silverwriter01)
(via paranormalexpresso)
(via mymomthinksimfunny)
Known as Heracleion to the ancient Greeks and Thonis to the ancient Eygptians, the city was rediscovered in 2000 by French underwater archaeologist Dr. Franck Goddio and a team from the European Institute for Underwater Acheology (IEASM) after a four-year geophysical survey. The ruins of the lost city were found 30 feet under the surface of the Mediterranean Sea in Aboukir Bay, near Alexandria.
Heracleion Photos: Lost Egyptian City Revealed After 1,200 Years Under Sea | Huffington Post
(via endlesswonder)





