deafkitten
41143
1469
35
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Fun stuff.
Muppetman18
I don't like being so early https://media1.giphy.com/media/v1.Y2lkPWE1NzM3M2U1Nmc3cG1xaWw1MHUycHU1M2hkZmhtaXBzcjVzYWd3YWE3NHZleXU4aiZlcD12MV9naWZzX3NlYXJjaCZjdD1n/HRashIyO5Bx6cImgAV/200w.webp
IUpvoteFuturama
#31
chubbycubby
#39 Hail the Wise Mothman!
elmesito
#26 yet Doc's reaction to knowing who is the president of the US now would be the same.
SamHandwhich
#12 I'm not a gynecologist but I know a cunt when I see one
haveanupvotegif
WienerBeener
#3 *gasps in midwest* disgusting
onlymostofthetime
#15 I see someone has read Infinite Jest and doesn't want to go through that experience again lol
itdoesntmatternoneofthismatters
I have read it twice (like a decade apart). It is a bit of an undertaking, so set some time aside.
geoffreyfourmyle
#15 I wanna know how that bookstore would label Gene Wolfe novels. "Absolutely exhausting but worth it"?
profiledit
https://media2.giphy.com/media/v1.Y2lkPWE1NzM3M2U1dDNveHc2MDhkYjNmeXEydjhmMWw1NmJzb3ZmamwyZHA1eTE2eDR6ZyZlcD12MV9naWZzX3NlYXJjaCZjdD1n/ycagKBYEmaili/200w.webp
JustDaShoemaker
I wonder why it took 8 years?
cryborg
#36
kitemanhellyeah
hell yeah!
RoboUnicornFishBalls
#2
tarkus10
dk, you're alright, the world's all fucked up.
cryborg
#12
cantreach
#33 a blessing and a curse
cryborg
alittleglassvial
#1
I mean, especially this year, when people won't be able to afford to buy them.
abrakadaBRO
#14
MsBehavinMaven
WhiskyBravo
#9 CLOAK ENGAGED
EverythingWithFries
#17 PSA - This knowledge isn't common enough - opioid addicts will literally break their bones to get a dosage of heavy painkillers fed to them by first responders. And there are first responders out there who get to deal with the uniquely awful choice between enabling or denying a fellow, very much suffering, human being.
kahooki
That's fucking horrible.
renalien
i still don't get it. if you have $100, just go buy some heroin
MungChomper69420
Omnislash9
#37 https://media2.giphy.com/media/v1.Y2lkPWE1NzM3M2U1ZjR5bm1zNjE2YWUydmlrYnFtN3Q2bGRpeTYzdHQ0Zm56ajVzMXR6OCZlcD12MV9naWZzX3NlYXJjaCZjdD1n/KQm5O05y9rzQA/200w.webp
malephicus
#42 anyone else notice that even if Jesus fit perfectly, he doesnt complete any of the lines?
itdoesntmatternoneofthismatters
But any other space or orientation would be a terrible move
deafkitten
Such things tough to nail down.
labyrinthconvention
what I notice is the bottom two rows should already be gone.
joeyecho101
deafkitten
sits patiently waiting for appropriate appreciation*...ungrateful savages ha.
Wheretheheckisjason
abrakadaBRO
Turkleturts
Here you go sir, hope you see it before the modz
kitnnicole9
Are you more into the T or the A for gifts?
Doismellbacon
I'm betting @OP will say: sundress
eaglejdc
#22 Knight to F5
itdoesntmatternoneofthismatters
You mean E5 or G5? Either way is a sacrifice.
geoffreyfourmyle
Sure, but then that knight gets immediately eaten by two pawns. Helluva sacrifice.
labyrinthconvention
#6 for all those too young to remember, the 2008 real estate bubble wasn't caused by poor people that couldn't afford decent housing, it was caused by banks lending to multiple property owners with zero collateral, zero down payment, and zero verification, all while the everything was getting rubber stamped by the industry credit agencies.
Pro tip, when a politician says something's wrong and blames it on 'the poor people', they're probably scapegoating them.
koalamonster
They were going to give my now husband- who was a 20 and still trying to finish college- over 200,000 for a home loan. When I tell you how screwed we would have been if he had done that, holy crap. There's zero chance we could have kept a house that was that much money. Shockingly (/s) when we went back in 4 years later in 2010 he only qualified for around 100,000. So crazy.
somnif
My buddy was a brand new air force recruit, first week on base. During his first leave he just... bought a house. Then and there. Insanity.
somnif
He actually managed to keep it too. Took 3 deployment bonuses and he drove a geo metro, but he actually did it, mad lad that he was.
QotU
Good for him for doing it!
bigtwindaddy10
#5
cryborg
For my next Ill-advised Musical Mash-up I'm thinking about mixing songs about cheese. Because I eat so much cheese my family makes comments about it.
trigonman3
bigtwindaddy10
cryborg
(Wait for the cheese part)
ItsActuallyDavidNow
#38 I like your memes.
profiledit
I like your gif.
apairofpetducks
I love this movie.
cryborg
earthlingextraordinaire
https://imgur.com/IwNFjqA.mp4
WhenCameronWasInEgyptsLand
cryborg
earthlingextraordinaire
I can hear Bob Saget's voice narrating this in my head, 90s AFV style.
jeejeejerrycotton
#26 To people now of the age that the target audience for "Back to the Future" was when it was made, 1994 is exactly as alien as 1955 was to people of that age in 1985.
WellAckchually
I grew up in the 90s and have a lot of nostalgia for that time period. I've recently consumed a lot of media set in or from the mid 90s and it's honestly pretty alien to me even though I remember it
ionicseraph
That only happens to me when I look at 90s stuff from an outside perspective. I know that I and those close to me had the same styles and fads, yet when I look at family photos or movies, or try to remember, none of it seems alien at all. Then I'll watch a sitcom or movie from the 90s and the dissociation takes full effect
TheDreadPirateBoberts
yeah i'd really love to be in 94. i got a gun to steal from a grunge musician.
SalmonTheWise
Getting your favorite shotgun stollen is such a downer though... Might push someone over the edge...
TheDreadPirateBoberts
dude.
noone1415
I'd say it's even more alien. Virtually no Internet, or mobile phones, no flat screens, no fascists in power. The 90s were a *very* different time. (Still no flying cars though...)
ionicseraph
Maybe not fascist, but I wouldnt call George Bush Sr. a ray of sunshine either.
DarkSock
We were promised jet packs.
Also, the above is the name of a pretty chill Scottish rock band.
InitHello
I was 12 in 1994, there was very little internet, but I think "virtually no" might be pushing it a bit.
jeejeejerrycotton
No Internet at home would be more accurate. At Universities & al. it was commonplace.
InitHello
That's fair. I remember Global SchoolNet, and Al Rogers actually attended the same church as my parents in the late 80s and early 90s. Cool guy, only person I knew back then with a whole T1 at home.
jeejeejerrycotton
We (dunno who's "we", but I'm assuming it was not just a domestic thing) had Freenet, which I used via dial-up. And I was a user in several BBSs that offered access to (in addition FidoNet and others I can't remember) Usenet and Internet e-mail (as opposed to the other e-mail systems).
noone1415
1994 was probably just about the turning point. WWW was publically released in 1993, and before 1994 Usenet was pretty much restricted to universities such that https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eternal_September was a noted phenomenon. I accept that "Virtually no" was probably hyperbole though.
InitHello
Apropos 1994, is it just me or does google switch font to comic sans when one googles geocities?
noone1415
No, that's not just you. I just got the same result...