Star Wars with Tommy Wiseau - “Oh Hi Mark”
Tommy Wiseau comes to the Star Wars universe.
so they put up these new signs at the ima and they make the whole thing feel very alice in wonderland kind of

but the ones with words on them are really great





Sometimes a chipmunk.
So thrilled this has 32,000 notes! This work was curated by my wife, Sarah, and created by the wonderful artist Kim Beck.
“The occasional Fox”
Tag yourself Im “Over there”
I’m “???”
Imagine a young muggleborn student at Hogwarts.
She’s calmly eating in the dining hall when an owl swoops in and drops off a scroll and a howler.
Hesitantly, she opens the scroll. All it has i done word on it:
“SOME”
Looking over at the Howler, she suggenly get very worried. Carefully she opens up the Howler, dreading what it’s going to contain. The Howler rips itself open.
“BODY ONCE TOLD ME, THE WORLD WAS GONNA ROLL ME.”
@maawi - I would do this to you in a heartbeat ahahahaha
Can you imagine
can you even imagine
the sheer number and variety of ways Muggleborns would Rickroll each other.
“Hey Sue, can you open this jar for me, my wrist hurts”
“sure thing”– *WE’RE NO STRANGERS TO LOO-OO-OOOVEE*
Omg the other students would be SO CONFUSED why these new kids are laughing and DELIGHTED to get Howlers!!!!
Someone gets a howler that just says “WHAT TEAM?” and hundreds of muggleborns and half-bloods scream out “WILDCATS”.
The purebloods are very confused.
I learned in a Latin Studies class (with a chill white dude professor) that when the Europeans first saw Aztec cities they were stunned by the grid. The Aztecs had city planning and that there was no rational lay out to European cities at the time. No organization.
When the Spanish first arrived in Tenochtitlan (now downtown mexico city) they thought they were dreaming. They had arrived from incredibly unsanitary medieval Europe to a city five times the size of that century’s london with a working sewage system, artificial “floating gardens” (chinampas), a grid system, and aqueducts providing fresh water. Which wasn’t even for drinking! Water from the aqueducts was used for washing and bathing- they preferred using nearby mountain springs for drinking. Hygiene was a huge part if their culture, most people bathed twice a day while the king bathed at least four times a day. Located on an island in the middle of a lake, they used advanced causeways to allow access to the mainland that could be cut off to let canoes through or to defend the city. The Spanish saw their buildings and towers and thought they were rising out of the water. The city was one of the most advanced societies at the time.
Anyone who thinks that Native Americans were the savages instead of the filthy, disease ridden colonizers who appeared on their land is a damn fool.
They’ve also recently discovered a lost Native American city in Kansas called Etzanoa It rivals the size of Cahokia, which was very large as well.
when you havent made plans for the future and then suddenly it is the future and everything didnt just magically work itself out
