(Source: oxane)
Let’s go see a $500 million sci-fi allegory about the perils of wasteful human behavior
Via someecards
Digital Citizens For Facets Films
Please check out the new Digital Citizens for Facets Films FB page and LIKE and SHARE! I’ve moved over everything from the former group page to the new timeline layout which let’s you scroll through all the articles and links we’ve been collecting to help teachers-help parents-engage kids with media in a positive and critical way. This work is where my heart is. Thanks for your support, this is a project I am most proud of! #informationisfun
Questioning the conventional worldview is a risky business. And the only reason I have done so is for the sake of the younger generation and for the integrity of Nature herself. It is your future that concerns me and that of your grandchildren, and theirs too. That is how far we should be looking ahead. I have no intention of being confronted by my grandchildren, demanding to know why on Earth we didn’t do something about the many problems that existed when we knew what was going wrong. The threat of that question, the responsibility of it, is precisely why I have gone on challenging the assumptions of our day. And I would urge you to do the same, because we need to face up to asking whether how we produce our food is actually fit for purpose in the very challenging circumstances of the 21st century. We simply cannot ignore that question any longer.
(Source: The Atlantic)
Gastro Pornification: Cannibalism and Food Culture in 301, 302 and Dumplings
What I am up to when I am not Tumblin.
#Tumbler-I-miss-you.
(Source: thenostalgiafreak)
Working Girl (1988)
This movie….THIS movie….How could you not love it? it’s like the 80’s threw up all over it. Joan Cusack’s eye makeup should have been nominated for best supporting actress here, and the eye makeup was robbed! robbed I tell you!
how I love thee, cheesy underdog-plot 80’s movie…
Harrison Ford. is in this. YOUNG Harrison Ford.
Kevin Spacey getting high on coke in the back of a limo as his only scene in the movie.
The computers…DOS systems *everywhere*. If Joan Cusack’s eye makeup wasn’t stealing the thunder, the DOS systems would be. It’s just raining archaic technology in here.
Sigourney Weaver playing what Regina George would be like at 30.
It’s just cheesy, wonderful, nostalgic, goodness.