Friday Ephemera
“The user’s touch and the temperature of the environment make two giant testicles retract and descend.” // Superhero essentials. // Chicago from on high. // Hiroshima, 64 years ago. // Cardboard clouds. // God of Small Things. // Hide your diamond. // Mattress dominoes. // Mobile bar and restaurant. // Your very own personal satellite. // Paint and water. // Photoshop fridge magnets. // Regrow lost teeth. // Red Rabbit. // Itty-bitty cars. // On tax and the “social contract.” // Steed and Mrs Peel in The Town of No Return. Part 2, 3, 4, 5. (h/t, SDA) // And, via The Thin Man, it’s the Imperial March.
“our installation is based on the natural interaction between the male reproductive organs and their environment… With this project, we are affirming our love for Mother Nature and the beautiful simplicity of her designs.”
David, you’ve finally found a piece of art that is literally bollocks.
Damn, mlrosty beat me to it! 😉
Loving the rabbit. The bollocks not so much.
Wow. If I spend $8000 on a satellite kit I can conduct “biological experiments” in space.
http://interorbital.com/Downloads/TubeSat%20Sales%20Brochure%20Publish%201.0.pdf
You bought one of these didn’t you?
Yes, my giant atomic ants will soon be ready to rain destruction on my enemies.
People who own pet rats are often advised to get females, since the males drop their nasty old scrotums out of their bodies when the weather gets hot.
Hiroshima article: Lots of craptastic revisionist comments there. Poor widdle Japanese Empire.
The cardboard cloud reminds me of the digital clouds in Tron. I guess it’s a result of my living in a digital age that I see the boxes as pixels rather than something natural.