Supposedly, this has been confirmed as "not a hoax," so enjoy guessing what the heck this is. There's some crazy sewer monster slithering around in the sewers of North Carolina. Reminds me of Hedorah the Smog Monster from Godzilla.
WARNING: The video in this link is nasty. It might be more than some can handle. A bit gooey, and gross.
Monday, July 20, 2009
Monday, July 13, 2009
giANT pov
Whoa. That's all. Whoa.
I love my bugs and insects. That's why I have to share this. Gigapan view of ant. I'm impressed.
Now we know what they'll look like when they take over the world :)
I love my bugs and insects. That's why I have to share this. Gigapan view of ant. I'm impressed.
Now we know what they'll look like when they take over the world :)
Friday, July 3, 2009
Ants take over the Earth
I for one welcome our new insect overlords :P
BBC Earth News reports a world-wide mega-colony of ants. Chatter indicates they plan to disrupt picnics around the world!
Vampire misinformation
As part of our misinformation campaign, we vampires have saturated the entertainment industry with various legends and lore regarding our existence. Have fun trying to figure out how we really turn you, and how we really devour you, and whether there really is any hope in destroying us. Have fun with that.
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Click here for USA Today's entertaining study on the rules of vampirism.
Labels:
Angel,
anti-vambite,
blood,
entertainment,
legends,
True Blood,
Twilight,
vampire slayer,
vampires
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
Attack of the Killer Repost
I'm not stealing this link.
I'm not plagiarizing this post.
Thank you, Gawker for a rational perspective on what amounts to being the newspaper industry's death throws. In a modern world, no one will likely read a single publication from cover to cover. It's more likely readers will find places that pull similar type stories in one place for a theme.
Fans of strange and freaky news and blogs, please continue to read My blog for my best finds across the interwebs. All others, prosecute me. I'm already undead.
I'm not plagiarizing this post.
Thank you, Gawker for a rational perspective on what amounts to being the newspaper industry's death throws. In a modern world, no one will likely read a single publication from cover to cover. It's more likely readers will find places that pull similar type stories in one place for a theme.
Fans of strange and freaky news and blogs, please continue to read My blog for my best finds across the interwebs. All others, prosecute me. I'm already undead.
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