Nyan Cat, performed by an orchestra.
Perks Trailer!!
OH MY GOD I’M SCREAMING
Things you do not say to an asexual
- how do you know you don’t want sex you’ve never had it
- it’s just a phase
- grow up
- your hormones just haven’t kicked it yet
- ‘prude’
- you must fear sex
- you just haven’t met the right person
- so do you split in half?
- you are in denial
- asexuality doesn’t exist
A’capella cover, huh… we’ll see about th… …
He’s all

And you are still

- Final school bell rings
- Me: YEAH! I'm going to do so much this summer!
- The next day...
- *click*
- *click*
- *scroll*
- *eat*
- *click*
- Me: Now what...
In its second recent act of LGBT-inclusive advertising, retailer JC Penney featured a real gay couple in an ad booklet for Father’s Day.
Last month for Mother’s Day, the store included a photo of two moms and their kids. Now they’ve done the same kind of spotlight with two dads:
The booklet, being mailed to customers and also available at the JC Penney website, has a picture of gay couple Todd Koch and Cooper Smith with their children, Claire and Mason, and copy reading, “What makes Dad so cool? He’s the swim coach, tent maker, best friend, bike fixer and hug giver — all rolled into one. Or two.”
JC Penney is rapidly becoming my new favorite store.
Hackers turned MIT’s Green Building into a giant, playable, and multi-color Tetris game. A console allowed players to move, rotate, and drop blocks.
The Green Building (Building 54) is home to the MIT Earth and Planetary Sciences department.
MIT hackers have long considered “Tetris on the Green Building” to be the Holy Grail of hacks, as the side of the building is a wonderful grid for the game.
The game started off scrolling the words “TETRIS” and then would start into the first level. As the player progressed, the second level would start with more pale colors, making it harder to identify the type of block. The third level involved the colors shifting on-screen. Upon losing the game, all of the blocks would fall to the bottom of the building.




