It’s a Solomon Burke kind of morning.
Sunday AM Soundtrack from a friend back home @royalwood From his upcoming album “We were Born to Glory”.
(Source: twixiesuicide, via itwasthebassthatgotme)
Haven’t issued a Sunday Soundtrack in a while. Glad Girls by @GBVTweets @Lauraalbers this one’s for you today.
(Source: Spotify)
Gotye vs Notorious BIG. SIIIIICK.
Where the fuck is THIS? I want to wake up everyday to THIS. Who can make THIS happen for me?
(Source: vanilla-diamond, via cinabrio)
Hey foodie. Let’s see if you can man up to my roots. Balut. #Philippines
When I grow up, I want to make one of these and does this.
(Source: viniciusbarbieri, via ruinedchildhood)
Why I love NPR. Challenge everything.
npr:
What’s a durable good? Also: Why does it matter?
Durable goods, as the name suggests, are things that don’t break easily. More specifically, they’re products that are used for more than three years.
Planes, trains and cars: durable goods. The chair you’re sitting on: durable good.
The carpet beneath your feet: not a durable good, despite the fact that most people keep carpet for more than three years. Carpet, clothing, and other fabrics aren’t durable goods.
Some of the distinctions are pretty arbitrary. A wine glass is a durable good, unless it’s made of plastic.
In general, though, durable goods tend to be more expensive items, and they tend to be the kind of purchases people and companies can postpone in a pinch.
If I buy a steak (not durable) it may just mean I’m hungry. But if I drop $500 on a fancy new gas grill (durable) to cook my steak, it suggests I feel pretty good about my economic prospects. -Robert Smith and Zoe Chace
That picture of the steak though…yum!
I REALLY hope this actually becomes the next @AngryBirds. I would fire these little feathered terrors all day at @ladygaga
(Source: 2pretty4jail, via ruinedchildhood)
Yeah, what this says.
(Source: concretedream)
Whatchya up to? Nothing. Just chillin’.
@Vice #Creators Project #SF

