1. ifswagwasacrime:

    ruinedchildhood:

    Getting your stimulus check like…

    Reblog for good luck

    (via spongebobssquarepants)

     
  2. mylittlesanity:

    thoteisha:

    ivorythephilosopher:

    stephenraygarza:

    honeysuckle-princess:

    this is the 2016 apology post. reblog in 45 seconds and 2016 will apologize to you in the form of money.

    not risking it.

    Not even scrolling past it

    I deserve an apology smh

    i was gonna scroll past once i saw 2016 but then i read it lol

    (via laughtime)

     
  3. note-a-bear:

    renxiaoyao:

    boiburokka:

    rami just ran by in front of my car lmfao

    this cryptid 

    This is the lucky Rami, reblog in 30 seconds for a year of safe driving

    (via spongebobssquarepants)

     
  4.  

  5. teal-fruit:

    teal-fruit:

    teal-fruit:

    teal-fruit:

    I’m making bread

    image

    bread boys

    image
    image

    my sons!

    image

    THEY’RE DELICIOUS

    image

    frog bread was tagged explicit. reblog the forbidden frog bread for luck and power

    (via princesss-13-deactivated2019031)

     
  6. enecoo:

    This is the payday meowth, reblog in the next 24 hours and money will come your way!!

    (via spongebobssquarepants)

     

  7. showerthoughtsofficial:

    ‘Kobe’ is for accuracy, ‘Yeet’ is for distance.

    (Source: reddit.com, via princesss-13-deactivated2019031)

     
  8. darksilenceinsuburbia:

    Maria Qamar

    In a world of fast-growing multiculturalism, the line between appreciation and appropriation of cultures steadily blurs. As far back as 2003, Gwen Stefani donned a bindi in No Doubt’s “Just a Girl” music video, and stars have been following suit ever since. Both Selena Gomez andM.I.A have come under fire in recent times for cultural tourism in their music videos, the latter being forced to scrap hers altogether. In the mainstream, cultural appropriation is perhaps most obvious by the sheer number of bindi-adorned girls at music festivals like Coachella and Lollapalooza. Asian, black, Native American and other marginalised groups are persistently having their cultures appropriated by those who feel entitled to it, thereby perpetuating a harmful power dynamic.

    With everyone from actress Zendaya to fashion designer Dries Van Noten weighing in with an opinion, one self-defined ‘Desi artist’ (where Desi means a person of Indian, Pakistani or Bangladeshi origin who lives abroad) encompasses all aspects of her culture ­– not just the shiny, pretty sticker for your forehead. Born in Pakistan, Maria Qamar of @hatecopy moved to Canada as a child. A natural artist, she began to depict the realities of growing up in two cultures in pop art and posted the results on her Instagram, rapidly gaining a following as other Desi women – myself included – identify with her bittersweet truths. (text by  Nadia Husen)

    instagram

    (via estrella-fuego)

     
  9. theblacktroymcclure:

    mahjongnookulus:

    Wrestling isn’t fake.

    Lmaooo this nigga said enough of this suplex shit and grabbed the blicky out the underoos

    (via imsoshive)

     
  10.  
  11. Hi. I’m displaying work here on Saturday. Come through to network, show face, or to see a face you haven’t seen in a while (mine). Link in bio for more info
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    I’m not vending 👹🤘🏿
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    #ArtHansen #CallMeHansen #EarsUp #MeydayHansen #Art #sketch #doodle #miamiartist #artist #miami #music #drawings #illustrator #l4l #illustration #graphicdesign #model #artlife #wynwood #abstract #fashion #illustagram #flyer #promo