21,384 notes
posted 1 day ago (® heart)
[Flash 10 is required to watch video]

t-rawwskinnyniggabigballs:

lickmyjuicee:

khaillou:

literallysame:

this is the world we live in

I love this world

Lol..dog rides a bike.. but i cant. Wellp, this is embarrassing haha.

That’s kinda creepy

30,425 notes
posted 2 days ago (® arianazolciaksbelly)
3,327 notes
posted 2 days ago (® 4sking4lexandria)
72,741 notes
posted 2 days ago (® camillenium)

partycrocanthem:

the best thing about the internet is that eye contact doesnt exist 

12,314 notes
posted 3 days ago (® partycrocanthem)
did-you-kno:

Source
6,071 notes
posted 3 days ago (® did-you-kno)
2,192 notes
posted 3 days ago (® rachellrosales)
29,188 notes
posted 3 days ago (® d3ssins)
814 notes
posted 1 week ago (® stikoeater)
superheronights:

Hey, Who Ripped Open a Hole in the Universe?

This eerie patch of blackness in the middle of a busy star cluster may look like a rather misshapen black hole, but it’s actually something even stranger. It’s also quite possibly the loneliest, darkest, coldest place in the entire cosmos.
This is Barnard 68, and it’s what’s known as a dark molecular cloud. Basically, the dust and gas that makes up Barnard 68 is so tightly packed together that it blocks out all the light behind it. The result might look like some alien civilization tore apart the fabric of the universe and opening up a gateway to the howling void, but thankfully - or unfortunately, I guess, depending on how you feel about the howling void - it’s just gas. Make that a lot of gas.
Here’s some additional info on this particular patch of darkness:
Read More

superheronights:

Hey, Who Ripped Open a Hole in the Universe?

This eerie patch of blackness in the middle of a busy star cluster may look like a rather misshapen black hole, but it’s actually something even stranger. It’s also quite possibly the loneliest, darkest, coldest place in the entire cosmos.

This is Barnard 68, and it’s what’s known as a dark molecular cloud. Basically, the dust and gas that makes up Barnard 68 is so tightly packed together that it blocks out all the light behind it. The result might look like some alien civilization tore apart the fabric of the universe and opening up a gateway to the howling void, but thankfully - or unfortunately, I guess, depending on how you feel about the howling void - it’s just gas. Make that a lot of gas.

Here’s some additional info on this particular patch of darkness:

Read More

7,952 notes
posted 1 week ago (® thenewenlightenmentage)