insp:
LOVE THIS.
Reblogged from insp with 30 notes / Like/Reblog /
visual. information. data. data visualization.
oh god
Oh dear.
(Source: zachmp)
Reblogged from notthatimthinkingaboutbutts with 718 notes / Like/Reblog /
The Office Season 4 Episode 4 - Money
(Source: jvxke)
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So you do a lot of investing?
Cakes
really? I thought they were pizzas
The top one though. Do-over on my wedding. That’s what I’m thinking
(Source: themadmaninabluebox)
Reblogged from notthatimthinkingaboutbutts with 76,468 notes / Like/Reblog /
April 2, 1954: A couple is photographed moments after learning that their 19-month-old child had been swept out to sea. That morning, Times photographer Jack Gaunt was at his home when he heard a neighbor shout, “Something’s happening on the beach!” Gaunt grabbed his Rolliflex camera and headed toward the shoreline. His photograph appeared on the front page of The Times the next day. The image won the 1955 Pulitzer Prize for press photography; the Pulitzer committee called the photo “poignant and profoundly moving.” But for Gaunt, the image was hard to bear at first, his daughter recalled in Gaunt’s 2007 Times obituary.
Reblogged from yuugao with 8,605 notes / Like/Reblog /
April 2, 1954: A couple is photographed moments after learning that their 19-month-old child had been swept out to sea. That morning, Times photographer Jack Gaunt was at his home when he heard a neighbor shout, “Something’s happening on the beach!” Gaunt grabbed his Rolliflex camera and headed toward the shoreline. His photograph appeared on the front page of The Times the next day. The image won the 1955 Pulitzer Prize for press photography; the Pulitzer committee called the photo “poignant and profoundly moving.” But for Gaunt, the image was hard to bear at first, his daughter recalled in Gaunt’s 2007 Times obituary.
Reblogged from yuugao with 8,605 notes / Like/Reblog /
(Source: whatatragedy)
Reblogged from growupidratherthrowup with 254 notes / Like/Reblog /
parks and recreation. nick offerman. rob lowe. ron swanson. chris traeger. my gif.
Follow this blog, it cured polio. Ok not really, but it could have…
(Source: drake-ramoray)
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No matter how many times I see this, the last two lines always take my breath away
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