saritasara
saritasara
saritasara

When I was a kid (and my mom wasn't looking) I used to just pour some chocolate Teddy Grahams and milk in a bowl and eat those as cereal.

Best part, the one official statement Baldwin's spokesperson has to make after the whole "insident" is: "He loves 'Words with Friends' so much that he was willing to leave a plane for it"

dude, that's not extreme. *this* is extreme!

According to my dad, one time when he was a kid his family made a trip into NYC for dinner. With 6 kids (tho there were only 5 at the time) I guess sometimes it's hard to keep track of them all. So his parents loaded everyone up in the car but somehow ended up driving off and leaving my dad's brother behind on the

Good, I'm glad I'm not the only one wondering why the fairy's boobs had to be so darn big. Especially with those camera angles... I mean really?!

ah yes, Christmas cake! tho given the increasing numbers of women who choose not to marry until late, word is that we ladies have now been given a reprieve until "New Year's cake." ;-p

reminds me of the heartwarming Japanese film they made a few years ago about a young female teacher who takes over the lazy-ass boys' volleyball team and decides that clearly, the only way to motivate them is to make a promise that she'll show them her boobs if they make the championship.

"All really, really good Christmas movies (I think) have one thing in common. And that is, [the notion that] the whole idea and the whole ethos of Christmas is in danger."

dude, forget that! *this* is the best star wars/japan mashup ad campaign!

it's a total showpiece for the studio, basically. i work in an animation studio and it totally boggles my mind to think of all the work that had to go into making her hair move like that...

Amazing!

Ugh, this article has been bugging me since I first read it in the NYT. I live in Japan, and it's true that yaeba are generally seen as endearingly awkward/imperfect, so most people don't bother to get them fixed. (Orthodontia, not such a big industry here)

This article really bugged me when I read it on the NYT. I live in Japan, and it's definitely true that yaeba are considered endearingly awkward and imperfect, so the vast majority of people do not bother to get them fixed (orthodontia is not such a big industry here...)