Today while wandering I saw something I haven’t seen in the last 10 years of living in New York. A metal cement company signature. Growing up if my brother and I saw one we would step on them and then punch each other.
Kraang!
“If my calculations are correct, when this baby hits 88 miles per hour… you’re gonna see some serious shit. “
One of the greatest trilogies of all time.
So fun.
Watercolor and ink on 5.5x8.5 inch watercolor paper
Original painting (and many others) for sale at my Etsy store…
http://www.etsy.com/shop/ScottChristianSava
Thank you for sharing your brilliance with us.
Rest in Peace
Trick Shot QB of the Day: Alex Tanney, the Division III quarterback whose trick shot viral video rivals only that of Johnny Mac, has earned a spot at the Buffalo Bills’ mini-camp, which begins Friday.
“I’m from a small school,” Tanney said. “And the only thing I’ve ever really wanted was an opportunity to get into a camp. And now I have that in Buffalo.”
[dailydot]
Tie Wednesday
May 2nd, 2012
Free Yankees tickets edition
Back to the Future and Lego, the nerdiest part of my brain just exploded.
via Gizmodo
Brooklyn Nets logo, “The new identity was designed with the help of rapper and Nets co-owner Jay-Z and Adidas.”
At 28 I’m still putting stickers on things. This is my light table at work featuring two EatSleepDraw stickers, one from Kid Robot, a vintage Highlights or Kids dinosaur and Mr. Met.
The Invisible Borders That Define American Culture
One of the clearest regional differences in the U.S. can found by tracking the words people use to refer to soft drinks, which is in fact the map you saw at the top of this story. Pop or soda, or even Coke, these small linguistic differences are not as small as we might think. While “soda” commands the Northeast and West Coast (green) and “pop” is in between (black), “Coke” reigns in the south (turquoise). These small distinctions can often act as touchstones for larger cultural differences.
Read more. [Image: Samuel Arbesman]
(via npr)