this is the funniest picture i have ever seen

thank you, church of satan. you make more sense than anyone these days.
Thanks Satan
So I was playing around with some new brushes and this happened
Hey yo this is the first bit original art I’ve posted on my new, separarate, art blog (I’ve put some of the old stuff I’m proud of there) for anyone who followed me just for art, it gonna all be there and that blog will be just art. For people who didn’t follow just for art, I’m still gonna reblog the new stuff on this blog, this just makes it both more convenient for me and other people.
i’m getting ready to update my wardrobe! i just need a
jat

jlasses

jloves

and
jarf

i’m sorry this is a formal occasion you will either need a
jie

or a
jallgown

time to break out my

juit
don’t forget you

jankerchief
We’re gonna be late hop in the

jar
This is junforgivable
don’t forget your

jurse
or your

jumps.
if you get bored you bring your

every time this post come back to my dash is more and more horrendous
Let me tell you about

Looks like just another AMC Gremlin, yeah? Well, notice the Levi’s logo on the front fender just behind the wheel well, and you know that when you get in this car, you’re in for something very… special.



Your eyes are not deceiving you. The seats and the trunk are upholstered in GENUINE LEVI’S DENIM, complete with bronze stitching. This is not some ironic custom job from recent times, either; this was a real option offered by AMC in 1973.

And people thought it was a good idea, even!
JEATS
Thats it, close the meme. It’s all done
This fucking post haunts me every time I wear jeans
This post was made by the Best Jeanist
I had the unique opportunity to visit the inside of Box 5 at the Palais Garnier in Paris, France, also known as the official box of the phantom of the opera.
And though there wasn’t much time I managed at least to take some photos I’m happy to share with you here.
Can I talk for a moment about visual storytelling, cause, I feel like it’s something that a lot of adaptations forget about in lieu of trying to replicate their source material.
It’s a problem you see most often in anime derived from manga or light novels, but it’s also present in movies based on YA novels, and you gotta know what I’m talking about, start on black, opening narration, fade in as the main character explains the world and environment. This works in a book since the reader can’t see anything, they need the specifics of the world explained, but it feels like the movies are just like “well it worked for the book, it’ll work for us right?
I’d say it’s worse in anime, where characters will go on long internal soliloquies trying to explain their thought processes and complex emotions, which again, works for the manga, in a manga movement is very expensive, every single motion requires it’s own panel, which takes up the artist’s time, printed space, and a moment in the narrative, so it’s important to only show what absolutely needs to be shown. But animation is different, it’s all movement and the details are what sells it more than the dialogue.
The reason I wanted to make this post is because of one scene in One Punch Man that perfectly exemplifies how to translate a written thought process into visual storytelling. After getting punched to the moon (err, spoilers), Saitama has this thought process

and it’d be easy to translate that entirely literally in the anime, Saitama crouches, has an internal monologue as he tries to figure out how much force he needs to put into his jump, and then he launches. Instead though, the scene is done completely silently, to sell the fact that he’s in space, but the thought process isn’t removed, it’s just show visually.

He throws a bit of moon rock to gauge the moon’s gravity, then launches, it’s a much more thoughtful approach to the scene and the audience’s ability to interpret visual information.
I just, really wish more adaptations realized the inherent strength of the visual medium instead of relying entirely on the source material’s structure and reliance on its own medium.
It’s here.
The cover art for the bluray has blatant spoilers which means I’ll have to hide it from my future kids when I binge watch it with them.