photo

Want/need, immediately. If not sooner.

Want/need, immediately. If not sooner.

(via i-am-the-oracular-spectacular)

photos

Watching reality TV

whatshouldwecallme:

Some people:

Me:

photos

When I quit my job I watched 5 seasons of Lost in a week. I’m still amazed and embarrassed.

(via l0vinglyric)

When I order something online but it won’t get here for a few days
video

latenightjimmy:

Brian WIlliams Raps Snoop Dogg: The video you didn’t know you needed in your life

(via popculturebrain)

(Source: soupsoup, via popculturebrain)

photo

This is magnificent.

This is magnificent.

(Source: amandaonwriting, via l0vinglyric)

photo

Always reblog

Always reblog

(Source: myinkblots, via i-am-the-oracular-spectacular)

photo

npr:

Unlike many celebrity chefs, who treat cooking like some mystical and convoluted ritual, Ina Garten (The Barefoot Countessa) approaches each dish with the nonchalance of someone who could be doing something else. That’s because she could be. Between 1974 and 1978, Garten worked in the Office of Management and Budget at the White House; starting in 1976, she was responsible for the budget of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and for part of the Department of Energy’s. How Garten went from analyzing nuclear policy to overseeing her own cooking empire is one of the unlikelier stories of American reinvention.
— How Ina Garten went from nuclear policy analyst to beloved chef. Mark Joseph Stern - Second Acts - Slate Hive
Photo: Therealbs2002/Wikipedia

INA, YOU TRICKY B. I knew you had tricks up your sleeve. 

npr:

Unlike many celebrity chefs, who treat cooking like some mystical and convoluted ritual, Ina Garten (The Barefoot Countessa) approaches each dish with the nonchalance of someone who could be doing something else. That’s because she could be. Between 1974 and 1978, Garten worked in the Office of Management and Budget at the White House; starting in 1976, she was responsible for the budget of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and for part of the Department of Energy’s. How Garten went from analyzing nuclear policy to overseeing her own cooking empire is one of the unlikelier stories of American reinvention.

How Ina Garten went from nuclear policy analyst to beloved chef. Mark Joseph Stern - Second Acts - Slate Hive

Photo: Therealbs2002/Wikipedia

INA, YOU TRICKY B. I knew you had tricks up your sleeve.