I can now not look at Rahm Emanuel and not think of Ramen thanks to this website.
[Via]
I can now not look at Rahm Emanuel and not think of Ramen thanks to this website.
[Via]
From the Internet time capsule, here's Michael Jordan hanging out with Kid 'n Play, and The Fresh Prince and Jazzy Jeff.
From an interesting interview with chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten in Wall Street Journal:
I can't sleep without a piece of chocolate in my mouth. I know it's not good for my teeth, but I've gone to sleep with chocolate since I was four years old, and I can't go to sleep without it. I let it melt in my mouth, and I have sweet dreams, every night.
As David Cho said this guy might living the ideal wife:
Respek.
As widely and casually as the word "terrorism" and "terrorist" is tossed around, there is no single consensus definition on what it actually is within the international community or the US government [Gottlieb, Stuart. "Terrorism and Counterterrorism." Columbia University.]. Apparently, the business sector also employs their own pejorative definition of what constitutes a terrorist.
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The cold weather today in New York City is AUDI this world.
The above frozen Audi was spotted recently on 2nd Street between 1st and 2nd Avenue
My new favorite show is the weekly live cam (hosted by Livestream) over at Conan O'Brien's office which airs every Friday at 2 PM EST. Today's show featured the Lady Gaga cleaning crew, Ricky Gervais, a human pinball game and more!



Pamela Johnson, Cup Noodle
I really like this photo by Terry Richardson.
And hungry.
Speaking of bacon, y'all need to get the bacon at Fatty 'Cue. It is too legit to quit.
http://twitter.com/#!/TheOnion/status/27908183028662272
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UvAQ2Q4zKro&feature=player_embedded] I saw BLUE VALENTINE this weekend. The highlight of the film was hearing this song: "You and Me," by Penny and the Quarters.
The MTA is now permitting love on the subways (or at least the L Train). That's great, but how about lower fares instead?
[vimeo=http://vimeo.com/15224130] Lipstick Enigma creates sentences using 1200 lipsticks, by Janet Zweig with Franklyn Berry for the Harris Engineering Center at the University of Central Florida.
This computer-driven sentence-generator, using rules and lexicon written by the artist, invents and writes a new line of text, and displays it on the sign when triggered by a motion detector. The sentences mix the language of engineering with the language of beauty advertising.