twinsfawn:

baby i could treat you so good you just have to get past my strange and off-putting demeanor and my kubrick stare and my inability to behave like a human and the 40 layers of icy fortress walls i have up and answer my riddles three

lonely-space-ace:

What really ticks me off when talking about ai is when people are like “it’s unavoidable” or “you’ll have to learn to use it someday” or “its going to be part of the future” like no it’s plenty avoidable actually if you have a spine stronger than a dandelion. You simply say “no” and continue to use your own goddamn brain.

insertunknownreferencehere:

being able to play songs in your head is cool and all but not really if you can’t control what and when it plays so this is a visualization of me trying to concentrate while angel of music plays in my head

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the-haiku-bot:

passionpeachy:

went to homegoods. they got summerween stuff up. look at this creature

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went to homegoods.

they got summerween stuff up.

look at this creature

Beep boop! I look for accidental haiku posts. Sometimes I mess up.

sun-moon-stars-jedi:

stele3:

decepticonsensual:

booksandchainmail:

voxette-vk:

dagny-hashtaggart:

I feel like a lot of people don’t quite get what a butler is. The role tends to get rounded off to ‘male servant’ pretty regularly in some media, whereas actually butlers are typically not just servants but chief servants. The butler was generally in charge of either all male servants or just all servants, period, in the household of an aristocrat or other very wealthy person. This meant that butlers have often been fairly powerful and influential people, and sometimes even had a manservant or two of their own.

(Also, fun fact: Mary Roberts Rinehart, the early 20th century mystery writer who is widely credited with popularizing the whole ‘the butler did it’ trope was nearly murdered by one of her own servants, a chef whom she had passed over for promotion to butler. He came at her with a pistol, but it jammed, allowing her chauffeur time to wrestle it away and restrain him.)

You didn’t answer the key question things brings up: did she popularize the trope before or after the would-be butler tried to kill her?

according to wikipedia, before

There’s something glorious about the fact that the author who popularised “the butler did it” had a servant who a) failed to become the butler and then b) failed to do it.

If he’d been butler material, he’d have finished the job.

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(via iwasrightaboutthesun)


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