My friend Kevin has a picture of a lightning bolt as his G-chat picture.
- me: dude, I love weather too
- i love how its so unpredictable
- great gchat pic man!
- Kevin: kill you
Looking for an apartment is troubling.
I’m on a couch. Tonight I will spend my eighth night on a pleather sectional in Burbank, California. I haven’t awoke with my face stuck to a cow so often since my ill-fated stint at fat camp. I mean, but really — did they expect me to leave my Hydroxy-Cut at home?
So naturally, I’m motivated to find my own spread to hang my hat. And my erotic squirrel photography. But I’m discouraged. Some of these types are not fit for roommates. I stayed for 75 minutes at the house of an aging realty lawyer with a five-inch-long soul patch. He had chosen a satanic theme for his living room, including a framed caricature of a pitbull with a throbbing penis and several horned candle holders. We talked about Ralph Lauren, Pinkberry, Russians vs. Armenians, cats and boating. He said he was hopped up on tea; I’m figuring it was some other herbal concoction.
Friday I was introduced to an aging hippie whose primary source of income was selling Beta fish from his living room. Figuring prominently among said living room’s furniture were weathered beanbags and a wooden television console. Before I could see the room, I had to wait for the current toady tenant to rouse from her bed with her shirtless, birthmarked boyfriend. It looked like his armpit hair was tonguing his nipple. I have to live with that image. I inferred that they’d be moving in together. Hopefully by splitting rent she can afford that neck she’s always wanted.
I want to move in somewhere soon, and to be honest, I could tolerate the aforementioned situations. However, my family could not. And as I’m everybody’s favorite sibling, I’d be hard-pressed to stretch excuses out for the minimum six months necessary to spare my sister(s) of an engorged canine cock or massive pink and purple bong. So try not to call me picky.
You know, when I get back there, I’m going to show you something called crouching tiger, hidden penis. I like that movie because of the flying and the magic.
Does anyone else feel bad about listening to Chris Brown on their ipod? Eh, no use beating yourself up about it.
Buzzer-Beater of the
DayEntire Span Of Human History: With .5 seconds left on the clock, Oklahoma high school kid beats the buzzer with the shot of a lifetime.[via.]
When Oprah dies, the world, bereft of one of it’s most charismatic leaders, descends into anarchy and chaos. A solitary traveler attempts to put the shattered pieces together again, but puts them together wrong, which can only mean doom for us all.
Shot by Jonathan Nicholas. Starring Clay Dzygun, CJ Meeks, Nick Rallo, Chris Cantwell, Matt Wyatt, Sean Bury, and Chelsea Bradshaw. We have an even bigger cast and crew list but it would just take way too long to list, please check out Oprah is Dead.com for a detailed list of credits. Also, huge thanks to Aaron Weber who designed Oprah is Dead.com, Mike Parker for designing the poster, and Christina Haberkern for letting us use your house and basically taking over your life for a week and last but not least, Ian Friedman for giving us the opportunity to do this.
This project has been a dream of ours for years and we are ecstatic that we get to share it with you now. If you could re-blog, “like” and/or DIGG that would be most appreciative. Thank you.
Holy crap. The latest and greatest from TTA is dark, funny and epic.
DAILY WHAT!!! MOM!!1! WE DID IT!!!!
But seriously, thanks DW.
After School Special: There is a subtle genius to Graduates, the debut effort from Here’s To Productions.
The plot formula—three grad school friends and their shenanigans—is familiar; the physical comedy—obligatory vomit scene, check—is borrowed; yet the result is far from contrived. Graduates’ ability to constantly stay one step ahead of being a tired rehash of an Animal House spin-off is all in the chemistry.
The success of most shows lies not necessarily in the originality of their concepts, but far more often in the authenticity we attribute to the interactions among their characters. In Graduates, buddies John, Cameron, and Gus share a camaraderie that is instantly recognizable and relatable. Their dialogs might as well have been adapted from real conversations that took place in the lives of the scriptwriters. Ultimately you’re rooting for them because you are them.
That’s textbook staying power.
(Also: It doesn’t hurt to cast CHTV’s Josh Ruben and David Futernick in lead roles. Just saying.)