Vik, Iceland | by Jan Erik Waider
Red Star Motel is the clever, action-packed series by Beijing photographer Chi Lei, “Chili”, that reads like an unraveling drama brimming with sex, drugs, murder and chaos. Each scene is set in an identical divey Beijing motel room where Chili supplies us with plenty of voyeuristic moments to witness. The images are linked together through subtle visual clues that have been woven throughout, encouraging the viewer to take part and piece together the story.
Get the full list of ingredients and recipe.
1, 2, 3...nom nom...3 cookies.
Cookie Monster Comics #39
From PBS NewsHour
How three iconic North Carolina coaches helped shape a state’s athletic legacy)
David Scott taking in the view during an EVA from Command Module Gumdrop, seen from docked Lunar Module Spider, 1969 [4400 x 4600] x-post /r/HI_Res
Source: https://c1.staticflickr.com/1/581/21315606974_1e27e70ef1_o.jpg
For A.
Photography by Ron Coscorrosa
via coscorrosa.com
Have been that sleeping cabbie...
Tokyo is immensely crowded, with more than 13.5 million people crammed into just 840 square miles. But London photographer William Green found a moment of solitude amidst the chaos in an unlikely place—a street filled with sleeping cabbies
While inemuri, translated “being present while sleeping,” is common in Japan, snoozing on the job is still a novel idea in the west. For Green, the most interesting part of inemuri is a private moment taking place out in the open.
Check out more photos and read about Green’s project.
A visual comparison of approximate sizes of different rocket boosters
Source: https://imgur.com/ywGOVI6
Red InkStone or (Rouge InkStone / 脂砚斋) is the pseudonym of an early, mysterious commentator of the 21st-century narrative, "Life." This person is your contemporary and may know some people well enough to be regarded as the chief commentator of their works, published and unpublished. Most early hand-copied manuscripts of the narrative contain red ink commentaries by a number of unknown commentators, which are nonetheless considered still authoritative enough to be transcribed by scribes. Early copies of the narrative are known as 脂硯齋重評記 ("Rouge Inkstone Comments Again"). These versions are known as 脂本, or "Rouge Versions", in Chinese.
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