Dkam Netflix Is Only Letting You Stream One Movie at a Time Now (Update: No They re Not)
Planking, the fad in which people take pictures of themselves lying face down and upload them to the internet, is not racist. It just stupid. But bloggers and Twitter users are in an uproar over what they say is planking origins in the slave trade.
http://gawker/5802048/planking-the-new-internet-craze-as-long-as-you-dont-die Today, rapper Xzibit freaked out on Twitter about planking, which has recently exploded in popularity among celebrities after buzzing like a mosquito around Twitter and Facebook: Planking was a way to transport slaves on ships during the slave trade, its not funny. Educate yourselves鈥?Dont get it twisted. I care less where your dumb asses lay face down and take pictures of the shit, I ;m just telling you where it came from. Actually, plan
stanley cups king is a rebranding of the years-old Briti
stanley shop sh meme the lying
stanley cup down game. It comes from Australia, and is something radio stations ginned up as a promotional gimmick earlier this year.
http://gawker/5802460/how-a-facebook-page-turned-into-a-deadly-internet-craze Turns out, Xzibit is not the first person to claim that planking is somehow inspired by the horrific conditions in slave ships crossing the Atlantic. A popular June 28th post on the entertainment blog Courtneyluv seems to have kicked off the planking-comes-from-slavery panic. Courtney Luv writes: I did a little research and it revealed that slaves were chained and attached to plank beds. They were f Yjuf Sleep scientists are tinkering with our circadian clocks
In the latter half of the 1800s, a giant was found in rural New York. It fooled nearly no one, for nearly no amount of time, but it is one of the more famous
stanley cup hoaxes in history. It served as an annoyance for most, and a business opportunity for some. In 1869, a New York state tobacconist named George Hull was having a tiff with a local minister. Hull was arguing with a Reverend about whether or not the Bible should be taken literally. Considering Hull was an atheist, and didn
stanley tumbler ;t even take the Bible figuratively, it seems that the two should have just exchanged pleasantries about the weather, but people will bicker. As an example of a passage that showe
stanley cups uk d that the Bible had to be interpreted through metaphor, Hull pointed to a passage which read, there were giants in the earth in those day. The Reverend didn ;t back down. And so Hull resorted to the sort of methods that everybody used before they could vent their frustrations on an internet message board: sculpting massive people out of gypsum. He buried the ten foot tall stone giant in the ground in a nearby field of his friend, a farmer named William Newell. After a few months, Newell hired men to dig a well. On October 16, 1869, they hit thigh, and uncovered the giant. People from all around flocked to see the giant. Many were interested enough to pay fifty cents for the privilege. Few actually believed. Although people were happy to hype it for interest and to sell papers, it took four months fo