Bruk and Pauperized
76.2K posts

Bruk and Pauperized
@Shadziipoo
#AbortionStandJA. #FreePalestine. Wife to @I_AM_LEE. Muva of 2. Accountant. Foodie. Jamaican 🇯🇲.







Critically watch this video. Look at the detailing. Watch his every moves. Watch his every aura displayed. Spot his energy levels and intense coordination of this dude called Jaafar Jackson. And some people here will come and tell me this dude learnt all these within 2 years pre-production of the movie?🎥 There is something called Legacy Grooming. There is no way, I’ll be in the Jackson’s family and I won’t study, watch, read every gadem articles about MICHAEL JACKSON. This dude has been grooming himself way back 2014 even before Graham King got the right to display the Biopic of MJ. Know this and know peace ✌️ #MichaelMovie

Roughly a billion people have seen this photograph. Almost none of them knew it was real. It’s the default wallpaper on Windows XP. Green rolling hills, bright blue sky, a few thin clouds. For two decades, most people assumed it was a computer-generated image or something digitally painted. It wasn’t. In January 1996, a former National Geographic photographer named Charles O’Rear was driving through the countryside in California, USA, to visit his girlfriend. A storm had just passed. The winter rains had made the grass unusually green. He noticed a hill on the side of the road that had recently been cleared of grapevines because of a pest infestation. He pulled over, set up his camera on a tripod, took a few pictures, and kept driving. It wasn’t edited. No Photoshop. No colour enhancement. That’s what the hill actually looked like. He sold it to a stock photo agency for a modest fee. Years later, Microsoft bought the full rights for somewhere in the low six figures. Getting the original film to Microsoft was the strange part. The package was worth so much that not a single courier company would ship it. They all refused. Microsoft eventually bought Charles a plane ticket and had him hand-deliver the film himself. They renamed the photo “Bliss.” Windows XP launched in 2001. Within a few years, it was on nearly every computer on earth. Journalists now speculate it may be the most-viewed photograph in human history. The hill is still there. Grapevines grew back over it years ago. Every so often, someone drives past and catches it when the vines have been cleared for the season, and for a few days, it looks exactly like the picture again.




















