

rye 🌾
464 posts

@ryelithic
🌵 21 he it ⚰️✨🪦🪱 artist ❤️🩹💭 ic: A123B77



Like a grand and miraculous spaceship, our planet has sailed through the universe of time. Earth as seen from Artemis II.

So I officially crashed out over this Blood Moon event yesterday and I asked my friends on if this is valid reaction. Here's me going off! Killer mains, best believe I do not care if you tunnel, but for the love of god stand on fucking business!

Just picked up my son from elementary school and was blown away that ZERO parents or kids were aware of the Artemis II launch. Have we lost complete interest in space travel?


“pokemon designs should take specific cultural inspiration from the part of the world their region is based on” meanwhile cofagrigus in new york:

Trump: We can't take care of daycare. We're a big country, we have 50 states, all these people, we're fighting wars. It's not possible for us to take care of daycare, Medicaid, Medicare, all these things

A Stanford study found that people who played Pokémon heavily as kids developed a small region of the brain that responds specifically to Pokémon characters. Researchers scanned adults who grew up playing on Game Boy and showed them images of Pokémon like Pikachu and Bulbasaur. Their brains lit up in the same exact spot, a consistent area in the visual cortex tied to recognizing specific categories of objects. The reason comes down to childhood. When you’re young, your brain is more flexible, and spending hours memorizing hundreds of similar-looking Pokémon essentially trained it to carve out space just for them. (via @Stanford)


A Stanford study found that people who played Pokémon heavily as kids developed a small region of the brain that responds specifically to Pokémon characters. Researchers scanned adults who grew up playing on Game Boy and showed them images of Pokémon like Pikachu and Bulbasaur. Their brains lit up in the same exact spot, a consistent area in the visual cortex tied to recognizing specific categories of objects. The reason comes down to childhood. When you’re young, your brain is more flexible, and spending hours memorizing hundreds of similar-looking Pokémon essentially trained it to carve out space just for them. (via @Stanford)

New look at the ‘BACKROOMS’ movie. Directed by Kane Parsons, the youngest director ever for A24 at 20 years old.