This new genre takes the worst ideas from hip-hop like bling, slutty girls, and a vocoder (AKA Crunk) and mixes it with the prepubescent high pitch squeals of screamo.
WTF Crunkcore? Please Don’t Let This Be The Future Of Music!
194 days ago
As sloth videos go, this one is up there.
194 days ago
I just realized Mario's chest is a space invader.
194 days ago

No Fook Me!... No Fook You!
194 days ago

Cool Ad
194 days ago

Beach Balls
240 days ago

It's a bird....
241 days ago
…but it kind of looks like a urinal.

Comment [11]
Feed a Pigeon...
249 days ago

Thanks Sam for your submission
Comment [1]
Tetris Street
285 days ago
— Viral NerdComment [1]
Vintage sketches of insects under the microscope
327 days ago
Kenbikyō Mushi No Zu (”Illustrations of Microscopic Insects”), a scroll published in 1860, depicts a lively parade of creepy-crawlies as viewed through a microscope. Although most of the insects pictured can actually be seen with the naked eye, the artist’s use of a microscope — still a relatively unusual instrument in Japan in those days — added a great level of detail to the drawings and made it a rather unique visual work.

Gnat

Mosquito larva

Louse

Flea

Aphid (left), Psocid (right)

Fish louse
The first microscope was brought to Japan in the mid-18th century (about 150 years after its invention in Europe) by Dutch traders at Nagasaki, and it was introduced to the public by pharmacologist Rishun Goto in a 1765 book entitled Oranda-banashi (”Story of Things Dutch”). Soon afterward, production of the first Japanese microscopes began in Osaka.
In 1787, Chūryō Morishima, a scholar of Western science, published Kōmō Zatsuwa (”Sayings of the Dutch”), which described the lifestyle and customs of the Dutch in Japan. The document included a section devoted to the microscope, complete with illustrations of insects as seen through the device.
As Japanese microscope technology developed, the device became a popular attraction at carnival sideshows. One notable sideshow in Nagoya in 1820 put an assortment fleas, lice, mosquitoes and other bugs on public display. According to written records of the event, many spectators shuddered with fear as they peered through the microscopes, which made the creatures look as large as a human hand. Others viewed the microscopes with excitement, as they offered a glimpse into a previously unknown world.
The Tohoku University Library houses the original copy of the Kenbikyō Mushi No Zu scroll.












