
Walgreens still has the Bucky Cap pop in stock. If the link doesn’t work for some reason search ‘Captain America’ since their search engine sucks and doesn’t recognize Bucky.

Walgreens still has the Bucky Cap pop in stock. If the link doesn’t work for some reason search ‘Captain America’ since their search engine sucks and doesn’t recognize Bucky.
they-told-me-be-seen-not-heard:
Can we talk about the gif where he sees that his arm is gone, again??? Can we talk about the dizzy way he comes up, already off balance with the lack of weight? Or the way his eyes widen and then he looks like he’s going to throw up?? I mean, guys. GUYS. This is fantastic portrayal. He’s seen his arm gone, again. Cue flashbacks, nausea, and fear. He’s a weapon, at least in his own eyes; the arm is at least one kinda big reason that he is a weapon. So that last flash of emotion is fear, because he’s lost a big advantage, he’s off balance, he’s experiencing some major ptsd and Sebastian gETS IT IN ONE GIF. He portrays all of this that Bucky is going through, clearly and emotionally, and I’m in the span of a few seconds. This is amazing.

Dinosaurs of tumblr unite! Honk if you know who everyone in this gif is and know what movie this is without needing to look anything up.
All you young’uns just enjoy the out-of-context-theater. 😉
(It’s a great movie, btw.)

Takin’ no chances, fam.
No More L’s
crossing fingers 😂😂😂
Need a job🤞🏾
For my babies
This graphic is fabulous. It represents a tiny crash course in rhetoric. Learn these things. Put them on your wall. Whisper them into the breeze. These are THINGS TO KNOW.
Yeesssssssssss.
Interesting
Bookmark this shit and the next time someone begins gobbling nonsense at you on a social network, instead of engaging, point them to this handy chart. Also useful: Thought Catalog’s “How To Have A Rational Conversation“ flowchart.
This.
A key component of the Spinster Mythos is financial independence — or at least the appearance of it. It’s very difficult to be a spinster when you can’t afford to live on your own, when you depend upon the income or the goodwill of others. This is why so many fictional spinsters are as wealthy as they are eccentric: it’s their money that allows them to behave strangely. Without money, without a home of your own, society will find a way to be beat the strangeness out of you. (It will still try even if you do have money, but then you can build a door of pearl and of onyx to keep society away from your house.)
When I think of all the women — real and fictional — who simply could not afford to become spinsters throughout history, my heart aches. There should be a Spinster Dream Fund for women who need a small apartment overlooking a river or a cottage on stilts propped on the side of a mountain that is continually wrapped in fog.