
The Random Image Thread (keeping it PG-13 at the worst)
obvs wrote:Who is she?maurvir wrote:![]()
Holy human waste.
MOAR!
juice wrote:obvs wrote:Who is she?maurvir wrote:![]()
Holy human waste.
MOAR!
learn reverse google image search
Sara Jean Underwood
did playboy
I did a Google reverse image search, and that image looks significantly different than all of the others, so I still wasn't sure it was the same person.ukimalefu wrote:juice wrote:obvs wrote:Who is she?maurvir wrote:![]()
Holy human waste.
MOAR!
learn reverse google image search
Sara Jean Underwood
did playboy
obvs wrote:I did a Google reverse image search, and that image looks significantly different than all of the others, so I still wasn't sure it was the same person.ukimalefu wrote:juice wrote:obvs wrote:Who is she?maurvir wrote:![]()
Holy human waste.
MOAR!
learn reverse google image search
Sara Jean Underwood
did playboy
I've seen her before... so... I know... it's her
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TOS wrote: meanwhile, in texas ...![]()
There's a Trump + Stock Market + Trump Voters meme in there somewhere.

Originally published: December 12, 1969

"TOS ain’t havin no horserace round here. “Policies” is the coin of the realm." -- iDaemon
- DukeofNuke
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dv wrote:ukimalefu wrote:
if that's a fake, it's a very good fake
1) You can see the golf club jerk when they cut.
2) Corks will pop themselves if you loosen them, which this one obviously was.
Probably digitally inserted the ball.
oh, I see the jerk now. Thanks, you killed the magic

I liked how the ball bounces up. Nice detail.
- DukeofNuke
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- Joined: Mon Jan 21, 2008 1:33 pm
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"Medieval Italian Man Replaced His Amputated Hand With a Knife":

It was NOT just the positioning of the knife near the amputation of this man's right forearm, but that there were calluses on the bone (which shows that this man lived a long time after losing his forearm AND that shows how there was biomechanical pressure on that end), and wear on his teeth (which indicated he likely used his teeth to strap the knife into place with leather straps which have long decomposed).
The skeleton was dated to have been buried sometime between AD 500 and 800.

It was NOT just the positioning of the knife near the amputation of this man's right forearm, but that there were calluses on the bone (which shows that this man lived a long time after losing his forearm AND that shows how there was biomechanical pressure on that end), and wear on his teeth (which indicated he likely used his teeth to strap the knife into place with leather straps which have long decomposed).
The skeleton was dated to have been buried sometime between AD 500 and 800.