Sadly, only got to see the second episode last night due to technical difficulties.
The first one will be on again on Saturday, at least on my local channel. Halloween episode.
I'm liking it a lot. I think I'm a Greg Garcia fan. Though I'm not going to go back and watch Yes, Dear.
Hmm. I don't know if those covers are all S&M. They are mostly bondage, though.
The top 7 S&M covers of Lois Lane. Seriously.
I had all of those 70s issues, including the #1 crotch dart, Lois on a target issue.
Those never tweaked me at all. Not like the Mort Weissinger era weird ones where Lois would get a massive egg-head, or the Jim Aparo Spectre stories (where people were turned into wood and fed through crosscut saws).
This video made me a little sad:
Fainting Goat Kittens
Charlie and Spike are two kittens with Myotonia Congenita, otherwise known as ‘Fainting Goat’ syndrome. At the slightest sound, the kittens respond by collapsing and falling into a rigid paralysis which lasts about a minute before they return to normal. This condition has hardly ever before been diagnosed in a cat, is rarely found in dogs and is more common in goats. The kittens are able to walk, but they cannot run or jump. aside from this they are normal.
Coolest. Bug. Evah?
Assassin Bug Eats Spiders After Feigning Capture
A species of assassin bug has been found which creeps onto spiders’ webs and pretends to be prey, then devours the spider when it comes to investigate.
The creature, known to entomologists as Stenolemus bituberus, and actually in the spider family itself too, is the subject of a paper just published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B by Annie Wignall from Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. Wignall describes the exact process of “aggressive mimicry” by which the assassin bug stalks its target.
Most predators conceal themselves in order to capture prey, but the assassin bug takes the opposite approach — overtly advertising its presence in a way that entices its dinner to investigate. Web-building spiders use vibrations in their web to detect when it’s caught something, so they can go over, bind it in more web, and eat it.
The assassin bug slowly approaches the spider on its web, using its forelegs to pluck the silk threads in a manner that simulates the vibrations of a fly struggling after being caught. Wignall studied the behavior of the bugs, and found that the response of the spider to the predator was the same as its response to when a vinegar fly or aphid was caught in the web.
Once the spider is close enough, the assassin bug lashes out, and eats the poor unsuspecting arachnid. Most of the time, anyway — Wignall also observed a few occasions of spiders counter-attacking the bugs and killing and eating them instead.
Those kitties were not going anywhere in the wild.
Man, slow day around here today.
Man, slow day around here today.
Here here? or just here (i.e. there)?
Here here? or just here (i.e. there)?
Here here.
Here
here
is incredibly slow. I'm working from home and on the phone with Best Buy and they've had me on the line for 25 minutes and they are telling me stuff I'm googling the opposite of. Curse my lack of patience. I guess I'll just buy the scanner tomorrow, near work.
Explain the Internet to a 19th Century Street Urchin With the Funniest Flowchart Ever
That WAS pretty great. I especially like the
maze
in the middle.