
So in other words, if you want to impress your guests with your talent for setting sugar cubes on fire, take up smoking first.
[Found here.]

So in other words, if you want to impress your guests with your talent for setting sugar cubes on fire, take up smoking first.
[Found here.]

[Found here.]

The Deltones (UK) had a nice reggae cover of The Staple Singers’ hit “I’ll Take You There” in 1972. (There were a lot of groups who called themselves The Deltones, so I’m not sure which to link t0.)
USS Bataan (LHD-5) fires on a killer tomato (video).
Bear breaks into condo, plays piano.
Pirates emerged from the sea at low tide in Birling Gap, Eastbourne, England recently [via].
Topiary Cat Visits The Seaside.
Fighting the Hoover & Denham fire, Washington D.C., July 1918.
1964 ridiculous Fashion Trends that took a couple of years to catch on [via].
“Effa didn’t liver ad move, wooden chew?” Appalachian dialect sawsum, enna fokeser grate.
[Top image: That love bug stayed on the side of my garage for two days, and I took it to be a good omen. It was.]
Nice groove with a great message from Mavis Staples.
[h/t windbag].
The Staple Singers, a family gospel/soul group had a number of hits in the 60’s and 70’s, and “I’ll Take You There” was my favorite due to the killer bass line.
Les Paul met up with Billy Gibbons in 1999. Interesting banter, interesting jam.
Bunkarina caught wind of a SoCal band that she thought I should check out. I did, and you should, too.
Cutty Flam is a 1-woman-2-man retro rockabilly R&B band from the San Fernando Valley. Reminds me of a combination of Richie Valens, The Paladins, Ruben & The Jets (with a sprinkling of The B-52s) and I like it.
Have a great weekend, folks. More stuff is on the way.
“There are moments in a nation’s history when its future course is decided by a chosen few who walked bravely into the valley of the shadow of death.”
–US Army General Curtis M. Scaparrotti, during a wreath-laying ceremony at the Iron Mike Memorial, Sainte-Mere-Eglise, France
4 June 2017.

[Image and quote from here.]

Yeah, I know it went viral yesterday, but so what. That’s the first time I saw it (and I reposted it just like everyone else did, except at least I linked my sources). Besides that, it’s still an awesome pic.
When I was a teenager I witnessed a “small” tornado that passed about a mile or so away from our house. Hail was raining down, sky was black with clear orange sky underneath, the funnel was a churning slow-moving mass of brown with no distinct edges. Next thing I recall is my dad grabbing me by the collar and throwing me into the basement where we hunkered down and listened to the static on the AM transistor radio.
The following day I drove to the neighborhood that took the hit. One side of the road was untouched, but the other was all splinters.