This is a Mighty Melt Spud Sandwich!

and someday this Sandwich will sing a ballad about the marvelous adventures & misadventures of a sea Spud who somehow found a way to breathe under whiskey
Happy Star Wars day everyone. No Trekkies allowed.

Happy Star Wars day everyone. No Trekkies allowed.

(Source: birds-of-pray, via vagina-thumper)

(Source: themoreyouknowinfo, via uwagoto)

27 March 1945, Iwo Jima was finally occupied, after 22,000 Japanese & 6,000 US killed.

27 March 1945, Iwo Jima was finally occupied, after 22,000 Japanese & 6,000 US killed.

justinrampage:

With the addition of Mordin Solus, the Mass Effect 2 crew by artist Protsenko Pavel is looking amazing. Mass Effect 3 hits stores tomorrow!

Mass Effect 2 Art by Protsenko Pavel / MadSpike (deviantART)

pacalin:

8-bit Beverage Cap Removal Assistant
Photo by pacalin
(via: it8bit)

pacalin:

8-bit Beverage Cap Removal Assistant

Photo by pacalin

(via: it8bit)

(via geekleetist)

(Source: lik3zombie)

For a better world, we need more sexy girls playing mandolin!!!!

For a better world, we need more sexy girls playing mandolin!!!!

(via wickedpedia)

(Source: elephantelephant)

war is hell.

(Source: mutiler, via gi-jew)

positive-press-daily:

Civil War Sub Finally Revealed

For the first time since the U.S. Civil War, the Confederate vessel H.L. Hunley—the world’s first submarine to sink an enemy ship—was revealed on January 12 (pictured) after 11 years of conservation work.
Shown in a South Carolina conservation facility, the Hunley sank the U.S.S. Housatonic off Charleston (map) in 1864. Within minutes the sub itself sank too-killing its eight-man crew and creating an enduring mystery. (Also see “Forensic Team Studying Skeletons of Hunley Crew.”)
Five years after the Hunley wreck’s discovery in 1995, conservators raised the sub using a special steel truss that was removed only weeks ago.
“No one alive has ever seen the Hunley complete,” said engineer John King on January 12 as a crane lifted the truss at Clemson University’s Warren Lasch Conservation Center in North Charleston, Reuters reported on January 13.
“We’re going to see it today.”

(click-through for 9 MORE PHOTOS)

positive-press-daily:

Civil War Sub Finally Revealed

For the first time since the U.S. Civil War, the Confederate vessel H.L. Hunley—the world’s first submarine to sink an enemy ship—was revealed on January 12 (pictured) after 11 years of conservation work.

Shown in a South Carolina conservation facility, the Hunley sank the U.S.S. Housatonic off Charleston (map) in 1864. Within minutes the sub itself sank too-killing its eight-man crew and creating an enduring mystery. (Also see “Forensic Team Studying Skeletons of Hunley Crew.”)

Five years after the Hunley wreck’s discovery in 1995, conservators raised the sub using a special steel truss that was removed only weeks ago.

“No one alive has ever seen the Hunley complete,” said engineer John King on January 12 as a crane lifted the truss at Clemson University’s Warren Lasch Conservation Center in North Charleston, Reuters reported on January 13.

“We’re going to see it today.”

(click-through for 9 MORE PHOTOS)

(Source: National Geographic)