| Steve: | Are you from the 1940s? Because I'd really love to have a future with you. |
| Thor: | I will make sure that you are "Thor in the morning". |
| Clint: | I always hit the bullseye...ifyouknowwhatimean. |
| Bruce: | They don't call me incredible for nothing, hehe. |
| Tony: | Hi, I'm Tony Stark. |
so the random number generator chose floaty josh!
of course Joshua’s ends up being the biggest oops
I think it has more frames than Hanekoma too
OTPs are so incredibly awkward because you want them to be your children but also be your parents but also you want to see them fuck but then you’re usually attracted to one or both of the people involved so ultimately what the fuck kind of complex is that WHAT HAS FANDOM DONE TO ME
Ok, so I went into the norse mythology tag, and many of the post were about The Avengers or Loki or something along those lines. Seriously, this is getting annoying. The Avengers and Norse Mythology is NOT the same thing. People need to understand that. Please, if you’re posting something about The Avengers or Thor or whatever, don’t tag it with norse mythology, because its not. It’s loosely based on it, its not the same thing.
Apollo Justice Gavin’s theme (Guilty Love) on guitar
YES.
GUYS. GUYS THIS MAN IS PLAYING GUILTY LOVE. ON HIS GUITAR.
I MUST HAVE
DIED
AND GONE TO HEAVEN
SO AMAZING.
When a honeybee dies it releases a death pheromone, a characteristic odor that signals the survivors to remove it from the hive. This might seem a supreme final act of social responsibility. The corpse is promptly pushed and tugged out of the hive. The death pheromone is oleic acid [a fairly complex molecule, CH3(CH2)7CH=CH(CH2)7COOH, where = stands for a double chemical bond].
What happens if a live bee is dabbed with a drop of oleic acid?
Then, no matter how strapping and vigorous it might be, it is carried “kicking and screaming” out of the hive. Even the Queen bee, if she’s painted with invisible amounts of oleic acid, will be subjected to this indignity.
Do the bees understand the danger of corpses decomposing in the hive? Are they aware of the connection between death and oleic acid? Do they have any idea what death is? Do they think to check the oleic acid signal against other information, such as healty spontaneous movement? The answer to all these questions is, almost certainly, No. In the life of the hive there’s no way that a bee can give off detectable whiff of oleic acid other than by dying. Elaborate contemplative machinery is unnecessary. Their perceptions are adequate for their needs.
Ann Druyan & Carl Sagan, Shadows Of Forgotten Ancestors: Who Are We?, What Thin Partitions
Oleic acid…






