
Probably have to F5 this one!
Some sketches of the idiots that got out of hand. Try to do more of those weird "body language" and "background" things.
Some sketches of the idiots that got out of hand. Try to do more of those weird "body language" and "background" things.
Category All / Doodle
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 386 x 1280px
File Size 203.4 kB
It certainly looks humid yet cold enough. Have some patriotism for the small things. For the culture. I don't know, are those c[h/r]i[s]ps prawn flavo[u]red?
(One thing I find funny - I spent my childhood reading Roald Dahl and British children's lit (my parents were convinced it was better) and sort of got used to the british spelling of things. I still think, say, "realisation" looks better... but for some reason, the "our" words - colour, armour, honour, etc. For some reason, I'm comfortable with the British spelling as long as it's used as a noun - but the American spelling is the only one I'll accept as a verb. I have no idea why that distinction exists. "You must honor your noble armour and royal colours" looks five million times better than vice versa to my eyes, and I have no fucking clue why.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noah_W.....Backed_Speller I'm fascinated with attempts at coalescing the souls of younger nations than yours - Agitprop, the art of post-revolutionary France, the National Film Board of Canada, [http://www.gutenberg.org/files/8683...../8683-h.htm]as embarrassingly terrible as these attempts can be[/url] - and I'd argue one of the more significant things was Noah Webster (the dictionary guy)'s schoolbooks, which basically invented secular public education in its modern form, and gave us a head start on the rest of the world in public schools that lasted a century and a half - this in a country that even today sort of considers education an optional tactic that brainwashes the young with liberal bias. And, as a side effect, changed the very way we used the language. "Center" and "traveler," that was totally his fault. The spelling "tung" never did catch on.
He was a distant relative of renowned American orator Daniel Webster.... Ironically, the most famous story about that guy, with its plea of American patriotism and "jury of the damned" of American historical figures (most of whom were Native American-related), is now most famous as a furry cartoon hailed as a great step forward for Canadian film. And they say the Devil lacks irony!)
(One thing I find funny - I spent my childhood reading Roald Dahl and British children's lit (my parents were convinced it was better) and sort of got used to the british spelling of things. I still think, say, "realisation" looks better... but for some reason, the "our" words - colour, armour, honour, etc. For some reason, I'm comfortable with the British spelling as long as it's used as a noun - but the American spelling is the only one I'll accept as a verb. I have no idea why that distinction exists. "You must honor your noble armour and royal colours" looks five million times better than vice versa to my eyes, and I have no fucking clue why.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noah_W.....Backed_Speller I'm fascinated with attempts at coalescing the souls of younger nations than yours - Agitprop, the art of post-revolutionary France, the National Film Board of Canada, [http://www.gutenberg.org/files/8683...../8683-h.htm]as embarrassingly terrible as these attempts can be[/url] - and I'd argue one of the more significant things was Noah Webster (the dictionary guy)'s schoolbooks, which basically invented secular public education in its modern form, and gave us a head start on the rest of the world in public schools that lasted a century and a half - this in a country that even today sort of considers education an optional tactic that brainwashes the young with liberal bias. And, as a side effect, changed the very way we used the language. "Center" and "traveler," that was totally his fault. The spelling "tung" never did catch on.
He was a distant relative of renowned American orator Daniel Webster.... Ironically, the most famous story about that guy, with its plea of American patriotism and "jury of the damned" of American historical figures (most of whom were Native American-related), is now most famous as a furry cartoon hailed as a great step forward for Canadian film. And they say the Devil lacks irony!)
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