Video 5 May 92,802 notes
Photo 5 May 188 notes fuckyeahretailrobin:

[Image Description: Background is several triangles in a circle like a pie alternating from true red, scarlet and black. A robin is sitting on his perch looking to the right. Top Text: “Hear the same song two or three times during one shift.” Bottom Text: “Slowly go crazy.”]
I live for the rare moments when the music finally gets to the manager and they decide to shut if off.

fuckyeahretailrobin:

[Image Description: Background is several triangles in a circle like a pie alternating from true red, scarlet and black. A robin is sitting on his perch looking to the right.

Top Text: “Hear the same song two or three times during one shift.”

Bottom Text: “Slowly go crazy.”]

I live for the rare moments when the music finally gets to the manager and they decide to shut if off.

Audio 5 May 280 notes [Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

damnafricawhathappened:

Masquerade | The Phantom of the Opera

Played 1,342 times. via Never Irreparably Broken.
Photo 5 May 1,377 notes

(Source: katshup)

Video 5 May 155,691 notes

theartofnotwriting:

Girl crush.

vlcphoto:

I didn’t think it was possible to love JLaw any more but omg she’s hilarious! 

devynburton:

Have you got a particular skill that people might not know about? (x)

She is my spirit animal. 

(Source: jasonnywithnochance)

Video 5 May 3,257 notes

myaliasisbones:

The Hunger Games cast Hidden Talents!

someone pleaaase gif the hell out of this!!! especially Jennifer’s part!!

 ”I can’t believe I almost said I dont have talent”

PLEAAASE GIF THIS!!! i would, but i don’t know how to download it or something

Photo 4 May 852 notes

(Source: itsmel4nie)

via hakuna.
Text 4 May 198 notes If James and Lily are a stag and a doe, then Harry Potter is Bambi…

(Source: lifeisbutadream35)

Photo 4 May 1,148 notes spacemannsays:

If you’ve been to a crowded airport, sporting event, or even a kid’s birthday party lately, a little peace and quiet might sound like the perfect thing to help you kick back and relax. Just don’t let things get too quiet, or you might drive yourself a wee bit insane: the anechoic chamber at Orfield Laboratoriesin Minnesota can mute 99.99% of all sound, but visiting the silent oasis isn’t as calming as you might expect.
The room holds the current Guinness World Record as the quietest place on the planet, and companies from all over the world seek out its unique acoustic properties. The walls of the chamber are lined with sound-absorbing baffles that can capture noise and mute it in an instant. This allows companies — both Whirlpool and Harley-Davidson have visited — to test just how noisy their products are without the risk of outside interference.
But while the super-silent oasis is a great testbed for various products, it holds a darker side: silence, it turns out, can put a great strain on the human brain. Researchers at NASA test the room’s unique acoustic capabilities on humans rather than hardware. The noiselessness is used to simulate the silence of space — an environment astronauts would be well served to grow accustomed to.
What they’ve found is that when all outside noise is removed from an enclosure, human hearing will do its best to find something to listen to. In a room where almost 100% of sound is muted, people begin to hear things like their own heartbeat at a greatly amplified volume. As the minutes tick by in absolute quiet, the human mind begins to lose its grip, causing test subjects to hallucinate.
NASA then monitors how the would-be space explorers react, and whether they can get past the very obvious awkwardness of seeing or hearing things that aren’t actually there. According to lab officials, the longest anyone has lasted is 45 minutes before being allowed to hear the sweet sounds of planet Earth once again.
In the end, the chamber has proven a valuable scientific tool, just don’t plan on renting it for some peace and quiet — it may do more harm than good.

spacemannsays:

If you’ve been to a crowded airport, sporting event, or even a kid’s birthday party lately, a little peace and quiet might sound like the perfect thing to help you kick back and relax. Just don’t let things get too quiet, or you might drive yourself a wee bit insane: the anechoic chamber at Orfield Laboratoriesin Minnesota can mute 99.99% of all sound, but visiting the silent oasis isn’t as calming as you might expect.

The room holds the current Guinness World Record as the quietest place on the planet, and companies from all over the world seek out its unique acoustic properties. The walls of the chamber are lined with sound-absorbing baffles that can capture noise and mute it in an instant. This allows companies — both Whirlpool and Harley-Davidson have visited — to test just how noisy their products are without the risk of outside interference.

But while the super-silent oasis is a great testbed for various products, it holds a darker side: silence, it turns out, can put a great strain on the human brain. Researchers at NASA test the room’s unique acoustic capabilities on humans rather than hardware. The noiselessness is used to simulate the silence of space — an environment astronauts would be well served to grow accustomed to.

What they’ve found is that when all outside noise is removed from an enclosure, human hearing will do its best to find something to listen to. In a room where almost 100% of sound is muted, people begin to hear things like their own heartbeat at a greatly amplified volume. As the minutes tick by in absolute quiet, the human mind begins to lose its grip, causing test subjects to hallucinate.

NASA then monitors how the would-be space explorers react, and whether they can get past the very obvious awkwardness of seeing or hearing things that aren’t actually there. According to lab officials, the longest anyone has lasted is 45 minutes before being allowed to hear the sweet sounds of planet Earth once again.

In the end, the chamber has proven a valuable scientific tool, just don’t plan on renting it for some peace and quiet — it may do more harm than good.

Photo 4 May 39,679 notes
via hakuna.

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