

This is also known as The Shell Station.
This is also known as The Shell Station.
I’m sorry I can’t sell you a movie ticket, you are just a tower of worms in a trench coat.
Unintentionally curing obesity in the US.
I’m thinking take an artist with exquisite color sense, and dose them (consentually) with mushrooms/ acid; that should do the trick.
Velvet sounds so unhygienic!
Indefinite?
indefinite /ĭn-dĕf′ə-nĭt/ adjective
It’s not the only option. What would you do if you could “snap” and all kids had school lunches, or houselessness went away? At least Gates is working on malaria. smh.
Hunh, that’s interesting they both resolve to the address above. But is that because we are both in fedia.io? And are you therefore saying that it wouldn’t resolve correctly if we, and or Disney Vacation were in different instances? I’m still trying to understand this so I can use it and teach it to others. Thanks!!
ah, cool. I’m not clear on the syntax. How should it be done, correctly?
FWIW, when I click on the link above it takes me to “https://fedia.io/m/[email protected]”
I’m open for suggestions.
This is copied from [email protected] - which is a delightfilled community. Here’s how the game is played:
This is not about actual vacations to Disneyland or Disneyworld.
It’s for weird, terrible, terrifying or bad illustrations from WikiHow.
Find a weird/terrifying/hilariously bad picture from WikiHow
Post it here with an original and funny caption
Link to the WikiHow source article in the comments
Rules:
All posts must be unmodified ‘full’ (non-mobile) WikiHow images or videos. They should be strange, terrifying or just plain awful.
All posts must provide the source WikiHow article as a link in the comments. This should be done as either a plain link, or the link text should be the name of the article.
Don’t be a dick.
No recent reposts.
Edit: corrected link to include ! instead of @
It’s much better than a owner of a broken shark.
Worse, better who can say?
Japanese Tebukuro - Hand Socks
“The Fox has many tricks; The Hedgehog has but one.”
He’s not the first one to ‘kill his liver’ with paracetamol/ acetominophen (tylenol). First case I recall, the person was taking tylenol nightly with a glass of wine. Here’s some links on the current understanding of Liver injury and paracetamol:
Apparently it’s not always overdosing: Paracetamol-induced hepatotoxicity at recommended dosage (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1046/j.1365-2796.2003.01097.x)
Acetaminophen-Induced Hepatotoxicity: a Comprehensive Update (https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4913076/) “…in the United States, in particular, it accounts for more than 50% of overdose-related acute liver failure and approximately 20% of the liver transplant cases.”
Risk Factors for Hepatotoxicity Due to Paracetamol Overdose in Adults (https://www.mdpi.com/1648-9144/57/8/752) “In the univariable analysis, significant hepatotoxicity risk factors were male gender, alcohol abuse, an ingested paracetamol dose, and a timespan from ingestion to hospital admission. The later one was the only significant risk factor in the multivariable model (adjusted odds ratio 1.08; 95% CI: 1.03–1.12).”
Paracetamol (acetaminophen) overdose and hepatotoxicity: mechanism, treatment, prevention measures, and estimates of burden of disease (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37436926/) “Where data were available, we estimate that paracetamol is involved in 6% of poisonings, 56% of severe acute liver injury and acute liver failure, and 7% of drug-induced liver injury.”
Understanding paracetamol-induced liver failure (https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00134-014-3293-9)
Sort of like the Weather Rock idea.
The Red image overlays the blue image, and are approximately the same.