"We've got a theory about magic and miracles."
The first portable computer weighed around 50 pounds, had a 16-bit processor and 64K RAM.
All Steven Apilado, LaRon Charles and Jon Russ wanted to do was to win the championship game at the Gay Softball World Series for their amateur San Francisco team.
Star Wars remade 15 seconds at a time. Group think.
Scientists Successfully Teach Gorilla It Will Die Someday
You, the Living (Swedish: Du levande) is a 2007 Swedish black comedy film written and directed by Roy Andersson. The film is an exploration on the "grandeur of existence,"[1] centered around the lives of an overweight woman, a disgruntled psychiatrist, a heartbroken groupie, a carpenter, a business consultant, an elementary school teacher with emotional issues and her rug selling husband, among others. The basis for the film is an old Norse proverb, "Man is man's delight," taken from Hávamál in the Poetic Edda.
Sometime in the ocean of goop and fire and heat
Little one celled organisms learned a new way to eat
They started reproducing
They started doing their thing
And baby, it all led to you
A story of a young film maker who moves to Paris to make Sci-fi films.
Pay close attention because there's a subtle cue in there which is the key to understanding the continuity between timelines, and the fulfillment of the Novikov self-consistency principle.
He asked me to forcibly insert the lifeline exercise card into my anus!
This is exacitically the scene where Alice meets the Caterpillar. There wasn't a very good one on YouTube, so I have improoooved it.
Reality TV star Heidi Montag has sparked rumors of marital troubles with Spencer Pratt after she sacked her husband from managing her business affairs and replaced him with a psychic.
The correspondents know what life is all about, but it would be dangerous to impart that wisdom to the general public.
Here's to all John Cleese fans, a "serious" discussion on the organization of the brain and its functions to human health.
A clip from the television show, "The Big Bang Theory".
Four friends go back in time.
From episode 417, Star Wars. The dreaded Darth Nader menaces the crew of the Swinetrek as Luke and the droids commandeer it to search for Chewy.
Steven Wright's first appearance on the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson
"You all want separate checks?"
An Italian inventor has combined faith and ingenuity to create the electronic terracotta dispenser, which is now being used in the northern town of Fornaci di Briosco. It functions like an automatic soap dispenser in public lavatories - a churchgoer waves his or her hand under a sensor and the machine spurts out holy water.
Another Ricardo Autobahn Movie Mashup.
Easy to use religion flowchart.
The Referendum is a phenomenon typical of (but not limited to) midlife, whereby people, increasingly aware of the finiteness of their time in the world, the limitations placed on them by their choices so far, and the narrowing options remaining to them, start judging their peers’ differing choices with reactions ranging from envy to contempt.
of two equivalent theories or explanations, all other things being equal, the simpler one is to be preferred.
This used to happen to me a lot more often when I was younger, but it still happens from time to time.
My own musical tribute to two great men of science. Carl Sagan and his cosmologist companion Stephen Hawking present: A Glorious Dawn - Cosmos remixed. Almost all samples and footage taken from Carl Sagan's Cosmos and Stephen Hawking's Universe series.
You've committed your life to Jesus. You know you're saved. But when the Rapture comes what's to become of your loving pets who are left behind? Eternal Earth-Bound Pets takes that burden off your mind.
The official trailer for the movie, "Oh, God".
George Burns and John Denver starred in the 1977 Blockbuster Comedy Hit "Oh, God!". In this key scene George Burns (as God) is "grilled" by John Denver (the avergae Joe chosen to spread "The Word").
Hilarious sketch from the fourth episode of series three of 'That Mitchell and Webb Look.'
First universal theory of humour answers how and why we find things funny. Published June 12, The Pattern Recognition Theory of Humour by Alastair Clarke answers the centuries old question of what is humour. Clarke explains how and why we find things funny and identifies the reason humour is common to all human societies, its fundamental role in the evolution of homo sapiens and its continuing importance in the cognitive development of infants.