
I can’t believe the cast of neon genesis evangelion is confirmed part of the marvel universe

Super sketchy, but I’ll post these anyway. Getting in on the Sailor Moon redesign party.
I’m going for the superhero/Gatchaman thing…
This is the strongest, most densely-packed year for music releases i can remember in my entire life.
asap rocky - long live asap
asap ferg - trap lord
~*anamanaguchi*~ - endless fantasy
ARCADE FIRE - reflektor
austra - olympia
~*baths*~ - obsidian
chvrches - bones of what u believe
cut copy!!! - free ur mind
DAFT PUNK - random access memories
danny brown - old
david bowie - the next day
drake - nothing was the same
EARL - doris
empire of the sun - ice on the dune
the field - cupid’s head
haim - days are gone
ICONA POP - THIS IS…
janelle monae - electric lady
jim guthrie - takes time
justin timberlake - 20/20 experience (not part 2 though, ugh)
KANYE - yeezus
kid cudi - indicud
king tuff
kurt vile - walkin on a pretty daze
neko case - the worse things get
okkervil river - silver gymnasium
SALLY SHAPIRO(!!!) - somewhere else
vampire weekend - modern vampires of the city
waxahatchee - cerulean salt
wild nothing - empty estate EP
I’m probably forgetting tons of stuff too. also Cut Copy just came out today i’m just assuming i’ll love it.
check all these out :}
me: i dont really see the point in anime figurines?? i mean what purpose do they even serve other than to just sit there and collect du-
*sees figure of fav character*
me: holy shit



dryyice said: Imagine gintoki wearing heart shaped sunglasses
what i learned from doing this is that i am really bad at drawing heart shapes
i haven’t talked about them here but i have a lot of intersex headcanons. dyadism is as ubiquitous as cissexism so it seems lazy and potentially harmful to have nothing but dyadic trans headcanons
here is a ref on various intersex conditions to get u started and of course if you’re dyadic like me you should listen to intersex folks’ opinions on the subject as well

Via A Mighty Girl:
Professional hacker Parisa Tabriz is responsible for keeping the nearly billion users of Google Chrome safe by finding vulnerabilities in their system before malicious hackers do. Tabriz, a “white hat” hacker who calls herself Google’s “Security Princess”, is head of the company’s information security engineering team. The 31-year-old Polish-Iranian-American is also an anomaly in Silicon Valley according to a recent profile in The Telegraph: “Not only is she a woman – a gender hugely under-represented in the booming tech industry – but she is a boss heading up a mostly male team of 30 experts in the US and Europe.”
Tabriz came up with “Security Princess” while at a conference and the unusual title is printed on her business card. “I knew I’d have to hand out my card and I thought Information Security Engineer sounded so boring,” she says. “Guys in the industry all take it so seriously, so security princess felt suitably whimsical.” Her curiosity, mischievousness, and innovative thinking are all assets in her business: a high-profile company like Google is constantly in the crosshairs of so-called “black hat” hackers.
Tabriz came into internet security almost by accident; at the University of Illinois’ computer engineering program, her interest was first whetted by the story of early hacker John Draper, who became known as Captain Crunch in the 1960s after he learned how to make free long-distance calls using a toy whistle from a Cap’n Crunch cereal box. She realized that, to beat the hackers of today, she had to be prepared for similar — but more advanced — out-of-the-box thinking.
While women at still very under-represented in the tech industry — Google recently reported that only 30% of its staff is female — Tabriz has hope for the future: “[F]ifty years ago there were similar percentages of women in medicine and law, now thankfully that’s shifted.” And, while she hasn’t encountered overt sexism at Google, when she was offered the position, at least one classmate said, “you know you only got it cos you’re a girl.” To help address this imbalance, she mentors under-16 students at a yearly computer science conference that teaches kids how to “hack for good” — and she especially encourages girls to pursue internet security work. One 16-year-old who attended, Trinity Nordstrom, says, “Parisa is a good role model, because of her I’d like to be a hacker.”
Tabriz, who was named by Forbes as one of the “top 30 under 30 to watch” in 2012, also wants the public to realize that hacking can be used for positive ends. “[H]acking can be ugly,” she says. “The guy who published the private photos of those celebrities online made headlines everywhere. What he did was not only a violation of these women but it was criminal, and as a hacker I was very saddened by it. I feel like we, the hackers, need better PR to show we’re not all like that… [A]fter all I’m in the business of protecting people.”
To read more about Google’s “Security Princess” in The Telegraph, visit http://bit.ly/Z6Z5RG