kamenridaa is a mad-scientist-turned-cyborg-turned-ass kicking superhero who fights his imaginary villains while sleeping on his couch, waiting for his beer belly to flatten out.
henshin.
I used to work on my university campus radio station in college. We used to talk about current events around the school, any news around the surrounding town, and played requested songs for students, something our school surprisingly allowed. I remember a very weird couple of months where students who tuned into the show constantly requested a song called “See You After, Babe”, a pop song by some one-hit-wonder group called Symmetry Icon, the dumbest name for a band I’ve ever heard. But that song was huge around October and November of 2008. As one of the campus radio’s DJs, I had to play that song over like a hundred times in two months. I heard it everywhere, in malls, gas stations, on real radio stations, and I think even on MTV.
Something was weird about that song, but I couldn’t remember exactly what. I tried Googling the song and band, but nothing came up in the results for either. Not even YouTube had a single clip of the song.
@sixpenceee the funky little beat after “But he took your” is FF AA CC EE.
“But he took your [face]”
Oh shit
I love a good Reddit no sleep and I’m usually able to keep scrolling but this story has me fucked up, like I’m not being a troll and going with the whole “my face is itchy” bs…. But my head hurts and I’m very cold and shaky…… Unnerving shit.
I READ THIS YESTERDAYA ND IT FICKRD NE UP
I’m unsettled because similar shit has happened to me
I really wanna listen to it but i’m too scared
I listened to it and I know this is just psychological but my face feels really tight now. Woah.
for some reason i’m starting to get really hot and paranoid and i keep thinking I’m seeing things from the corners of my eyes after listening to that clip wtf is going on
Anticrepuscular rays are spectacular optical phenomena that are quite rare and they require the viewer to have his or her back to the sun or sunset point. They are columns of sunlit air streaming through gaps in clouds. Yet while the former seem to converge from the sun, anticrepuscular rays converge toward the antisolar point, the point in the sky directly opposite the sun, creating some stunning effects. (Source)