And yet, when the resident with the highest rate of correctly identifying impostors insists that the head psychiatrist is a reptoid, he is pooh-poohed.
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There’s also a difference between not knowing the difference and always getting them mixed up. The diagram doesn’t help with the stated problem. Also, it doesn’t address the question.
As another example, the Cuyahoga River famously caught fire in 1969. That isn’t technically the 70s, but I wouldn’t have gone near it anytime during that decade.
So many parts of this picture don’t make any sense.
Got it. The Easter Bunny is an immigrant, over 1,500 years old, and has at least one ovipositor. Let me restate the remaining question: Why does it lay/bring Celtic fertility symbols?? I learn so much here.
Korval@lemmy.todayto
Terrible Estate Agent Photos@feddit.uk•You cannot possibly prepare yourself for this house.
0·12 days agoPicture #15 will shock you! (so much so that it’s censored?)
I spent too long trying to figure out what was going on with the walls (and ceiling!) in #s 2 and 3. My first thought was a kid run amuck with markers, but it’s too…“well done.” Wall paper? No, it’s not regular enough. All I can come up with is stamps, which is confusing on its own.
Oh, and the spot at the end of the stairs in #9, under the window to another planet–that’s got to be beginning of a wormhole forming, right?
Not too mention the implication that lemurs know what malaria is. What else have these scientists been hiding from us???
I initially thought it looked like a conceited villain’s lair, but there’s so much stuff crammed in that people would have trouble simply moving around, let alone duking it out in the final showdown.
Although, I like the number of busts–there’s always something available to hurl no matter which room you’re in.


I vaguely remember hearing about an artist who, I think this was about 15 years, scavenged a bunch of the oldest camera phones they could find (i.e., flip and candy bar phones) and, because no one ever resets their electronics, pulled all the photos they held. I didn’t actually see how they displayed the pics (giant collage? coffee table book?), but I thought it sounded interesting from historical perspective. I’ll bet it’s a lot like nowadays except for the quantity since those phones predated constant cloud-connections. That is to say, mostly kids, SOs, and cats.