Workplace safe porn
This subject should not be discussed but I am sure that most of us know that work and porn should not be used in the same sentence unless you work for the adult industry.
This subject should not be discussed but I am sure that most of us know that work and porn should not be used in the same sentence unless you work for the adult industry.
Look how serious that doggie is taking its job.
Sarah Silverman urges her fellow Florida-residing Jews to blackmail their grandparents into voting for Democratic Presidential candidate Barack Hussein Obama. She’s LOL
I guess he must have been so involved in his job that he failed to notice the fire or he was too dumb to put it out. Either way this radio announcer from Greece might soon be looking for another job.
Video can be viewed after the jump
Crazy Scientologist passed out flyers with real pictures, real names, and real home addresses of members of Anonymous outside the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre where Scientologist Katie Holmes made her debut in Arthur Miller’s “All My Sons” on Thursday evening.
SF director of photography Art Adam says:
My partner and I were plaintiffs in the lawsuit suing the State of California for the right of same-sex couples to be married. We won that battle but now we have a new one: California Prop 8, if it passes, would change the part of the state constitution that the State Supreme Court upheld in granting us our new marriage rights.
Don’t ever turn your back on the mime artist. You’d never know what they’re up to.
Xeni Jardin says:
One year ago, a 19-year-old MIT engineering student named Star Simpson got dressed to go pick up a friend at Boston’s Logan airport. She pulled a hoodie out of her closet, a wearable tech design she’d made with a light-up LED-circuit on the chest. In her hand was a small pink rose she’d crafted from hardened clay, a gift for her friend.
A few hours later at the airport, after an airport employee mistook her sweatshirt for a bomb and the rose for an explosive implement, Star found herself surrounded by 40 armed police who believed she was a suicide bomber. She was arrested for “possessing a hoax device,” and an unprecedented media frenzy ensued.
A year later, after a long series of court dates, a Boston judge ruled that Star must perform community service and make a public apology. Star says she intended no harm. She believes the authorities were unfairly harsh with her long after it was obvious she posed no threat, and that legal proceedings were unduly influenced by a prevailing atmosphere of anxiety over terrorism
Watch the interview after the jump