NAIL THAT SHIT
i haven't got the figure for a vest

Krystalle. 19. Chicago. I'm a bundle of class. I have a thing for a bunch of scum-sucking road whores from Sheffield. This one time I thought Pat Carney was making eye contact with me, but then I realized he couldn't see shit because he didn't have his glasses on so he was not, in fact, giving me the "stage nod." Sigh.

also: Jesus Fried Chicken.

i sing like a crow· deep emo shit· just click it okay don't be a dick about it


posted 4 weeks ago on 5/5/2012 - 647 notes - via imma-robot © michellewilliamss

posted 1 month ago on 23/4/2012 - 8,077 notes - via iwillsingyoulullabies © fassyy


posted 2 months ago on 2/4/2012 - 14,453 notes - via hellcatspangled © -retrograde

fightclub1999:

Tyler was a part time projectionist 



posted 2 months ago on 15/3/2012 - 161 notes - via jamiephillipcook © basedmcavoy

posted 2 months ago on 12/3/2012 - 812 notes - via floatingsky © mcavoyings


Author Chuck Palahniuk first came up with the idea for the novel after being beaten up on a camping trip when he complained to some nearby campers about the noise of their radio. When he returned to work, he was fascinated to find that nobody would mention or acknowledge his injuries, instead saying such commonplace things as “How was your weekend?” Palahniuk concluded that the reason people reacted this way was because if they asked him what had happened, a degree of personal interaction would be necessary, and his workmates simply didn’t care enough to connect with him on a personal level. It was his fascination with this societal ‘blocking’ which became the foundation for the novel.


Fucking genius

Author Chuck Palahniuk first came up with the idea for the novel after being beaten up on a camping trip when he complained to some nearby campers about the noise of their radio. When he returned to work, he was fascinated to find that nobody would mention or acknowledge his injuries, instead saying such commonplace things as “How was your weekend?” Palahniuk concluded that the reason people reacted this way was because if they asked him what had happened, a degree of personal interaction would be necessary, and his workmates simply didn’t care enough to connect with him on a personal level. It was his fascination with this societal ‘blocking’ which became the foundation for the novel.

Fucking genius


posted 2 months ago on 12/3/2012 - 15,762 notes - via quifflover505 © filmtrivia