Ask me anything

I blog but do not expect anyone to actually read this gibberish. I lack imagination.
I think it would the coolest thing to meet an Olympian :]
Not the nerdiest nerd you would meet but i love a nerdy joke.
Accents and lisps are adorable.
Belgian waffles for dinner
Quiche for breakfast
Indie & Jazz are my type of music
Getting a bad grade in your best subject
tiefighters:

C3PO Descending A Staircase  - by John Mattos
via: theuniblog

tiefighters:

C3PO Descending A Staircase  - by John Mattos

via: theuniblog

3 months ago
6,448 notes
<3 I want this outfit!

<3 I want this outfit!

4 months ago
0 notes

shumbodynamedharry:

iTut-Dance Tribute to Steve Jobs by Pac-Man, Hok and Moon.  Super creative guys!

2 months ago
532 notes
impaktphotography:

An Unexpected Chat
2/8/2012
I had to shoot my school’s basketball game today. I don’t enjoy shooting sports and I prepared myself for a crappy night of unmotivated photography. Around me there were other photographers, shooting away while I stood behind the backboard, holding my lifeless camera, compared to the loud “click clacking” of the other cameras. I swear, one guy was shooting at least 10 fps and I just imagined how much editing he was going to do and I chucked. As the halftime buzzer rang, I went cross court to get ready for the 2nd half. I noticed an old man but paid no attention to him. Mere minutes go by and he asks me, “Is that digital”? I reply, “yes” and I immediately knew this was going to be a good night. He had a sparkle in his eye and I knew he wanted to talk. It was just basic stuff at first. “Are you the school’s photographer? What school would you like to go to? UCLA? Such a great school, you would love it there. I started shooting back in 1992, so that was when i was about 61.” At that moment, thousands of questions popped into my head.
I started with an easy one. “How were the girls back then?”
“Oh my they were much more proper. Wore long skirts past their knees and always covered themselves up. They had class.”
I laughed at that, then started to ask him more questions. I asked him when his favorite decade was and he immediately said, “The 50’s”. When asked why. he replied, “It was just better. No crime. You didn’t have to worry about your shit being stolen. You could leave the doors open and you could find people asking others if they needed a ride home. You can’t do that anymore. I remember that mom always used to cook the meals, three times a day, breakfast, lunch and dinner. There were no fat kids back then. No McDonlads, Jack in the box, Taco Bell. Life was just better”. He then told me something that I know will stick me with for a long time.
“These are the best times of your life. You’re young. After college, it just goes downhill. You get married, you have to work, you have kids, the fun kind of just leaves you. Just know that these are the best times of your life.”
I looked into his eyes and I saw his yearning to be go back 60 years, when his mother would be there for him, when “steak dinners were a buck fifty, when a milkshake This big was ten cents, when there was no crime”.
He looked to his son (left of the picture) and said, “i’m going to leave soon”.
I knew that this was a moment I would not forget and I took the oppurtunity.
“May I take your picture?”
“Of course, can my son be in it too?”
“Definitely”.
And that was that.
We lost the basketball game but I could care less.
I met this man. I only know his name is Mr. Popper. He will be 81 this year and he lived through eight decades that will never be able to be lived again. He heard Sinatra and Glen Miller on the radio. He paid 10 cents for a matinee show and stayed there for six hours. I will never be able to live through what he told me.
He envied me for being young and restless.
I envied him for being able to live through such great times and wanting more of it.
I was born in the wrong generation.
damn…

We&#8217;re born in the wrong era Tim. 

impaktphotography:

An Unexpected Chat

2/8/2012

I had to shoot my school’s basketball game today. I don’t enjoy shooting sports and I prepared myself for a crappy night of unmotivated photography. Around me there were other photographers, shooting away while I stood behind the backboard, holding my lifeless camera, compared to the loud “click clacking” of the other cameras. I swear, one guy was shooting at least 10 fps and I just imagined how much editing he was going to do and I chucked. As the halftime buzzer rang, I went cross court to get ready for the 2nd half. I noticed an old man but paid no attention to him. Mere minutes go by and he asks me, “Is that digital”? I reply, “yes” and I immediately knew this was going to be a good night. He had a sparkle in his eye and I knew he wanted to talk. It was just basic stuff at first. “Are you the school’s photographer? What school would you like to go to? UCLA? Such a great school, you would love it there. I started shooting back in 1992, so that was when i was about 61.” At that moment, thousands of questions popped into my head.

I started with an easy one. “How were the girls back then?”

“Oh my they were much more proper. Wore long skirts past their knees and always covered themselves up. They had class.”

I laughed at that, then started to ask him more questions. I asked him when his favorite decade was and he immediately said, “The 50’s”. When asked why. he replied, “It was just better. No crime. You didn’t have to worry about your shit being stolen. You could leave the doors open and you could find people asking others if they needed a ride home. You can’t do that anymore. I remember that mom always used to cook the meals, three times a day, breakfast, lunch and dinner. There were no fat kids back then. No McDonlads, Jack in the box, Taco Bell. Life was just better”. He then told me something that I know will stick me with for a long time.

“These are the best times of your life. You’re young. After college, it just goes downhill. You get married, you have to work, you have kids, the fun kind of just leaves you. Just know that these are the best times of your life.”


I looked into his eyes and I saw his yearning to be go back 60 years, when his mother would be there for him, when “steak dinners were a buck fifty, when a milkshake This big was ten cents, when there was no crime”.

He looked to his son (left of the picture) and said, “i’m going to leave soon”.

I knew that this was a moment I would not forget and I took the oppurtunity.

“May I take your picture?”

“Of course, can my son be in it too?”

“Definitely”.

And that was that.

We lost the basketball game but I could care less.

I met this man. I only know his name is Mr. Popper. He will be 81 this year and he lived through eight decades that will never be able to be lived again. He heard Sinatra and Glen Miller on the radio. He paid 10 cents for a matinee show and stayed there for six hours. I will never be able to live through what he told me.

He envied me for being young and restless.

I envied him for being able to live through such great times and wanting more of it.

I was born in the wrong generation.

damn…

We’re born in the wrong era Tim. 

3 months ago
96 notes

when I have something in common with my celebrity crush.

(Source: purelyawkward, via impatient-is-peri)

4 months ago
36,860 notes