Banner


Text

roundobject

VIRAS

Viras’s features include a spike-shaped head capable of piercing through a meter of steel, a brain with an IQ of 2500, organs for producing a force field and controlling the minds of others, tentacles that are 10,000 times stronger than an elephant’s trunk and which can emit powerful beams for space travel, and organs to break down cell tissue and control metamorphosis (for creating its human disguise).

Via Pink Tentacle



January 25, 2011, 12:52pm

comments (View)



Text

jortmaster

Calling Dr. Aquaman

What happens to the poor fish of the seven seas who become injured or ill? Are they left to float and flounder on the choppy waters, unattended and uncared for? Not if Aquaman can help it! For the Sea Sovereign operates an unusual underwater shelter and clinic for his finny friends—and they get all the medical attention they need by…CALLING DR. AQUAMAN!

Via Squidkid.



October 15, 2010, 1:35pm

comments (View)



Photograph

roundobject



August 31, 2010, 11:24am

comments (View)



Photograph

roundobject



May 24, 2010, 12:04pm

comments (View)



Photograph

roundobject

via the very awesome The Ever So Strange Animal Almanac

via the very awesome The Ever So Strange Animal Almanac



August 20, 2009, 1:22pm

comments (View)



Text

jortmaster

“It’s hard to walk normally with four pounds of cephalopod stuffed down your pants”

Throwing the octopus is easy. More difficult is concealing the eight-legged creature until the toss is at hand, a skill that requires determination, luck and the ability to walk normally with 4 pounds of slimy cephalopod stuffed down your pants.

When Detroit drops in on Nationwide Arena Tuesday night in an attempt to further frustrate the Blue Jackets some among the Red Wings fans in attendance undoubtedly will have attempted to enter while packing octopus.

Some might even succeed, continuing a Detroit tradition dating to 1952 of throwing octopi on the ice during Red Wings games.

“I just sell it. What they do with it is up to them,” said Frank Gonzalez, owner of Frank’s Fish & Seafood Market in Columbus.

What they do with it is the second hurdle. The common method is to sneak the octopus through the turnstiles by slipping it into your trousers, a technique that Gonzalez does not understand.

“I wouldn’t want something moving around down there when you’re moving around,” he said, smiling.

“They’ve been creative,” said Eric Granger, general manager of Nationwide Arena. “We’ve caught them Saran-wrapped to the body.”

Most contraband carriers get caught before they reach their seats, having failed to elude the authorities, who conduct bag searches for every game and event.

But fans are not required to drop their drawers, so the danger always exists.

“We have not had one octopus thrown this season,” officials said, adding that arena personnel know what to look for after witnessing octopi hit the ice during previous seasons.

Those caught carrying an octopus must surrender it before being allowed to enter. Anyone who passes detection and manages to heave an octopus gets the immediate heave-ho.

During the 1995 playoffs, two Detroit seafood sellers tossed a 38-pound octopus onto the ice during the national anthem before Game 1 of the Western Conference Finals. A year later, they tossed a 50-pounder during the conference finals. The blob ended up displayed on the hood of the Zamboni between periods.



April 22, 2009, 5:10pm

comments (View)



Video

jortmaster

The “Globular Blue Eyes” are worth the price of admission (which is only your obviously worthless time). But definitely stick it out for the choice bioluminescence footage around 3:11. Try to look past the questionable font choices. Vampire squid win again.

-Thanks to @GeoffG



January 14, 2009, 9:28am

comments (View)



Page1of1