I am me.

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I am me.

19 yrs old. Aspiring photographer & graphic designer. 20th of July. Half Japanese, half Thai - I know, an awesome mixture. Weird sense of humor. Happily taken & forever will be.

My photo tumblr account: bunbunnies.tumblr.com
Follow me please~ ;D
wowfunniestposts:

 Follow this blog and laugh some more
(via leilockheart)

sk1tzofr3n1c:

holy shit dude

(Source: rumour, via jesskayho)

mikweeerdna:

andreskim:

alexisy0o:

geesterrrrr:

flushingfinest:

supremeswaggbro:

NYC
Flushing in the 50’s

Looking down Main St from the Northern Blvd intersection.

dang..

and then the asian invasion happened

DANG. That Dicks store is currently Kentucky Fried chicken if I recall correctly. 

KENNEDY fried chicken

woah

mikweeerdna:

andreskim:

alexisy0o:

geesterrrrr:

flushingfinest:

supremeswaggbro:

NYC

Flushing in the 50’s

Looking down Main St from the Northern Blvd intersection.

dang..

and then the asian invasion happened

DANG. That Dicks store is currently Kentucky Fried chicken if I recall correctly. 

KENNEDY fried chicken

woah

(via jesskayho)

thedailywhat:

McBacklash of the Day: McDonald’s this week become the latest fast-food giant to learn an important lesson about trying to force a Twitter hashtag meme based on a marketing campaign.
That lesson? Don’t.
You’d think Wendy’s failed attempt to make #HeresTheBeef happen would have prevented McDonald’s from making the same mistake with #McDStories, but you’d think wrong.
After Mickey D’s official Twitter feed tweeted an self-congratulatory quote attributed to a “McD potato supplier” (since deleted) along with the hashtag #McDStories, it didn’t take long for Twitter users to turn the trend-forcing on its face and offer up their own, less flattering “McD Stories.”
#McDStories quickly became a gushing stream of badvertising. Until this morning, that is — when it turned into a gushing stream of news stories about how badly McDonald’s failed.
[dailydot / @natebramble.]

thedailywhat:

McBacklash of the Day: McDonald’s this week become the latest fast-food giant to learn an important lesson about trying to force a Twitter hashtag meme based on a marketing campaign.

That lesson? Don’t.

You’d think Wendy’s failed attempt to make #HeresTheBeef happen would have prevented McDonald’s from making the same mistake with #McDStories, but you’d think wrong.

After Mickey D’s official Twitter feed tweeted an self-congratulatory quote attributed to a “McD potato supplier” (since deleted) along with the hashtag #McDStories, it didn’t take long for Twitter users to turn the trend-forcing on its face and offer up their own, less flattering “McD Stories.”

#McDStories quickly became a gushing stream of badvertising. Until this morning, that is — when it turned into a gushing stream of news stories about how badly McDonald’s failed.

[dailydot / @natebramble.]