"It ain't What You Do (It's the Way That You Do It)"

Wednesday 30 March 2011

The Selby is in... Karl Lagerfeld's place ♥

The Selby ©

Nissan’s Cute Little Orphans


The New York Times ©


































I found these two very cute cars on The New York Times while searching 
across the web for a New Car. Unfortunately mine is not working anymore... 

Monday 21 March 2011

Follow me on twitter!

This bird feels the Spring, TWEET ♫! by Jolie ♥

Twitter Poems

The New York Times ©

Twitter Poems from The New York Times

Twitter Poem

The poem creates a space.
It hides in a tent in a forest.
Making its own bed it falls asleep in the dark,
wakes up under a lamp or the sun.

Billy Collins, whose new book of poems is “Horoscopes for the Dead.”

Earth donates

break in a wave train
fallout active plume cloud spills
red reactors give
cross characters translated
in kanji could say much more

Claudia Rankine, whose latest book of poems is “Don’t Let Me Be Lonely.”

Teeny tiny poem

Teeny tiny poem/just enuf 2hold/1 xllent big word/Impluvium/open-eyed 
courtyrd/collectng rain/as all poems do/ skylife, open/birds do:/ tweet

Elizabeth Alexander, whose latest book of poems is “Crave Radiance,” 
and who wrote and delivered a poem for the inauguration of 
President Barack Obama.

Low Pay Piecework

The fifth-grade teacher and her followers—
Five classes, twenty-eight in each, all hers:
One-hundred-and-forty different characters.

Robert Pinsky, whose “Selected Poems” will be published next month.

Monday 7 March 2011

Up in the Air!






































National Geographic Channel and a team of scientists, engineers, and two world-
class balloon pilots creating a real-life version of Pixar's animated hit film Up.

On March 5th at dawn they successfully launched a 16' X 16' house 18' tall with 
300 8' colored weather balloons from a private airfield east of Los Angeles, and 
set a new world record for the largest balloon cluster flight ever attempted. The 
entire experimental aircraft was more than 10 stories high, reached an altitude 
of over 10,000 feet, and flew for approximately one hour.

UP in the Air