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armin

@arminsmyname / arminsmyname.tumblr.com

dead acc... or am i?
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I want to start using Tumblr again. It's been so long and a lot has changed here!

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reblogged
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jaedencex

Another Translation

Ritsu: “I’m so sorry…”

“I’m really…”

“It’s no use. I can’t move my head anymore.”

Takano: “Onodera,”

*grab*

“It’s fine already. For now, just hurry up and get better.”

Takano-san, that’s not possible when we haven’t even talked yet.

Yet still, you hold my hand so tenderly.

Ritsu said ごめんなさい, which is the most sincere way to apologise. He’s never said that to Takano before. Ritsu feels very bad guys.

I’m fucking CRYING!! 

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She went on a rant for two days. Delta got her ass together in two tweets.

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bob-belcher

Bonus:

DAAMMMNNNNN

Reblogging for chris evans’ bonus toothpaste bit

….Did he tell her to chill with emojis?

I’m deeeeaaaad!

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Reasons why Millennials prefer e-mail to phone in a work environment:

1) We don’t want to talk to you.

2) We don’t want to pause our music to talk to you.

3) We don’t even talk to each other on the phone — why would we want to talk to you?

But the biggest reason is A TRAIL. If I e-mail you back, you can see what was said in the future. You can’t tell me I forgot to tell you something because it’s right there. You can’t tell me I “never reached out” because we can both SEE it. I don’t have to trust your recollection.

And, in a group inbox, you can see who has been responded to. I got forwarded a voicemail from my supervisor (through e-mail! imagine that!) asking me to call some lady back for clarification. So I did, against my will of course…and she said somebody had called her yesterday.

Who? When? What did y’all talk about? Is follow-up necessary?

Phone calls back and forth only work in a workflow where the standard procedure is to *log* phone calls in a shared system with a brief summary of what was discussed. Otherwise, y’all need to let us e-mail. It’s not just about a generation gap. It’s also about efficiency.

Thanks for coming to my TED Talk. Any feedback can be proffered via e-mail.

EDIT

Also: let’s keep it real – we multi-task better than you do. If I’m on the phone with you, I’m FORCED to do that ONE thing and put whatever you want above all the other things I could’ve been doing. If you e-mail me, I can research what you want (while doing other things), find the solution (while doing other things), and offer it to you in a nice concise package (while doing other things) without sitting on the phone with you in awkward silence looking for the answer to whatever you think is urgent. (It’s not urgent. You’re not dying. I know it’s not urgent.)

OP is being kind in saying “i don’t have to trust your recollection.” people straight up lie, especially customers.

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idkpotato117

Look at this wholesome message by Stephen Hillenburg in the DVD box set of Spongebob’s 1st season

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animentality

I woke up really depressed, and was even more depressed when I found out about Stephen Hillenburg.

It was sad when Stan Lee died, because he created a rich universe for everyone to imagine good people running around, saving the day in, but Spongebob seasons 1-3 were closer to my own heart because they really were something else.

They were silly and light hearted, but evoked this sense of being weirdly realistic too.

I mean, how iconic are spongebob memes?

How relatable are they, that screenshots and stills and references to old quotes can create a whole new linguistic communication for teens and young adults? 

Listen, we can joke about memes being trash all day, but memes possess raw cultural energy.

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people use these formats to express in easy-to-understand ways their life experiences and even political views.

Memes are a part of people’s lives, nowadays, or at least, the younger generations that grew up in this digital culture that’s taken over their lives. 

And spongebob was just so delightful. 

Had so many memorable moments. 

So many good quotes, and they don’t have to be deep. they just have to be simple. 

“I’m ugly and I’m proud.”

“Is this the krusty krab?” “no this is patrick.”

“We did it, Patrick, we saved the city!”

“The pioneers used to ride these babies for miles!”

“the inner machinations of my mind are an enigma.”

The iconic marching band moment.

am i positive that all of these moments are from hillenburg’s spongebob- well no. I honestly don’t remember. 

but it doesn’t matter, because spongebob is a cultural icon, and the show exists thanks to stephen hillenburg’s wonderful direction.

So thank you, Stephen.

Your legacy will live on.

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