Very Blue. on Flickr.
(Source: nothingislinear, via fuckyeahspidermemes)
(Source: nothingislinear, via fuckyeahspidermemes)
(Source: mechanicalmoose, via fuckyeahspidermemes)
(Source: mechanicalmoose, via fuckyeahspidermemes)
(Source: mechanicalmoose, via fuckyeahspidermemes)
(Source: spideymeme, via fuckyeahspidermemes)
npr:
Can new “stealth” hunting gear fool the deer?
Don’t Go Near That Guy With A Rifle! What Guy? : Krulwich Wonders…
Illustration by Melissa Forsyth / NPR
Watch the Throne therefore should not be judged as an album, but rather as a move in this savvy strategy of institutionalizing hegemony in the face of potential decline. Kanye and Jay-Z’s alliance offers a new blueprint for managing decline in a turbulent world from which international relations scholars and American foreign policy practitioners alike should learn. And if political scientists don’t want to take lessons from hip hop artists, then allow me to give the last word to Cyhi Da Prince: “my haters got PhDs, y’all just some major haters with some math minors.”
Jay-Z’s Hegemony in the Age of Kanye | Marc Lynch
*drops mic*
(via npr)