This is fucking hilarious.
This is fucking hilarious.
Like, holy shit. This is seriously fucking... just wow.
The thing that puts it over the edge of ridiculous is that it is completely serious.
EDIT: lol "And fucking magnets, how do they work?" Wow...
"Magic everywhere in this bitch" Hah!
Last edited by Mr. E; 04-12-2010 at 02:42 AM.
This is pretty amazing. I came twice watching it
They're surprised that they're kids look like them. Genetics, magnets - shit, if the world were such a big mystery to me, I'd probably claim it was magic too.
IT'S JUST THERE IN THE AIR
almost topped by MAGIC EVERYWHERE IN THIS BITCH
youtube is a miracle how does that shit work
i stream many bytes directly to your frontal lobe using a mallet and a really sharp chisel
quotes from the internet
Oh fuck I seriously can't stop laughing. I mean the pelican in frisco bay and the fucking magnets and sweet jesus I only wish they were joking.
Andy Samberg and Jorma Taccone and the other guy must see shit like this and think "what's the point?"
I LUL'd at "Fucking Rainbows!"
fucking lol
"Music is all magic
you can't even hold it
it's just there in the air"
Is the freezing point of music above or at liquid helium's temperature?
Abstract:
One open question that has been the subject of much recent experimental inquiry is whether or not "you can't even hold [music]." Famously, the theorists in the Insane Clown Posse (ICP) have over the last couple months established that "it's in the air," but then also posited that "you can even hold it" based on symmetry and suggested forms for music's equations of state. In this paper, we subject music to the temperature of liquid helium at ambient pressure (4.2 K) in a cryostat made specifically for this purpose. Different musics were subject to this temperature, including classical musics, raps musics, and retarded grown men dressed as weird clowns musics. The experimenters the tried with the aid of insulated gloves to, one at a time and on multiple trials to grasp the music. All of these trials were unsuccessful One experimenter then tried to grasp the music with a bare hand, but before a definitive conclusion could be reached, he lost the use of his hand which subsequently was amputated. Though we have gotten a null result, the data obtained can help in setting the upper limits for music's thermodynamic properties.
I double face palmed.
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