thelazydaisyspeacefullife:

pastelmorgue:

UGH YES

SO GPOY

MY LIFE!!
Can you figure it out? My Brother: Is it illegal to expose yourself to a blind person? My Brother: Why is it called a building when it's already built? My Brother: If money doesn't grow on trees, why do banks have branches? My Brother: When something is shipped by ship it's called cargo, but when something is shipped by car it's called a shipment... My Brother: If love is blind, then why is lingerie so popular? My Brother: Why is impediment so hard to say when used to describe someone who has a hard time talking? My Brother: What's the speed of dark? Me: -awake forever trying to figure out all the answers-
storyboard:

The Murders & the Journalists
This story produced in partnership with The Awl.
In February 1970, at Fort Bragg in Fayetteville, North Carolina, a pregnant woman named Colette MacDonald and her two children, Kimberley, 5, and Kristen, 2, were slaughtered in their home. Colette’s husband, Jeffrey MacDonald, a 26-year-old doctor and Green Beret at the time of the crime, was convicted of the murders in 1979. MacDonald faces the next of countless court dates on September 17, 2012, still seeking exoneration. The MacDonald case has been an object of obsession and controversy for more than four decades and the subject of high-visibility journalistic debate. But respectable opinion has always vastly favored the jury verdict of guilt. Errol Morris is trying to change that.
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NEXT YEAR :)
“I believe that everything happens for a reason. People change so that you can learn to let go. Things go wrong so that you appreciate them when they go right. You believe lies so you eventually learn to trust no one but yourself, and sometimes good things fall apart, so that better things can fall together” Marilyn Monroe”