“A six page comic about a kid who struggles to pass his dance school final. But when your whole world revolves around dance what is one to do with such big shoes?”
Please consider supporting the me via purchase ofdigital PDF’s of my work or by reblogging this comic!
no one will ever understand the deep fucking connection I have with this film
For real though
Ok guys I need to talk about this movie.
The Breakfast Club came out in 1985 and to this day is, in my opinion, one of the greatest damn movies ever to barely even have a script.
During the famous “dance” scene, Molly Ringwald, who played the “princess” Claire, was supposed to a small little dance by herself, but she was shy so all of them did some dancing together, creating one of the most famous film scene’s to date. It was improvised.
During the scene in the film where the characters sat down and told why they were their, there was NO SCRIPT. John Huges told the cast to sit there and improvise why they thought their characters were there, creating that heart wrenching scene everyone could relate to.
EVERYONE can relate to this movie and thats the best damn thing.
On March 24, 1984, five students entered a detention room thinking it was just another Saturday. Before the day was over, they broke the rules, bared their souls, and touched each other in a way they never dreamed possible.
EVERYONE IN THE WORLD NEEDS TO SEE THE BREAKFAST CLUB.
I’m just reblogging this for the fact it is the worlds best movie and if you don’t think so you need to rethink your priorities.
My mom, dad and I were going through old DVDs and VCRs, and we found this! I’m gonna try it out, it was in the same container of stuff from when my dad got his first computer.
Vitiligo is a condition in which people lose melanin – the pigment that gives skin its color – resulting in white patches of skin. While the exact cause of vitiligo is unknown, it has been confirmed that an autoimmune component plays a strong role in the disease. The chronic nature of the
condition, long term treatment, lack of uniform effective therapy and
unpredictable cause of the condition has a significant impact upon the
quality of life for individuals living with vitiligo.
Vitiligo can begin at any age, but in half of all affected patients, its onset
is noted before the age of twenty. In more than half, there is a family
history of vitiligo or early greying of hair. In most cases, periods of
rapidly extending hypo-pigmentation occur. After several months, the
number and size of the light areas become stable and may remain so for
several years; other episodes of pigment loss may occur later on,
however often following stress or trauma, and the hypopigmentation may
spread.
Most patients with vitiligo are in good general health. Although 1 – 2% of
the general population has vitiligo, the incidence is 8 – 20% in people
with adrenocortical insufficiency, hyperthyroidism, alopecia areata,
pernicious anemia, melanoma, scleroderma, morphea, and certain types of
uveitis. Three different hypotheses have been advanced to explain the
cause of vitiligo: autoimmunity, neurochemical factors, and
self-destruction of melanocytes. Research on the cause is continuing.