We've already had a Nightmare on Sesame Street -- these are just plain awesome.
Catch the rest here.
[incrediblethings]
We've already had a Nightmare on Sesame Street -- these are just plain awesome.
Catch the rest here.
[incrediblethings]
Nerd Nightly News: Guitar Heroes Edition
Picture This:
Know This:
Reports Claim:
You've never seen graffiti like this.
Unless you're from the future, and those damn robo-hoodlums keep sponging your LEDs. Don't worry -- it washes out.
These stunning pictures are both a display of electrical magic and photographic mastery.
A variety of plants are carved down, then shocked to all hell -- and captured under the perfect settings.
[mymodernmet]
This is the combination of watercolor and ferrofluid, a magnetic liquid, that has been used to create some truly stunning works of art. You don't want to miss the other images and a video of the process.
[make]
In the tradition of DrFaustusAU's beloved Dr. Seuss versions of The Call of Cthulhu and Ghostbusters, cartoonist Adam Watson has Seuss-ified another story dear to geeky hearts: Star Wars.
Yoda, Darth Vader, Obi-Wan Kenobi and even Jabba the Hutt get new, whimsical looks, and there's even a bit of Geisel-inspired poetry to go with it.
Confidential to A. Watson: here's a free sequel idea: "Horton Senses a Disturbance in the Force."
[flavorwire.]
The works of the late John Chamberlain, a sculptor who specialized in destroying cars, galvanized steel, aluminum foil and other metals, are currently on display at New York's Guggenheim Museum.
Thanks to some clever hackers, though, you can download a replacement version of the audio tour that, er, transforms the Chamberlain exhibit into a chronicle of the Decepticon defeat of the Autobots in the robot wars of 2028.
It's even narrated by a fake art expert, "Patricia Redgrave," a leading scholar in the field of Transformers-related art.
You can download "Artobots" for yourself at Art Tour Hack.
[gizmodo.]