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#source: moshpit jones
incorrectbatfam · 15 days
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[texting]
Jason: Where are you right now?
Dick: I'm getting Batburgers.
Jason: Can you grab me Robin nuggets? I'll pay you back.
Dick: ...
Jason: Please get me nuggets, I'll pay you back.
Dick: No.
Jason: Why not?
Dick: You never pay me back for anything.
Jason: Yes I have.
Dick: Name one.
Jason: I can literally name hundreds.
Dick: I don't want hundreds, I want one.
Jason: Just please get me nuggets.
Dick: Okay.
Jason: Seriously? I love you!
Dick: Nah I lied, I already left.
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Howdy was about to have a lunchbreak when suddenly:
Howdy: *on the phone* WHAT. DID. YOU. DO?!!
Chuck: Girl, what you mean?
Howdy: You ate my leftover chinese food!
Chuck: I... absolutely did not.
Howdy: There were 2,972 grains of rice!
Chuck: Okay, and?
Howdy: And now there's NONE!!
Chuck: I didn't do it!
Howdy: *beat*
Chuck: Okay, fine, it was me.
Howdy: JEEEE-
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icyr0ads · 2 years
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S.T.A.R. Labs Shenanigans part 33
Cisco: Can you get twizzlers while you’re at the store?
Harry: No, I’m already in line
Cisco: Okay can you get out of line and get them?
Harry: No
Cisco: Why not?
Harry: Because the line is super long and I don’t care about you enough to get twizzlers
Cisco: I’ll never ask you for anything ever again
Harry: Yes you will. You’re a sponge and you don’t do anything
Cisco: Just get me twizzlers!
Cisco: *missed call*
Harry: Don’t call me!
Cisco: Just please get them!
Harry: Eat a salad instead!
Cisco:
Harry:
Harry: Okay, I got twizzlers. I’m on my way back
Cisco: Okay :)
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lizazavanbeek · 4 years
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Moshpits l Jarvis says that while crowds tend to encourage what psychologists call ​‘deindividuation’ – ​“losing your inhibitions as you become more anonymous” – he doesn’t observe the same effect in the context of a mosh pit, largely because deindividuation is more commonly associated with negative behaviours. ​“Deindividuation doesn’t really explain the positive behaviour exhibited by the overwhelming majority of moshers,” he explains, ​“I see the key to understanding this as social identity. Fans at gigs experience a shared euphoria and sense of emotional closeness and profound shared experience – a quasi-spiritual experience if you like. At that moment, shared identity as fans is a tremendously powerful influence and this leads to overwhelmingly pro-social behaviour, at least to others identifiable as part of the same group. In this context it’s not surprising that moshpits are safer and more ordered than they appear.”
By now, it’s a cliché that our constant connectivity can leave people feeling disconnected from reality – and from one another. Moshing can offer a physical catharsis and outlet for people living under the confines of 21st century life. One young rap fan in London told me he sees moshpits as an opportunity to ​“just get it all out”. The intersection of depression and elation to be found in Lil Uzi Vert singing ​“Push me to the edge /​All my friends are dead” whilst leaping into the embrace of the audience might look familiar to people who’ve followed the development of punk through to hardcore and emo.
“I firmly believe that the spirit of the pit is not primarily about anger, but about the euphoric expression of shared identity,” explains Jarvis. Though he does have one admission: ​“Of course the music needs a certain tempo before moshing becomes practical. It’s never going to catch on at a Tom Jones gig – no disrespect to the great man…”
source: https://theface.com/tag/moshpits
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