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Post by auntym on Oct 31, 2021 1:28:29 GMT -6
HAPPY HALLOWEEN
still my favorite...
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Post by paulette on Nov 2, 2021 17:25:32 GMT -6
It was good. But he wasn't the clear eyed young man at the start of the video. He was the monster. We laughed then...
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HALLOWEEN
Nov 9, 2021 6:28:38 GMT -6
via mobile
Post by jcurio on Nov 9, 2021 6:28:38 GMT -6
Sorry Aunty, its not a favorite of mine. Never has been.
Though it was done in “fun”, I have 2 daughters that I can endlessly imagine out on a date at night, with a nice boy…. that, idk, seems a little “off”…..
Nothing against the way Michael Jackson looked. Nothing against the major style of dancing in a nightmare. Ok? I don’t mind you posting it. The talent and the ideas behind it are AMAZING.
The fact that a “thriller” can give us a rush that we can become addicted to? Does it just boil down to a job, hard work, and entertainment?
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Post by auntym on Oct 29, 2022 21:20:22 GMT -6
HAPPY HALLOWEEN
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Post by auntym on Oct 31, 2022 22:12:38 GMT -6
www.vice.com/en/article/m7gkby/a-skull-shaped-asteroid-flying-by-earth-on-halloween-is-the-spookiest-thing-to-ever-happen-in-space?utm_source=email&utm_medium=editorial&utm_content=tech&utm_campaign=221031A Skull-Shaped Asteroid Flying by Earth on Halloween Is the Spookiest Thing to Ever Happen in SpaceThis creepy space object showed that even the cosmos can join in on the Halloween festivities.By Becky Ferreira / www.vice.com/en/contributor/becky-ferreiraOctober 31, 2022 IMAGE: ARI It’s Halloween: the special day of the year reserved for scary stories, hidden identities, and candy binges. While most of these eerie festivities take place here on Earth, extraterrestrial trick-or-treaters have occasionally swung by our planet to partake in the holiday fun. Take, for instance, the amazing skull-shaped asteroid that just happened to zoom by Earth on Halloween in 2015. Known officially as 2015 TB145, the asteroid has since earned the nicknames “the Great Pumpkin” and “the Halloween Asteroid” because of its eerie resemblance to a human skull, which is, of course, an enduring symbol of Halloween. The asteroid was discovered by Paannamic Survey Telescope and Rapid Response System (Pan-STARRS) just a few weeks before Halloween that year, but its skeletal appearance was first revealed in radar observations captured on October 30 by the Arecibo Observatory, a premiere radio telescope that has sadly since collapsed. The rock is less than a half-mile wide and passed about 300,000 miles from Earth, which is just a little beyond the orbit of the Moon. It does not pose any threat to our planet in terms of a potential impact, though its ghoulish shape may have given some skywatchers the creeps. The asteroid is just one of many outer space phenomena that have stoked the Halloween spirit over the years. This year, NASA shared an image of the Sun that makes our star look like a giant Jack O’Lantern that runs on nuclear fusion, and there is no lack of zombie stars, ghostly nebulas, and cannibal galaxies out there in space for anyone interested in an off-Earth dimension to the scary season. www.vice.com/en/article/m7gkby/a-skull-shaped-asteroid-flying-by-earth-on-halloween-is-the-spookiest-thing-to-ever-happen-in-space?utm_source=email&utm_medium=editorial&utm_content=tech&utm_campaign=221031
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Post by auntym on Oct 31, 2023 14:46:58 GMT -6
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