if you want to kill someone stab them with an icicle because the icicle will melt and then there will be no murder weapon
(via ibuildmyself)
(via danlhowell)
davidtennantinplacesheshouldntbe:
Les Tennantables
(via danlhowell)
Imagine waking up to this
(via danlhowell)
plot twist: when John and Mary leave on their honeymoon and they’re on the airport, John gets 3 tickets and he’s like “no, I don’t think so,
we only booked two” and then from behind there’s this deep quiet voice “then I phoned back and got one for myself as well”.John:
I thought this was about spn for a moment and that the deep voice was Cas and I was like, what.
Mr. Moseby is one of us.
And he hated Cole from the beginning. We should have known sooner.
(via jackbaradick)
What I always enjoyed about Morticia and Gomez was how they made no secret that they passionately loved each other. We get so used to seeing depictions (on television especially) of married couples in continual states of contention—belittling one another, falling into the wife/mother-husband/child trope, and generally disrespecting each other, which made me wonder why they even bothered marrying in the first place.
But Gomez and Morticia never lose their desire and respect for each other. Is it because they’re “weird” that it’s acceptable to depict married life so positively? Or are they “strange” because, after three children and a lifetime together, they still adore each other? I know no marriage is perfect, but wouldn’t it be nice if the media portrayed marriage as more than a continuous state of exasperation and anger? Maybe that’s why romance novelists and romance novel readers are so embattled: because we dare to believe in love.
“How long has it been since we waltzed?”
“Hours.”
always reblog
(via entercatchyurlhere)