Radio Blue Heart is on the air!

gardenstated:

mero977:

image

LONG LIVE THE CROW WITCH

thewarmsound:

Tori Amos / Crucify

supremeleaderkylorens:

Industrialization has crippled the globe. Nature failed as technology spread. And in it’s wake, a market erected. An entire city built on top of the dead!

classichorrorblog:

Night Of The Living Dead
Directed by George A. Romero (1968)

npr:
“ Some wolf puppies are unexpectedly willing to play fetch, according to scientists who saw young wolves retrieve a ball thrown by a stranger and bring it back at that person’s urging.
This behavior wouldn’t be surprising in a dog. But wolves...

npr:

Some wolf puppies are unexpectedly willing to play fetch, according to scientists who saw young wolves retrieve a ball thrown by a stranger and bring it back at that person’s urging.

This behavior wouldn’t be surprising in a dog. But wolves are thought to be less responsive to human cues because they haven’t gone through thousands of years of domestication.

Exactly how dogs emerged from a now-extinct population of ancient wolves is a mystery. Wolves are large, dangerous carnivores, and yet they were the first animals that humans tamed. More than 15,000 years ago, when humans were still hunter-gatherers, this large predator somehow began cozying up to people, eventually becoming their “best friend.”

To try to get clues about how that happened, scientists such as Christina Hansen Wheat of Stockholm University in Sweden have been studying the differences between dogs and modern wolves. As part of her work, she raised litters of wolf puppies, feeding them and acclimating them to her presence but not playing with them or training them.

Fetching With Wolves: What It Means That A Wolf Puppy Will Retrieve A Ball

Photo: Christina Hansen Wheat

citystompers1:
“Yojimbo vs. Godzilla by Sean Hartter
”
merelygifted:
“(via Painting found inside Italian gallery wall confirmed as a Gustav Klimt | World news | The Guardian)
”
filmwitches:
“Halloween (1978) dir. John Carpenter
”

filmwitches:

Halloween (1978) dir. John Carpenter 

countess-zaleska:

The Slumber Party Massacre (1982) dir. Amy Holden Jones