Like so many good ideas, once seen, it is instantly inevitable and I can only curse myself for not thinking of it first. Available across the pond from Nation Design.
UPDATE: The like stamp inspired me to add a “like” button to this blog. Why? Because we can. Knock yourselves out.
| The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
| You’re Welcome – Constitutional Crisis | ||||
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There’s an analogy for law students in here somewhere, but I’m going to wait until after taking the bar before doing any existential self-analysis.
Law school exam season is upon us. One more to go for me. This spoof from LSU’s Assault and Flattery will either give you a little hope or extinguish it entirely.
Dilbert author Scott Adams posted some great cartoons on his blog following the lost prototype fiasco at the world’s most secretive tech company.


According to Adams these cartoons will never make the newspapers, not because they’re any less funny than the ones that will, but because the newspaper pipeline is simply too slow and cumbersome to accommodate comics based on today’s lighting-fast news cycle.
Rob Cottingham’s Noise to Signal

XKCD: Honor Societies
Google ran the following heartwarming ad in the Super Bowl, telling the story of a romance in Paris through search queries.
The ad, of course, begs to be spoofed. See Hitler spoof meme for a preview of where this is headed.
A Realistic French Romance
Is Tiger Feeling Lucky Today?
Study Abroad: Thailand
Dating Fail
Surprise Party
It’s probably not a good idea to sleep outside in one of these – especially not in Maine – certainly not in hunting season – or or mating for that matter. Still, a clever idea from designer Eiko Ishizawa.
When a graphic artist says the wrong thing. From Betsy Streeter, Brainwaves
| The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
| Mass Backwards | ||||
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Classic diatribe on the state of politics by the imitable Jon Stewart, embedded above.
via life is a thrill, a parody of German film director Werner Herzog reading Curious George. Hysterical, at least if you’re a fan of Herzog’s work.






