View allAll Photos Tagged Terrifying
Yes. Fear the Frogburger.
These little beasties lurk in the bottom of your handbag, eat your keys and then bite your fingers with razor sharp invisible teeth.
These unusual and off-putting men will apparently perform some sort of erotic dancing for you, in exchange for money.
Rather terrified of posting these as I know I have at least one pro chef in my contacts (sorry Yannick...I know I should do it all by hand!) but I am a huge fan of Rye Bread, and this terrific machine will make a 100% rye loaf in three and a half hours flat (which coincidentally is the same amount of time it takes me to eat a whole loaf...) and the results are fab.
It's my own recipe, complete with ground black pepper and a great combination of seeds (although this loaf was missing mustard seeds which are a must [ho ho]).
Anyway, enjoy.
They talked and blinked and looked at each other while arguing about things like secret fantasies. The description said that their conversation was generated on the fly by the computer that ran the whole thing. Super creepy, and it caused Arlo to lose his shit.
I don't know. I just don't. This is one of those inexplicable things that happens when you buy a house that was built in 1923: sometimes there are freakish lumpish toilet-shaped things out in plain sight down in the unfinished basement, and no one can explain why.
It scares me. I should turn it into a planter or something.
My grandparents, Gwen and Charlie are on the right in this photo. I have absolutely no idea who the other couple is, but the woman really scares me. This is a classic 70's photo in my view. Taken December, 1975.
John Smyser’s Terrifying Toronado exhibition car, which, terrifyingly enough, is best remembered for hurtling the guardrail at Irwindale Raceway and scaring the bejesus out of the fans in that section.
By all accounts, Smyser was a very good Top Fuel racer. With Nando Haase driving, his 392 Chrysler-powered Radar Wheels entry won the 1965 Hot Rod Magazine Championships in Riverside, Calif., and he and Harry Hibler were runner-up to Tony Nancy at the 1970 March Meet.
The Terrifying Toronado had its street roots in Olds’ peculiar attempt at a muscle car. With gobs of horsepower under the hood and chain-driven front-wheel drive for better traction, it should have been a huge winner, right? After all, while the GTOs and Mustangs were melting the hides trying to glue their tires to the road, the Olds would hook up just fine, thank you very much. The car was so highly praised that it won Motor Trend’s prestigious Car of the Year award in 1966. Smyser’s car was a ’66 – the first year in a production that ran through 1992 – and shared the same engine as the production car, a 425-cid V-8 powerplant.
Noted speed merchant Don Ratican (of Ratican-Jackson-Stearns fame) built the two Olds engines that, while they retained the stock displacement, were pretty racy, packed with Mickey Thompson pistons with Grant rings, a Racer Brown camshaft, heads ported and polished by Valley Head Service, and, naturally, a 6-71 supercharger.
The front engine turned the front 10-inch-wide Casler slicks on Halibrand wheels through the conventional Toronado automatic transmission and differential while the rear-seat-mounted second engine used a dual-disc clutch and a Schiefer aluminum flywheel to funnel power via direct drive to a conventional Olds rear end.
While the wheelbase remained at the stock 119 inches, the track was widened 8 1/2 inches in front and 2 1/2 inches in the rear, presumably for stability and tire clearance. The rear engine sat in a subframe that was easily removable for repairs (maybe they knew something ahead of time?). The car tipped the scales at a portly 4,500 pounds.
Despite its pedigree, the car may have been one of the more ill-conceived and certainly most ill-handling race cars ever built. Or maybe it was just too far ahead of its time.
The Terrifying Toronado was unveiled at the 1966 AHRA Winternationals at Irwindale and made its first run the following week at the ‘Dale. On its fateful lone pass, Smyser lost the handle early, with the car first darting left for the centerline, then hooking up hard and plunging back to the right into and over the Armco. As the famous photos show, it didn’t make it much farther than the guardrail and fell comfortably short – easy for me to say because I wasn’t sitting in the stands – of the chain-link fence.
It ran a few other times that year but never performed well enough to merit much attention. The car’s final outing came about a year after its debut, at the 1967 NHRA Winternationals in Pomona, where the car again ran afoul of the laws of physics. During Saturday qualifying, Smyser made an exhibition pass but again the car got all terrifying on him and busted through the right-side guardrail at speed at three-quarter-track. Fortunately, there were no grandstands that far downtrack. Regardless, it became clear that the Terrifying Toronado was just too terrifying to continue, and the car was retired.
i braved the roads, and despite how absolutely terrified i was to drive in the ice, headed for the drive4copd event for nash. words can't express how proud i am of patty to see her so involved in this cause.
please take the screener at www.drive4copd.com and vote for her :)
Manchester, house. Flash ligh was already set to a minimum but it was still too strong at this short distance and the skin was burned. So I used the camera ND filter function to further reduce the impact of the flash and get the details of the skin out.
Does anyone know anything about this? It's pretty much a children's story that happens to be approved by the Nazi party.
We went on the Olomana Hike this morning. I am afraid of heights and had a slight panic attack near the top. After hugging a rock with my eyes closed for ten minutes I was able to take my camera out of my backpack and shoot this picture of my friend who made it to the top. I couldn't turn around so I just pointed the camera over my head. Katherine also went to the top.
Explosive - Scripts and Animations, High Quality Bento Animations, available in Full Perm and Standard versoion. Visit the store and watch live Animations: Walking, Combat, Emotive. Sitting, Lying, Dancing, Couple, Sport and Other. Some animations have built-in avatar physics. Scripts and Pose Stand are also available in the store, to inspire your photos. Reach for joy with Explosive Animations
Explosive - Scripts and Animations Store InWorld
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Ruined%20Mine/164/16/22
Explosive - Couples & Adult Animations Store InWorld
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Astralis/153/155/2001
Explosive Marketplace WEB Store
marketplace.secondlife.com/stores/157265
Explosive Facebook
www.facebook.com/SecondLifeExplosive
Explosive Youtube
www.youtube.com/@explosiveanimation4492/videos
Explosive - Scripts and Animations Group in Second Life
secondlife:///app/group/ed0897fe-4524-265f-3f1c-8cdc702596bb/about