If something looks unappetizing like it was cooked in an iron pot in the ninth circle of hell by a gastronomic demon, we’re likely to say, “Are you friggin’ kiddin’ me? Do I look like a troll with no standards?”
Tears caused by different emotions actually look different under a microscope. It's true! Tears from cutting onions look like starbursts, or snowflakes, and are called "reflex tears" because they are created by the body as a reflex to protect from an irritant. Emotional tears have a natural painkiller in them (teeny tiny amounts!) as a reaction to the body being stressed.
When I planned on seeing "The Ninth Circle" and "Crocodile" on Friday night at the Rochester Fringe Festival, I inadvertently set myself up for an evening of theatrical throwbacks to aching adolescence. In totally different ways, each piece presented a situation where youths wrapped up in their own difficult worlds can manifest tragic results.
Inferno, Canto X: Many artists have attempted to illustrate Dante Alighieri's epic poem the Divine Comedy, but none have made such an indelible stamp on our collective imagination as the Frenchman Gustave Doré.
The Ninth Gate: occult and tarot-like symbolism in the engravings by Aristide Torchia and Lucifer The Ninth Gate is probably one of my favourite movies of all time, as is the official soundtrack. …
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The Ninth Gate: occult and tarot-like symbolism in the engravings by Aristide Torchia and Lucifer The Ninth Gate is probably one of my favourite movies of all time, as is the official soundtrack. …
Dante’s Inferno is not a game for someone expecting to experience a precise reading of the poem.
If something looks unappetizing like it was cooked in an iron pot in the ninth circle of hell by a gastronomic demon, we’re likely to say, “Are you friggin’ kiddin’ me? Do I look like a troll with no standards?”
As much as we might rave about the importance of taste, the fact of the matter is that we’re also very visual creatures—the better a meal or a food product looks, the more likely we are to try it. On the flip side, if something looks unappetizing like it was cooked in an iron pot in the ninth circle of hell by a gastronomic demon, we’re likely to say, “Are you friggin’ kiddin’ me? Do I look like a troll with no standards?”
As much as we might rave about the importance of taste, the fact of the matter is that we’re also very visual creatures—the better a meal or a food product looks, the more likely we are to try it. On the flip side, if something looks unappetizing like it was cooked in an iron pot in the ninth circle of hell by a gastronomic demon, we’re likely to say, “Are you friggin’ kiddin’ me? Do I look like a troll with no standards?”