Kayfabe-Nation

  1. Chat Originally by ideclaresurrenderpendence

    Your very Personal and Intense Disney Ask:

    Aurora: Story of your first kiss
    Rapunzel: 5 things from your bucket list
    Dory: Something someone has told you that you can't forget (two good things and one bad)
    Pocahontas: Something new you taught someone.
    Mulan: Do you trust your gut feeling? What happened.
    Jasmine: The story of when you had to really trust someone. Was it easy?
    Belle: Is there someone you are close who no one else likes? What's the story?
    Ariel: Where do you think you belong, and why?
    Flounder: Something that surprised you and frightened you.
    Eric: Have you ever helped a stranger? What happened.
    Aladdin: A sacrifice you made for someone.
    Tiana: A time you tried the hardest for something.
    Boo: A childhood hero.
    Cruella: Something you really want but you aren't allowed to have.
    Seven Dwarfs: 7 things you like in the people around you.
    Kronk: What you are best at in the kitchen?
    Simba: Something a parent has taught you.
    Cinderella: "A dream is a wish your heart makes" What's that for you?
    Nemo: Your bravest moment.
    Terk: Are you a big brother/sister figure to anyone?
    Buzz: Your favourite fantasy world (aka Harry Potter, Star Wars), if any.
    Alice: Done drugs?
    Peter Pan: Something from your childhood that you still love.
  2. Photo no caption needed, just pure awesome

    no caption needed, just pure awesome


    Tagged: wwe onceinalifetime shawnmichaels brethart,
  3. Link

    Come and get 'em...last ticket to Wrestlemania 29!

  4. Originally by odditiesoflife

    abioticblood:

    neil-gaiman:

    odditiesoflife:

    The Mystery of “Nancy Drew” and the Author that Never Was

    The Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew, the Bobbsey Twins, and Tom Swift were all the product of one man, Edward Stratemeyer, a New Jersey author who wrote more than 1,300 books and eventually founded a syndicate of ghostwriters who pounded out juvenile mysteries based on his instructions. Thus book syndication was born. They were referred to as “book factories” and were extremely profitable.

    Stratemeyer conceived the syndicate when his Rover Boys series proved so popular that he could not keep up with the demand for more books. He corralled a stable of hungry young writers, and in 1910 they were producing 10 new series annually. Each writer earned $50 to $250 for a manuscript he could produce in a month, working with characters and plot devised by Stratemeyer. He would review each completed manuscript for consistency and publish it under a pseudonym that he owned — Franklin W. Dixon, Carolyn Keene, Laura Lee Hope, Victor Appleton. Each book in a series mentioned the thrilling earlier volumes and foreshadowed the next book. The formula worked so well that when Stratemeyer died in 1930 his daughter continued the business; when she died in 1982 the syndicate was selling more than 2 million books a year.

    This sounds cynical, but it worked because Stratemeyer had a sympathetic understanding of what young readers wanted. “The trouble is that very few adults get next to the heart of a boy when choosing something for him to read,” Stratemeyer wrote to a publisher in 1901. “A wide awake lad has no patience with that which is namby-pamby, or with that which he puts down as a ‘study book’ in disguise. He demands real flesh and blood heroes who do something.”

    Writing books. I am obviously doing it wrong.

    .

    (via cateyesindisguise)

  5. Originally by patrick-dempsey

    (Source: patrick-dempsey, via penised)

  6. Photo Originally by secretdreamlife I should get this tattoo

    I should get this tattoo

    (via sillystilinski)

  7. Originally by y2js

    reblog…forever :)

    (Source: y2js, via captainyaoihands)

  8. Originally by gif-database

    captainjackzelos:

    This is relevant today and no one can convince me otherwise

    (Source: gif-database, via cateyesindisguise)

  9. Photo Originally by hangthecode hangthecode:

An incompetent, two-faced politician. Was Romney ever the mayor of Halloweentown?

    hangthecode:

    An incompetent, two-faced politician. Was Romney ever the mayor of Halloweentown?

    (via penised)

  10. Photo Zomg!

    Zomg!

PortraitMusings, opinions and a few history lessons of the wonderful world of professional wrestling. Long time fan, first time public rambler.
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