1. (via anyiarocks)

    Il y a 1 mois  /  2420 notes  /  Source : pussylequeer

  2. Le film du week-end: la bonne surprise.

    Le film du week-end: la bonne surprise.

    Il y a 1 mois  /  0 notes

  3. newyorker:

Why Are So Many Americans Single?

Few things are less welcome today than protracted solitude—a life style that, for many people, has the taint of loserdom and brings to mind such characters as Ted Kaczynski and Shrek. Does aloneness deserve a less untoward image? Aside from monastic seclusion, which is just another way of being together, it is hard to come up with a solitary life that doesn’t invite pity, or an enviable loner who’s not cheating the rules. (Even Henry David Thoreau, for all his bluster about solitude, ambled regularly into Concord for his mother’s cooking and the local bars.) Meanwhile, the culture’s data pool is filled with evidence of virtuous togetherness. “The Brady Bunch.” The March on Washington. The Yankees, in 2009. Alone, we’re told, is where you end up when these enterprises go south.
And yet the reputation of modern solitude is puzzling, because the traits enabling a solitary life—financial stability, spiritual autonomy, the wherewithal to buy more dishwashing detergent when the box runs out—are those our culture prizes. Plus, recent demographic shifts suggest that aloneness, far from fading out in our connected age, is on its way in. In 1950, four million people in this country lived alone. These days, there are almost eight times as many, thirty-one million. Americans are getting married later than ever (the average age of first marriage for men is twenty-eight), and bailing on domestic life with alacrity (half of modern unions are expected to end in divorce). Today, more than fifty per cent of U.S. residents are single, nearly a third of all households have just one resident, and five million adults younger than thirty-five live alone. This may or may not prove a useful thing to know on certain Saturday nights.

- In this week’s issue, Nathan Heller writes about  Eric Klinenberg’s new book, “Going Solo: The Extraordinary Rise and Surprising Appeal of Living Alone”: http://nyr.kr/HvawXS 

    newyorker:

    Why Are So Many Americans Single?

    Few things are less welcome today than protracted solitude—a life style that, for many people, has the taint of loserdom and brings to mind such characters as Ted Kaczynski and Shrek. Does aloneness deserve a less untoward image? Aside from monastic seclusion, which is just another way of being together, it is hard to come up with a solitary life that doesn’t invite pity, or an enviable loner who’s not cheating the rules. (Even Henry David Thoreau, for all his bluster about solitude, ambled regularly into Concord for his mother’s cooking and the local bars.) Meanwhile, the culture’s data pool is filled with evidence of virtuous togetherness. “The Brady Bunch.” The March on Washington. The Yankees, in 2009. Alone, we’re told, is where you end up when these enterprises go south.

    And yet the reputation of modern solitude is puzzling, because the traits enabling a solitary life—financial stability, spiritual autonomy, the wherewithal to buy more dishwashing detergent when the box runs out—are those our culture prizes. Plus, recent demographic shifts suggest that aloneness, far from fading out in our connected age, is on its way in. In 1950, four million people in this country lived alone. These days, there are almost eight times as many, thirty-one million. Americans are getting married later than ever (the average age of first marriage for men is twenty-eight), and bailing on domestic life with alacrity (half of modern unions are expected to end in divorce). Today, more than fifty per cent of U.S. residents are single, nearly a third of all households have just one resident, and five million adults younger than thirty-five live alone. This may or may not prove a useful thing to know on certain Saturday nights.

    - In this week’s issue, Nathan Heller writes about  Eric Klinenberg’s new book, “Going Solo: The Extraordinary Rise and Surprising Appeal of Living Alone”: http://nyr.kr/HvawXS 

    Il y a 1 mois  /  410 notes  /  Source : newyorker.com

  4. leyeti: Michael Sheen reading Twilight Fan Fiction…

    via coyotecrafty:

    Ces petits cheveux bouclés, Michael, c’est…

    Il y a 1 mois  /  31 notes  /  Source : akatproductio

  5. Il y a 2 mois  /  7075 notes  /  Source : hxcfairy

  6. Comment on va faire maintenant que Megaupload a fermé ?
thisvideoisnotavailable:

gameofkaamelott:

Plus qu’un jour d’attente avant une grande saison!

It’s the final countdown !

    Comment on va faire maintenant que Megaupload a fermé ?

    thisvideoisnotavailable:

    gameofkaamelott:

    Plus qu’un jour d’attente avant une grande saison!

    It’s the final countdown !

    Il y a 2 mois  /  1561 notes  /  Source : littleyellowcup

  7. (via thisvideoisnotavailable)

    Il y a 2 mois  /  5322 notes  /  Source : doctorabishop

  8. (via enfantgatee)

    Il y a 2 mois  /  19465 notes  /  Source : sexdrugsandsixtynine

  9. Défilé Moncler F/W 2012

    Il y a 3 mois  /  0 notes