20 April, 2017
Plywood clock
It is simply described as “Material: PLYWOOD”, but the price of this clock will surprise you.
|
20 April, 2017
It is simply described as “Material: PLYWOOD”, but the price of this clock will surprise you.
19 April, 2017
Even if the print or bolting a carabiner to a metal mug made sense, the lone, sad review said that the ink ran off when she washed it the first time.
18 April, 2017
Summer approaches, and this year, you’re going to want this swimsuit covered in the text from Shakespeare’s Hamlet. Finally, you can answer “yes” to the question posed on this t-shirt.
17 April, 2017
For the price of just a few months’ worth of health insurance, you can own this enormous malachite pyramid. (Check out the picture of a lady holding it, for size.) It may not do anything, but, as the manufacturer explains, “Please do not expect something that looks like it was made in a factory.” Yeah! Fuck the factory pyramids!
If you need something less pointy to heal, you should go with this 46-pound crystal ball, described as a “high altitude orb gem” that contains “green phantoms.”
16 April, 2017
Celebrate the headless women in your life with this shot glass set, which I’ve pixellated to meet the stringent no-glass-boob requirements of today’s workplace. (You can see the full-glass-nudity version on the manufacturer’s listing, if you must.) There’s also a huge version of this that holds fifty ounces, if you’re a guy who insists on drinking all of your drinks out of a titty-and-butt.
15 April, 2017
The bucket-fort you see here is the Legacy Premium Food Storage system, which you can eat while you’re locked in the basement of your home, prolonging your post-apocalypse life for as long as you can make 4,320 meals last. Assuming you have water, and the air isn’t poisoned, and you don’t get hurt, or get an infection. And, then, assuming the apocalypse is still raging onward when your food runs out, it’s into the wasteland to scavenge what you can find, be it flora, fauna, or your neighbor’s freeze-dried food supply.
Thankfully, no one buys stuff like this, because fear doesn’t sell products, especially not fear of apocalypse and death. We’re rational beings, and allay our brains’ chemical response to threats by careful and considered thought. Free will is real, and homo sapiens has thankfully transcended the stimulus-response paradigm of life to become post-animal models of logic and reason. If that weren’t true, then we would be doomed to repeat our obvious mistakes, both personally, and in society at large.
14 April, 2017
It connects to your phone via Bluetooth. It sells for thousands of times the average price of a backpack. There’s really no way you can go wrong.