It's like: hysterical history, laminating animals, this american life

just a matter of time before the bomb explodes

By dusty (June 4, 2009)

I am often asked what it was like to grow up in the bowels of the midwest. The answer, as you can probably imagine, is pretty simple: there was a lot of shit. Everywhere. That’s not a metaphor: there was shit — literally — everywhere. Cow shit, pig shit, dog shit (on our lawns), some bird shit (our cars, the sidewalk), and more cow shit (on top of other cow shit).

Driving to the ol’ workhouse with the windows down was always a surefire way to find out what the local farmers were up to for the week. Spreading cow shit on the fields! Positively delish!

Surprisingly, though, I’m not aversed to that shit-smell. I still love steak, still love bacon. Still love the midwest, love the flies and mosquitoes. The cow shit, the pig shit, it’s all just a part of the aura. Take that away and you might as well be in California, amidst the steaming piles of human shit, festering and rotting away like the dreams of passersby.

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It's like: hysterical history, the hunger, this american life

shooting a raccoon in the face at close range with a 12-gauge shotgun

By dusty (January 9, 2009)

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It's like: hysterical history, this american life, ttylkthxbye

an online chat transcript between dr pepper and an unkown acquaintance, mid-summer 1999

By dusty (May 6, 2008)

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It's like: hysterical history, music is my girlfriend

what journey’s “don’t stop believin’” would have been called if written by polish anti-christian death metal band, behemoth

By dusty (March 16, 2008)

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It's like: hysterical history, the art of seduction, ttylkthxbye

an online chat transcript between amelia earhart and an unknown friend, July 2, 1937

By dusty (March 7, 2008)

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