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19 Reasons Wednesday Addams Is The True Spirit Of Halloween


46 Products That'll Solve All Your Clothing Problems

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Deodorant is meant to be worn by you, not your black shirt.

Charlotte Gomez / BuzzFeed

We hope you love the products we recommend! Just so you know, BuzzFeed may collect a share of sales from the links on this page.


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We Know Your Zodiac And Location Based On Your McDonald's Order

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You are where you eat.

37 Awesome Things You Never Knew You Needed For Your Home

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Who *wouldn’t* want a bookcase shaped like a tree or a T-rex head to hang on their wall?

We hope you love the products we recommend! Just so you know, BuzzFeed may collect a share of sales from the links on this page.

Charlotte Gomez / BuzzFeed

A poster covered with classic books that you can "scratch off" (like a scratch ticket) as you read them.

A poster covered with classic books that you can "scratch off" (like a scratch ticket) as you read them.

If you love nothing more than physically checking something off a to-do list, this is the poster for you.

Get it from Pop Chart Lab for $35.

popchartlab.com

Wall decor for anyone who has practically every word of Jurassic Park memorized.

Wall decor for anyone who has practically every word of Jurassic Park memorized.

"Dodgson, Dodgson, we've got Dodgson here!"

Get it from Mod Cloth for $84.99.

modcloth.com


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23 Of The Most Powerful Photos Of This Week

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A child dressed as Shiva at Sangam, the confluence of the Ganges, Yamuna, and mythological Saraswati rivers.

Pacific Press / Getty Images

A pair of conjoined twins were allegedly abandoned at the Dhaka Medical College Hospital in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on Oct. 15.

Nurphoto / Getty Images

Thousands of people participate in a procession honoring "The Lord of Miracles" (Señor de los Milagros) in Lima, Peru, on Oct. 18, 2016.

Anadolu Agency / Getty Images

Queen Elizabeth II views a portrait of herself by British artist Henry Ward, marking six decades of patronage to the British Red Cross, at Windsor Castle on Oct. 14, 2016, in Windsor, England. The Queen is the longest-serving patron of the charity, which supports people in crisis in the UK and overseas.

Wpa Pool / Getty Images

A man takes a selfie in front of a fire from oil that has been set ablaze in the Qayyarah area, some 35 miles south of Mosul, during an operation by Iraqi forces against ISIS to retake the main hub city. In the biggest Iraqi military operation in years, forces have retaken dozens of villages, mostly south and east of Mosul, and are planning multiple assaults for Oct. 20.

Yasin Akgul / AFP / Getty Images

Iraqi forces sit in the back of a vehicle as troops advance through the desert on the banks of the Tigris River, northeast of the main staging base of Qayyarah. A wide array of Iraqi and international forces are involved in the fight to retake Mosul from ISIS, which overran the country's second-largest city in 2014.

Ahmad Al-rubaye / AFP / Getty Images

A man clenches onto the coffin of Hezbollah fighter Jalal al-Effie, who was killed during clashes in Syria's Aleppo, during his funeral in Beirut's southern suburbs, Lebanon.

Aziz Taher / Reuters

A child flashes a peace sign near the wreckage of a car bomb attack that killed 19 people in Aleppo, Syria.

Anadolu Agency / Getty Images

Hillary Clinton shakes hands with Donald Trump while attending the annual Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner at the Waldorf Astoria in New York City. The white-tie dinner, which benefits Catholic charities and celebrates former governor of New York Al Smith, has been attended by presidential candidates since 1960 and gives the candidates an opportunity to poke fun at themselves and each other.

Spencer Platt / Getty Images

Eve Rydberg (left) and Megan Lee pose for a portrait with their sign as they take part in a protest against Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump outside the Trump International Hotel and Tower in Chicago.

Joshua Lott / Reuters

A Muslim woman is caned 23 times after being caught in close proximity to her boyfriend in Banda Aceh, Indonesia. Out of seven couples caught spending time together outside marriage, 13 were caned, while one woman was spared after it was discovered that she was pregnant. Indonesia's Aceh province has gained international infamy for its strict Islamic laws.

Chaideer Mahyuddin / AFP / Getty Images

Women shout during a demonstration against gender violence in Buenos Aires. Argentines marched to condemn violence against women in a protest that is being followed in other Latin American countries. Wednesday's demonstration comes after the recent rape and brutal killing of a 16-year-old girl.

Natacha Pisarenko / AP

Summer Zervos (right), a former contestant on the TV show The Apprentice, is embraced by lawyer Gloria Allred while speaking about allegations of sexual misconduct against Donald Trump during a news conference in Los Angeles.

Kevork Djansezian / Reuters

Members of Hindu Sena, a right-wing Hindu group, burn posters of US Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton during a protest against what they say is Clinton sabotaging Republican US presidential nominee Donald Trump's election campaign, in New Delhi, India.

Adnan Abidi / Reuters

A Customs and Border Protection agent scans the Rio Grande on the US–Mexico border in McAllen, Texas. US Air and Marine Operations agents fly over border areas, coordinating with border patrol agents on the ground to stop undocumented immigrants and drug smugglers from entering the US.

John Moore / Getty Images

Police investigate the body of Herman Cunanan, who police said was killed by men riding on motorcycles in Quezon City, Philippines. Cunanan was a drug user, his unidentified partner told reporters.

Erik De Castro / Reuters

A recently released kidnapped girl celebrates with her family during an church service held in Abuja, Nigeria. The girls were released Thursday and flown to Abuja, Nigeria's capital, but it has taken days for the parents to arrive. The families came from the remote northeastern town of Chibok, where nearly 300 girls were kidnapped in April 2014 in a mass abduction. Dozens of schoolgirls escaped in the first few hours, but after last week's release, 197 remain captive.

Olamikan Gbemiga / AP

A motorcade carrying the body of Thailand's late King Bhumibol Adulyadej makes its way from the hospital to the the Grand Palace in Bangkok.

Stringer . / Reuters

An officer salutes and family members watch before pallbearers take away the casket carrying the body of Officer Jose Gilbert Vega after funeral services for fallen Palm Springs Police Officers Vega and Lesley Zerebny at the Palm Springs Convention Center in Palm Springs, California. The officers were fatally shot and a third was wounded by a single gunman during a neighborhood disturbance earlier in October.

David Mcnew / Getty Images

Shoshana Boyd (center left) and Olympic sprinter Tyson Gay (center right) stand surrounded by family and friends during a candlelight vigil at Lafayette High School for their daughter Trinity Gay, who died in an exchange of gunfire early Sunday morning in Lexington, Kentucky.

Bryan Woolston / Reuters

Chinese astronauts Jing Haipeng (left) and Chen Dong meet the media at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in Jiuquan, China. China launched the Shenzhou-11 manned spacecraft at 7:30 a.m. on Oct. 17.

Vcg / Getty Images

The Soyuz rocket booster with the Soyuz MS-02 spaceship carries a new crew to the International Space Station after blasting off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. The Russian rocket is carrying US astronaut Shane Kimbrough and Russian cosmonauts Sergey Ryzhikov and Andrey Borisenko.

Ivan Sekretarev / AP

Azalea, a 19-year-old female chimpanzee whose Korean name is "Dallae," smokes a cigarette at the Central Zoo in Pyongyang, North Korea. According to officials at the newly renovated zoo, the chimpanzee smokes about a pack a day. They insist, however, that she doesn’t inhale.

Wong Maye-e / AP

22 Of The Best Face Serums You Can Get On Amazon

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Get ready for a serious glow-up!

We hope you love the products we recommend! Just so you know, BuzzFeed may collect a share of sales from the links on this page.

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Put the skin-improving benefits of jojoba, baobab and pomegranate oil to work with Damascus Rose’s face oil.

Put the skin-improving benefits of jojoba, baobab and pomegranate oil to work with Damascus Rose’s face oil.

Promising Review: "This stuff smells great and is wonderful for taking off makeup and general face cleansing. It keeps my skin from losing moisture without breaking me out. And I also love using it on my hands to soften them when giving myself a manicure." —Love Natural Beauty

Price: $14.44 / Rating: 4.5/5

amzn.to

Enjoy the refreshing combo of apples and hibiscus with Burt's Bees firming serum.

Enjoy the refreshing combo of apples and hibiscus with Burt's Bees firming serum.

Promising Review: “I use this everyday. It gives a great glow and I use this in conjunction with the cleanser. It's thin, which I love, not heavy and not oily." —Melissa D

Price: $12.72 / Rating: 3.9/5

amzn.to

Strengthen your eyelashes with Rimmel’s lash serum.

Strengthen your eyelashes with Rimmel’s lash serum.

Promising Review: “After using this for two weeks, my mom accused me of wearing falsies. OMG! I had normal length lashes and now they're long and thick!” —Brooklyn Girl

Price: $9.99 / Rating: 3.6/5

amzn.to


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The BuzzFeed Animals Newsletter Will Turn Your Frown Upside Down

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Because who can resist adorable animals?

Have you been feeling down lately?

Have you been feeling down lately?

imgur.com

Well get ready to turn that frown into a smile, friend! All you need is the BuzzFeed Animals newsletter!

Well get ready to turn that frown into a smile, friend! All you need is the BuzzFeed Animals newsletter!

Chance / Cute or Not

The BuzzFeed Animals newsletter brings you the absolute cutest animals three times a week so you'll always have something to feel good about.

The BuzzFeed Animals newsletter brings you the absolute cutest animals three times a week so you'll always have something to feel good about.

imgur.com

From news stories about doggy maternity photoshoots to lists of adorable interspecies friends, the newsletter has it all.

From news stories about doggy maternity photoshoots to lists of adorable interspecies friends, the newsletter has it all.

imgur.com


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We Can Tell If You’re The Worst By Which Halloween Costume You Pick

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Pick wisely, or like the asshole you really are.


This Couple Hilariously Recreated Their Wedding Photos At Target

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Another walk down the aisle(s).

The Target staff people were incredibly accommodating, Corey said, and really went above and beyond to help them pull it off.

The Target staff people were incredibly accommodating, Corey said, and really went above and beyond to help them pull it off.

"They sent someone around to all the aisles to make sure they were clean and tidy, and they were blocking off people from getting in the shot," he said.

callielindsey.com

Photographer Callie Lindsey, a self-proclaimed "extreme Target lover" herself who said she goes there "at least three times a week," called the photo shoot "a natural union of my two biggest loves."

Photographer Callie Lindsey, a self-proclaimed "extreme Target lover" herself who said she goes there "at least three times a week," called the photo shoot "a natural union of my two biggest loves."

"This was such a fun, out of the ordinary shoot to photograph!" she said. "Lauren and Corey are some of my favorite clients-turned-friends, so it was extra special to do it with them."

callielindsey.com


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7 Things You Really Need To Check Out This Week

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What to read, watch, eat, and more.

Rebecca Hendin / Getty / BuzzFeed

Watch UnReal.

Watch UnReal.

If you loved Fleabag and haven't turned on to UnReal yet, this one's for you. The comedy on this show is so depressingly dark I'm not entirely sure it's ever actually funny, but somehow it's impossible to look away from. This is mostly thanks to compelling AF performances by Shiri Appleby and Constance Zimmer who play deeply, deeply (no like seriously DEEPLY) flawed women. The show itself is a satirical look at reality matchmaking shows, and asks a lot of interesting and uncomfortable questions on sexism between women, intersectional feminism, and what it means to be a powerful women in the male-dominated entertainment industry.

Seasons 1 & 2 are currently available on Amazon Prime in the UK.

If UnReal doesn't sound like your jam, check out the charming and recently-added-to-Netflix-UK film, Laggies .

Lifetime

Read The Good Immigrant.

Read The Good Immigrant.

Jasmin says: "So many parts of it are incredibly relatable to growing up BAME in Britain, it covers a wide range of topics and experiences to do with race and absolutely everyone should read it. Even if you don't relate to everything, it's still worth reading as all the essays are so beautifully written." Read an excerpt here.

Buy a full copy here.

Or check out this gorgeous essay.

Amazon


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We Really Need To Talk About How Amazing Dascha Polanco Is

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She is #AfroLatinaMagic incarnate.

You probably know Dascha Polanco, goddess in human form, from her role as Dayanara Diaz in Orange Is The New Black.

You probably know Dascha Polanco, goddess in human form, from her role as Dayanara Diaz in Orange Is The New Black.

Netflix

And when she doesn't have us all on the edge of our seats (WTF to that finale though), Dascha is basically an all-around queen in real life.

And when she doesn't have us all on the edge of our seats (WTF to that finale though), Dascha is basically an all-around queen in real life.

sheisdash / Via instagram.com

She's been an amazing body positivity role model, and rocks her curves everywhere from NYFW...

She's been an amazing body positivity role model, and rocks her curves everywhere from NYFW...

Ilya S. Savenok / Getty Images

...to the red carpet...

...to the red carpet...

Frederic J. Brown / AFP / Getty Images


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7 Little Things You Should Do This Week To Educate Yourself

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What to read, play, and watch this Black History Month.

Watch In The Shadow Of Mary Seacole.

Watch In The Shadow Of Mary Seacole.

This is definitely one to watch. David Harewood goes on a personal journey across Britain, Jamaica and Crimea to tell the story of the statue of Mary Seacole – the first ever public statue of a black woman in Britain. Catch the first episode on ITV.

ITV Studios / Via itvstudios.com

Read this piece on the experiences of black men in Britain.

Read this piece on the experiences of black men in Britain.

This very open, honest piece looks at experiences of eight black men born and raised in the UK. The men talk about growing up black, the police, mental health, sexuality, and love.

Rebecca Hendin / Via BuzzFeed

Check out this Cocktails and Conversation event.

Check out this Cocktails and Conversation event.

If you are in the London area, then you should head over to the Black Ballad cocktails and conversation event. The event celebrates the talents of black British women. The speakers include Olympic champion Christine Ohuruogu and Florence Adepoju, owner of MDMFlow.

Black Ballad

Head over to the Creative Café.

The Creative Cafe in Manchester is hosting an afternoon of poetry and readings from a library of LGBT and feminist literature. This is a great way to find out about sidelined narratives in black history and literature.You can get more information after the free event here.

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Here's What It's Like To Have Time-Space Synaesthesia

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I'm at my desk, and my laptop and I are sitting comfortably in today. To my right, a hot cup of tea is filling yesterday with plumes of steam, and to my left piles of notes and papers submerge tomorrow and the day after. Outside my window, a dirty-looking London pigeon flies through the 1990s to land on a lamppost in 1987.

Although it seems as if I've accidentally typed nonsense, I promise I haven't. I have a form of synaesthesia where my brain connects spatial awareness with the perception and understanding of time. To put it simply, time is all around me. My mental calendar game is pretty strong.

Time-space synaesthesia is not as well-known as its sibling grapheme-colour synaesthesia, where people see colours for certain words, numbers, characters, or letters. Synaesthesia tends to run in families, and it essentially means someone has unusual relationships between areas of the brain that process different things; in my case, the processing of time and space.

I’ve "seen" time for as long as I can remember, and it has always looked the same – each unit, whether lessons, days, weeks, months, or years, is represented by boxes, running right to left. If they existed outside my head, each box would be around 40cm x 40cm or so, much like a hopscotch square, and I am always standing in today. If I’m in a room of people, I can roughly identify who is standing where in time. It’s my bizarre party trick.

The closer a date is to me, the larger it appears, so next week is bigger than next year, and if I’m reading a history book with lots of dates then I might find myself "zooming out" to see it in units of decades or even centuries. However, the strangest aspect has to be the direction in which it runs. As the future runs to my left, it curves slightly behind me. This makes sense to me – you can’t see the future, so naturally it would be positioned so it disappears from my vision.

The past is to my right but it curves around so that between 1996 and 2000, it completes a U-turn and runs back to the left. The best explanation I have been able to come up with is that time which I’ve lived in runs right to left, but at the point at which my memories give way, it curves back to resemble the timelines I studied in school.

The fact that, on the whole, time runs right to left, does mean that calendars feel faintly odd, as they read left to right. While this bothered me a little as a child, I don’t much notice the discrepancy any more.

As well as the horizontal direction, there is some vertical variation. Years form shallow dips, with peaks around Christmas and a long, low, flat area around August. If you’re really struggling to follow, picture Rainbow Road from Mario Kart, a huge track floating in space. It’s something like that, but black-and-white and with fewer banana skins.

For me, it was the most natural thing in the world. How else would you understand something as complicated as time?

Scientific interest in synaesthesia has grown over the last few years, but there are records of the condition going back much further.

“The vast majority of people with synaesthesia never realise that others don’t experience the world in that way,” says Professor Julia Simner of the University of Sussex, who runs the university’s synaesthesia research centre and co-edited the Oxford Handbook of Synesthesia. “It’s a challenge to reality – you have your reality, I have mine, and who would have thought that they’d be different?”

It was only after studying synaesthesia for about two years that Simner realised her own mother was a synaesthete. “I explained I was studying people who think days of the week are coloured, like Tuesday might be yellow," she says. "My mother said, ‘That’s ridiculous. Everybody knows that Tuesday is grey with that tweedy texture.'”

This resonates. It took me years to learn that what I was experiencing was actually synaesthesia. As far as I was concerned, it was the most natural thing in the world. How else would you understand something as complicated as time?

To help identify synaesthetes, Simner is putting together an online test that, through various tasks, can assess and help people understand their synaesthesia.

We already know that synaesthesia can influence people’s talents and weaknesses. Abstract artist Wassily Kandinsky is thought to have painted music as he heard it, in explosions of colour and line, and musicians as diverse as Mary J. Blige, Billy Joel, and Kanye West all also have music-colour synaesthesia.

For us timelords (it isn’t an official term but I propose we make it one), the benefits are slightly more mundane. A study in 2009 found that synaesthetes were better at remembering specific dates, and could also plan their diaries better.

“All these advantages make sense,” she says. “If you take two people, one carrying around a diary and one not, the same advantages of carrying around a diary were carried by people who have time-space synaesthesia.”

I can attest to this. My day will be blocked out as I make plans, and unless I’m being unusually forgetful I won’t double-book myself. It’s hard to do when you can literally see your diary. I once tried to use it to help revise for history classes, but sadly nothing was able to overcome my lack of interest in the Tudors, and the metaphorical pins I tried to put in my mental map didn’t stick.

Rebecca Hendin / BuzzFeed

As well as the spatial aspect of time, synaesthesia can also give rise to perceptions of colour, personality, light and dark, and more within these "maps". Some people, Simner says, might consider days of the week to have personalities, while others see months with an innate colour.

“The most common forms are coloured days," she says, "and we’re not talking standard metaphorical colours such as 'I feel bad, it’s a blue Monday', but truly synaesthetic colours.”

While less well-known than other forms of synaesthesia, Simner says time-space may be the most common of all. Some estimates say it and other forms of sequence-space synaesthesia affect as much as 10-15% of the population.

Additionally, in non-synaesthetes, teaching can produce a similar mental number line to that seen by those with time-space synaesthesia. “I, as a non-synaesthete, have an implicit knowledge of numbers running left to right,” Simner says, “simply because I’ve been exposed to it all my life.

“There’s a test called a SNARC [spatial numerical association of response codes] test, which works like this. You’re sitting at a screen, and numbers flash up in a random order. The task is to press a button with one hand if it’s odd, and the other hand if it’s even. Even non-synaesthetes will be faster to respond to high numbers with their right hand, and faster to respond to low numbers with their left, because we have learnt this number line that runs from left to right.”

So, if non-synaesthetes can learn to connect timelines and/or number lines with spatial awareness, what sets synaesthetes like me apart?

Well, for starters, if you have one form of synaesthesia, you’re likely to have another. Maybe someone’s map would be coloured, so that Tuesday is to their left and purple, or has a distinct personality. Additionally, while non-synaesthetes can find their number lines if they’re tested, for synaesthetes it is a constant awareness. Any mention of time, and I’m immediately placed back inside my map.

The shape of my map is completely my own, distinct even to other synaesthetes.

But perhaps the most important distinction is how unique a synaesthete’s experience is in comparison with that of the general population. The shape of my map is completely my own, distinct even to other synaesthetes. While many people will learn to perceive numbers as going left to right through years of maths lessons, nothing seems to alter my experience. If it grows, it grows organically and subconsciously.

My map hasn’t grown in a while, though. Like the hands on a clock, I move calmly into the next day, only aware of my alternative world when I’m making plans or looking at a calendar. It is so natural, so clear and so permanent, that the idea of losing it feels like changing a part of myself.

My perception may be unique, but so is everyone’s. We all read the world around us in different ways, shaping it and interacting with it in a way that makes sense to us. It fascinates me to think that if I hadn’t discovered research on time-space synaesthesia, I may never have recognised the infinite variety of human perception.

Rebecca Hendin / BuzzFeed

More long reads from BuzzFeed UK.

17 College Cooking Fails Guaranteed To Make You Laugh

A Little Girl's Letter Went Viral After Someone Called Her Autistic Brother "Weird"

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“Some people are different but we should all be treated the same.”

A six-year-old's letter asking everyone to be treated the same has been celebrated online.

A six-year-old's letter asking everyone to be treated the same has been celebrated online.

Sophie Camilleri, via Facebook

Sophie Camilleri's six-year-old daughter Lex was upset after a girl at school called her nine-year-old brother, Frank, "weird", Camilleri told BuzzFeed News. "She said he’s not, he has autism. The girl didn’t know what it was...She was confused. Lex said that she had to explain that it was a disability."

Camilleri, who lives in the south of England, said Lex was very upset when she got home that day, but that she had recently been elected to the school council so she decided to write a letter, which was then read out in her class.

"The teacher of Lex’s class asked if anyone knew what autism was. Not one child knew what it was," Camilleri said. Afterwards, she decided to put her daughter's letter on Facebook, in a bid to campaign locally for better awareness of autism in schools.

"On Monday I felt very sad because a girl in my class said that my brother was weird.

"My brother has autism and is not weird and I would like it if could learn about all disabilities in schools so that everybody understand that some people are different but we should all be treated the same."


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28 Very Good Dogs Who Stole The Show At NYC's Halloween Dog Parade

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Sit back, relax, and look at these dogs in Halloween costumes.

Here are some of 2016's best.

Pikachu and Ash, ready to fetch 'em all.

Pikachu and Ash, ready to fetch 'em all.

Julia Reinstein / BuzzFeed News

GAME OF BONES.

GAME OF BONES.

Julia Reinstein / BuzzFeed News

Red Riding Hood and her grandma.

Red Riding Hood and her grandma.

My, what big paws you have!

Julia Reinstein / BuzzFeed News


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This Quiz Will Reveal The Exact Year You Graduated High School

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“As we go on, we remember…”

These "Walking Dead" Lego Creations Are Just The Best

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More like BRICK Grimes, amiriteoramirite? Also, BuzzFeed has an exclusive pic of Lego Negan!

French photographer Chrystelle Charles has done something virtually impossible — made the gushing blood and rotting guts world of The Walking Dead unbearably cute.

French photographer Chrystelle Charles has done something virtually impossible — made the gushing blood and rotting guts world of The Walking Dead unbearably cute.

chrystellecharles.com

chrystellecharles.com

Chrystelle's Onibaba Legography project adapts all manner of pop culture properties into brick and peg pastiches — everything from Pulp Fiction to Baywatch — but she's devoted a considerable amount of effort to turning the zombie post-apocalypse into a candy-colored wonderland.

Chrystelle's Onibaba Legography project adapts all manner of pop culture properties into brick and peg pastiches — everything from Pulp Fiction to Baywatch — but she's devoted a considerable amount of effort to turning the zombie post-apocalypse into a candy-colored wonderland.

chrystellecharles.com

chrystellecharles.com


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Would You End Up With Seth Cohen Or Ryan Atwood?

11 Little Things To Make You Smile This Week

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It’s not all bad!

We all know the world is a bit sad at the minute.

We all know the world is a bit sad at the minute.

Brexit, elections, climate change, IT'S ALL TOO MUCH.

hulu.com

So here's a bunch of just genuinely lovely things that have happened, to provide a little relief from it all.

So here's a bunch of just genuinely lovely things that have happened, to provide a little relief from it all.

youtube.com

Who knows, maybe you'll even crack a smile.

Who knows, maybe you'll even crack a smile.

popsugar.com

This lovely story about a three-year-old girl who chose to be Superwoman in her school pictures.

This lovely story about a three-year-old girl who chose to be Superwoman in her school pictures.

Austin Steinbach


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