No campfire needed for this delicious dessert!
BuzzFeed Video / Via youtu.be
No campfire needed for this delicious dessert!
BuzzFeed Video / Via youtu.be
Doesn’t mean you shouldn’t work hard, though.
A-levels: Zero
Where are they now? Deborah Meaden is best known from the business programme Dragons' Den. Despite not doing A-levels, Deborah has continued higher education. She studied business at Brighton Technical College and has three honorary degrees. She’s made millions in the holiday business and is now worth approximately £40 million.
Chris Jackson / AFP / GettyImages
A-levels: Zero.
Where are they now? Richard Branson struggled with dyslexia during his school years. But despite dropping out at 16 without “official school qualifications”, he has still managed to create the hugely successful Virgin Group, made up of over 400 companies. He also owns a space shuttle and a Caribbean island.
Paul Kane / Stringer / Getty
A-levels: Zero. Cheryl left her secondary school in Newcastle at 16 with no qualifications. In her 2012 memoir she explained that she would rather "hang out with OAPs" than study.
Where are they now? Despite having achieved no A-levels, Cheryl has gone on to be a member of Girls Aloud, an X Factor judge, a solo artist, and the current face of L’Oreal.
Ben A. Pruchnie / Getty Images
A-levels: Zero.
Where are they now? Despite being expelled from school at 15, Guy Ritchie went on to have a successful career as a film-maker, directing movies such as Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels.
Tim Whitby / Stringer / Getty
Classic films that Ebert really, really hated.
Where is your other shoe?
Chances are one of your kids interupted your sleep in some way and you're dying to catch a few more zzz's.
Giphy / Via giphy.com
Paramount Pictures / Via giphy.com
Let's be honest, it's not until that sweet nectar hits your lips that your synapses really start firing.
Tumblr / Via giphy.com
Why is getting out of the door a daily struggle?
Buena Vista Pictures / Via giphy.com
You’ll never look at Champagne Papi the same way again.
Chai T
AP
The dude on the left is Chai T, a Toronto rapper and comedian who has blessed us all with upside-down Drake with the help of some creative shaving.
Summer is slowly coming to an end, so it’s time to get your fill of all things Caprese.
Garlic bread and Caprese together in one amazing dish! Find the recipe here.
Pumpkin 'N Spice / Via pumpkinnspice.com
This salad has it all, including a roasted garlic dressing! Find the recipe here.
Mariah's Pleasing Plates / Via mariahspleasingplates.com
These roll-ups contain the freshest flavors of summer, rolled up in ribbons of zucchini! Find the recipe here.
Sweet Peas & Saffron / Via sweetpeasandsaffron.com
Get your melon and Caprese fix at the same time with these skewers! Find the recipe here.
Floating Kitchen / Via floatingkitchen.net
Are you more of a freckles or a blondie?
That’s right. There’s two of them. His name is Joel and he’s a major babe.
Wikimedia Commons / Via en.wikipedia.org
Alberto E. Rodriguez / Getty Images
Because we honestly can’t agree on how to do it.
Sachin Kumar / Via youtube.com
figleavesTV / Via youtube.com
"It never would've occurred to me to do the front-clasp-with-turnaround. It seems like a shortcut you'd use if it was your first time fastening a bra. Do front-claspers also tie their shoelaces with the bunny ears method?" —Sally Tamarkin, back clasper
"Clasping in the front — where your EYES are — just makes sense. How can you even align those teeny tiny hooks behind your back? Do you also text with your eyes closed, just for fun? You think you're better than us don't you, back claspers?!" —Casey Gueren, front clasper
Why fork out the big bucks when Kmart has everything you need?
Jemima Skelley / BuzzFeed
Instagram: @bridalbouquetsbybrie
“Depends on how many friends with benefits you have at the time.”
BuzzFeed Yellow / Via youtu.be
What does in shape even mean? Technically I am a shape.
BuzzFeed Violet / Via youtu.be
And it is glorious.
Ugur Can / AP
Stringer / Reuters
We’re not worthy.
“I am plagued and pained by the violence that continues to escalate in our city.”
On Friday, Drake extended his condolences to the families of the two people killed, Duvel Hibbert and Ariela Navarro-Fenoy, in a post on his blog.
"I am plagued and pained by the violence that continues to escalate in our city," read the note. "I stare into the eyes of so many young people and I wish to see them all shine as bright as they possibly can in this lifetime."
Justin Sullivan / Getty Images
Hibbert and Navarro-Fenoy died after gunfire erupted at the event at the Muzik nightclub on Aug. 4. Three others were wounded.
Drake, whose record label OVO Sound hosts the annual music festival in his hometown, has been under pressure to address the tragedy but had so far maintained his silence. He says he was "choosing to follow my heart" by speaking out now, against the advice of his managers.
"Although Toronto is globally viewed as a major city, at the core we are still a small close-knit community, and it is our public responsibility to ensure the safety and wellbeing of one another," Drake wrote.
Muzik / Via Facebook: MuzikClubs
Joel Ryan / AP
These recipes prove how awesome edible bowls are!
All the great flavors of summer stuffed inside a ripe tomato! Recipe here.
Izzy / Via She Likes Food
This breakfast bowl looks like the perfect thing to wake up to! Recipe here.
Liz / Via The Floating Kitchen
The perfect little cheesy bites! Recipe here.
Annie / Via Maebells
The thirst is SO real.
NBC
Reese does the South well, y’all.
Obviously Reese is at the top, obviously.
Lace for days and days and days.
And just look at that posture... it's perfection.
A pop of color never hurt anyone.
New York’s hottest quiz is…
BRB, crying over a finale I watched years ago.
The Quote:
Pam: "There's a lot of beauty in ordinary things. Isn't that kind of the point?"
Why It's Perfect:
These words, spoken by Pam Beasley, perfectly sum up the series. A paper company should be the most boring place in the world, and when you look at the outside of Dunder Mifflin, it really does look like a dull, lifeless office building. But over the course of nine seasons, we saw how much beauty there can be in a place like that, thanks to the people who work there.
NBC
The Quote:
Fry: "What do you say? Want to go around again?"
Leela: "I do."
Why It's Perfect:
The finale of Futurama saw Fry and Leela as the only moving, talking people left on Earth after time had completely stopped. As a result, they spent the rest of their lives together, growing old as the rest of the world stood still.
Finally, once they had reached old age, Farnsworth found them and offered them a portal back to the beginning, to essentially start their lives together over again...but they would forget everything that had happened.
The idea that Fry and Leela would be able to fall in love all over again is wonderful, and Comedy Central immediately followed the series finale with the pilot episode, basically showing us that Fry and Leela had indeed looped back to the day they met. Chills.
Comedy Central
The Quote:
Sam: "I'm sorry, we're closed."
Why It's Perfect:
Sure, it's a little on the nose, but what better line could you have to end one of the greatest workplace sitcoms of all time? Sam's final walk through the bar, even though it was silent except for this line, spoke volumes as to the emotional weight of this finale and how much Cheers meant to the cast and crew, and to fans.
NBC
The Quote:
Jerry: "The second button is the key button. It literally makes or breaks the shirt. Look at it, it's too high, it's in no-man's-land."
George: "Haven't we had this conversation before?"
Jerry: "You think?"
George: "I think we have."
Jerry: "Yeah, maybe we have."
Why It's Perfect:
Seinfeld was "a show about nothing," so it's only fitting that the final lines of the show should be about something trivial. That's compounded by the fact that Jerry and George were actually repeating this already trivial conversation, and that it would take place in jail after the absurd events that preceded it...just as the Seinfeld gang always found themselves in the strangest situations from the most mundane beginnings.
NBC