enjoy~

“The Hurricane Sandy cocktail recipe: 2 parts vodka, 1 oj, 1 curaçau, 1 lime juice. Cosmo-like in taste but color is like a ‘61 Cadillac…”

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enjoy~

“The Hurricane Sandy cocktail recipe: 2 parts vodka, 1 oj, 1 curaçau, 1 lime juice. Cosmo-like in taste but color is like a ‘61 Cadillac…”

Paul Sahre, who is a swell graphic designer (he did the Join Us artwork and a lot of other recent TMBG things) is giving a talk in NYC tomorrow and Mr. Flansburgh is gonna be introducing him. I imagine it will be a very fun night and we here at Fuck Yeah Flansy would like to encourage y’all to check it out.

Tickets are just $10 for students! (and $30 for other people)

(john flansburgh is a rock and roll musician)

(john flansburgh is a rock and roll musician)

(Source: selfcallednowhere)

lekkerish:

Flaaaaaans

rofl

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lekkerish:

Flaaaaaans

rofl

(Source: hotflansburgh, via lekkerish-deactivated20121128)

19 notesPosted on September 30, 2012 at 12:43am

shannguin:

Lie Still Little Bottle (Feat. The Stick)

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shannguin:

I almost spit up my Pepsi when I saw this

fuck yeah five guys, y’all

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shannguin:

I almost spit up my Pepsi when I saw this

fuck yeah five guys, y’all

21 notesPosted on September 24, 2012 at 9:59pm
bibberly:

John Flansburgh of They Might Be Giants performing in 1995.

aw yes

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bibberly:

John Flansburgh of They Might Be Giants performing in 1995.

aw yes

17 notesPosted on September 6, 2012 at 10:52pm
we here at Fuck Yeah Flansy hope you enjoy your cucumber gimlets!

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we here at Fuck Yeah Flansy hope you enjoy your cucumber gimlets!

‘When I was growing up, science was as American as apple pie,’ says John Flansburgh of alt-rock band They Might Be Giants, recalling the age when space exploration held a firm grasp on the American imagination and James Bond movies always featured a scientist whose job was to provide 007 with super-cool gizmos. But in a shift that Flansburgh traces to the George W. Bush era, which introduced a climate of skepticism and even hostility toward science, ‘there really is this culture war in which to talk about science in public as if it holds actual truths is a very risky position to take.’