Moral of the Day
A crafty old mountain lion used to hang around a ranch looking for stray cattle. One day he saw a bull off by himself and managed to kill it after a mighty battle. The bull was too heavy to drag off, so the mountain lion decided to just eat as much as he could hold. He ate and ate until he just couldn’t eat any more. This made him feel really good, so he let out a big roar. That made him feel even better, so he roared again. He kept it up until the rancher came by and shot him.
The Moral of this story: When you are full of bull, keep your mouth shut.
The Top 10 Reasons To Go To Work Without Clothes
You’ve always wanted to do it, now here are the top 10 reasons to go to work without clothes!
10. No one ever steals your chair.
9. Gives “bad hair day” a whole new meaning.
8. Diverts attention from the fact that you also came to work drunk.
7. People stop stealing your pens after they’ve seen where you keep them.
6. So that -with a little help from Muzak- you can add “Exotic Dancer” to your exaggerated resume.
5. You want to see if it’s like the dream.
4. To stop those creepy guys in Marketing from looking down your blouse.
3. “I’d love to chip in, but I left my wallet in my pants.”
2. Can take advantage of computer monitor radiation to work on your tan.
…and (drum roll, please) the number one reason to Go To Work without clothes:
1. Your boss is always yelling, “I wanna see your ass in here by 8:00.”
Ocean Sky from Alex Cherney on Vimeo.
Video Description:
At a star party in August 2009 I took my first long exposure photograph of the night sky. I was so thrilled with the results that I dedicated most moonless weekends since then to photographing two things I love the most in nature – the night sky and the Ocean.
Taking a series of images and combining them into a time lapse video sequence made it even more interesting. I have since experimented with all-night time lapses, panning motion, etc. But most importantly I’ve enjoyed the journey immensely.
This time lapse video is the result of almost 1.5 years of work, 31 hours of taking images during six nights on Southern Ocean Coast in Australia.

