Truth.
(Source: artofthewire)
Truth.
(Source: artofthewire)

The Weeknd can do no wrong
Sign me up for that Jewish Under 40 league. I will run that shit.
ONE OF US. NERD CULTURE IS MAINSTREAM NOW.
(via rubyseauxheaux)
‘Don’t be morbid,’ Jordan said. ‘Life starts all over again when it gets crisp in the fall.’
Hey Anna, this graph should be titled “Parker G.”
Yessssss.
(Source: , via kahristykins)
(Source: , via foreverinsolitude)
gq:
Lunch With Omar In Our Cafeteria
He sure turned heads, too. The Wire’s (and Boardwalk Empire’s and Community’s) Michael Kenneth Williams grabbed a quick meal with GQ’s Mark Anthony Green to talk about being funny, getting a shoutout from Obama and keeping that scar. Click here for the full read. A small sample below:
GQ: After working on The Wire for two seasons, you were evicted from your apartment. What happened?
Michael Kenneth Williams: When I booked The Wire, I was in a very dark place. I was searching for a way out, period. And I didn’t know what my next move was going to be. I had left the [acting] business, and I was working at my mother’s daycare in Flatbush. It was a point where I didn’t care about much and that was my state of mind when I went in to read for Omar. When I got the part, it took the focus off myself and my personal problems. With that came a lot of irresponsible behavior, especially financially speaking. I had a lot of time on my hands and wasn’t working as much in the second season, so I started getting into some reckless behavior. Lots of partying and a little too much spending money and at the end of season two, I had to put my shit in storage and move out. But one thing I didn’t do was give up my apartment in Brooklyn, so at the end of season two all my shit was in storage in Baltimore and I was sleeping on a mattress on the floor in the projects of Brooklyn. And that hurt.GQ: You were 25, right when the incident…
The fight.GQ: Yes, the fight, that left you with that infamous scar. Did you have plastic surgery?
Yes I did. But not to remove it, just so I wouldn’t keloid.GQ: So could they have removed the scar permanently?
I never asked that question, really. When it first happened, I had to maneuver some things to be eligible for a plastic surgeon. I didn’t have health insurance at the time. So he just stitched me up. That was my main concern.GQ: If you could have it removed today, would you?
No.