HUGE Wolfpack fan, and alumnus of NC State University, class of 1993.
4 stories
·
0 followers

Erotica Written By An Alien Pretending Not To Be Horrified By The Human Body

13 Comments and 25 Shares

erotica pen“They mutually thrashed their softest, most vulnerable parts about in a horrifying normal attempt to seek pleasure at the other’s expense.”

“Their mouths, which mere minutes before had been employed in the process of demolishing and ingesting various foodstuffs, were now jammed up damply against one another while still being used for breathing, which must have been more than a little uncomfortable.”

“Bits of one jammed into bits of the other, dangerously close to some of the weakest and most important internal organs.”

“With absolutely no regard for personal space, the two of them created an unnecessary amount of friction, generating sweat in the process.”

“Some sort of gel emerged.”

“One sat upon the other, like furniture that sneaks inside of your body.”

“Her genitals engulfed his for some arcane purpose.”

“One of them put their teeth-cave directly over the other’s fleshiest appendage, but did not bite it.”

“His genitals emerged from his body with no protection whatever, so that any passing bird could have easily swooped down and carried them off in its beak.”

“They licked one another as if they were food, but they were not food.”

“They took off their clothes, leaving their soft and hairless skin exposed to dust, wind, cold, and various other deadly elements.”

“Jostling occurred for an extended period of time, then silence.”

“Everything was just a mess.”

“Various parts inched forward, then retracted, rather as turtles do.”

“Together they put all of their clothes in a pile on the floor, where the dog lives.”

“Only hours before he had used the very same appurtenance to urinate. He had not washed it in any significant way before inserting it into the other human’s body.”

“They writhed together like a Chinese finger trap.”

Read more Erotica Written By An Alien Pretending Not To Be Horrified By The Human Body at The Toast.

Read the whole story
TLKoontz
3667 days ago
reply
Funny stuff. Indeed.
popular
3668 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete
12 public comments
Cdogg
3658 days ago
reply
Pure gold.
NDG, Montreal
cinebot
3664 days ago
reply
100% accurate
toronto.
SamWilson
3666 days ago
reply
This is terribly, terribly funny... trust me.
Cape Town, South Africa
leiter420
3667 days ago
reply
This is awesome. Nothing like a non-human depicting human rituals.
grammargirl
3667 days ago
reply
"Some sort of gel emerged" is where I lost it. Mallory Ortberg is a terrifying evil genius.
Brooklyn, NY
tante
3668 days ago
reply
Erotica Written By An Alien Pretending Not To Be Horrified By The Human Body
Berlin/Germany
ameel
3668 days ago
reply
This is brilliant!
Melbourne, Australia
subbes
3668 days ago
reply
!
mikejurney
3668 days ago
reply
This is beyond amazing.
New York, New York
sredfern
3668 days ago
reply
this is amazing
Sydney Australia
Courtney
3668 days ago
reply
Decades in the fanfic erotica trenches make this the funniest thing I have read possibly ever.
Portland, OR
WorldMaker
3668 days ago
I may be broken, but this just left me with an exisistential sadness. Sartre nausea, I guess. This alien has a much more interesting evolution than I, and I am sad for how low I am in the universe now.

NewsBlur iOS 4.0 features a new dashboard, gestures and sharing controls

8 Comments and 13 Shares

Today marks the release of version 4.0 of the NewsBlur iOS app. To illustrate the significance of this release I’d like to talk about where the app has been.

The first version of the NewsBlur iOS app was actually just an iPhone app. It launched in October 2011 and only allowed you to read your feeds individually. Within months the river of news (reading by folder) was added, along with better sharing controls, intelligence training, sharing to your blurblog, and the May 2013 re-design.

But similarly to the web, I wasn’t particularly proud of the app until I hit a major milestone. On the web, I hit that milestone with the May 2013 re-design. In the blog post announcing the wide ranging re-design, I wrote:

Not to say that NewsBlur was ugly before today, but it certainly didn’t have the loving embrace of a talented designer. So without waiting another moment (or month) I proudly present the NewsBlur redesign.

Fast forward to today where I am finally releasing an iOS app that I’m proud of. This one comes with a ton of great features, both for iPhone and iPad.

  • New dashboard for the iPad app: All Site Stories are now on the dashboard for easy access to stories. More to come with this new dashboard.
  • Tons of new gestures: double tap, 2 finger double tap, long press.
  • New gestures for the iPad app: swipe to dismiss the original story view.
  • Brand new sharing controls work with Facebook, Twitter, Email, iMessage, Instapaper, Pocket, Readability, App.Net, Pinboard, OmniFocus, Safari, Chrome, and Airdrop.
  • Inline images show a preview of the story in the story title.
  • Inline descriptions show a preview of the story’s content in the story title.
  • Improved landscape support for the iPad app.
  • Improved video support: videos are now fit better for each device.
  • Numerous bugs fixed resulting in speed improvements and cleaned up code.

If you want to tweet something along the lines of “Holy crap, the NewsBlur iOS app is nice! Only took four years” that would be alright. Download the free NewsBlur iOS app, and if you find yourself enjoying it, please leave a positive five star review on the App Store.

Read the whole story
TLKoontz
3690 days ago
reply
Yes!!! It really is...

I've grown to like it even more than Reeder2!

That's a big statement!

Keep it up!
popular
3691 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete
7 public comments
musictubes
3688 days ago
reply
In case you haven't seen it, Newsblur continues to get better and better. Worth checking out if you like RSS.
Falls Church, Virginia
fancycwabs
3688 days ago
reply
Update is fantastic, BUT for some reason trying to read blurblogs on the iPad caused it to crash to home. Reboot and closing everything didn't help, commenting on the iPhone version at the moment. Minor bug, I'm sure you'll hit it with the next update, and all the other improvements more than compensate. Thanks!
Nashville, Tennessee
samuel
3688 days ago
The fix was just approved this morning. Download 4.0.1.
fancycwabs
3688 days ago
See? This is why you're the best. Thanks!
davenelson
3690 days ago
reply
When I read a story on an iPad there is no way to close the story... I have to return to the home screen and manually kill the app.
Atlanta, Georgia
Jenngreg
3689 days ago
Swipe from the left hand side of the screen to close the story. Threw me off at first, too.
davenelson
3685 days ago
Thanks @Jenngreg
MotherHydra
3690 days ago
reply
Another solid update, keep this up and I'll never leave!
Space City, USA
samuel
3690 days ago
I'll tell you though, I am planning to start to build bigger features again, which can take time to roll out. I have some management stuff first.
nipun89
3691 days ago
reply
It's great the iOS app is getting so much love, but the disparity that now exists between the Android app and the iOS app is ridiculous. The Android app in its current state isn't worth using and I don't really see the point of sticking to NewsBlur if I can't use it when I'm mobile
Harare, Zimbabwe
farmjope
3690 days ago
I use the Android version of the app because I basically have to, but you're right, the disparity is ridiculous and every time I see these great updates it just reminds me how little they care about Android and all the user base.
wffurr
3690 days ago
The Android app works just fine. I use it all the time. iOS gets "more love" because that's where the users are. I say that in quotes, though, because the Android app has gotten plenty of updates over the past year too.
samuel
3690 days ago
The Android app is getting an update tomorrow and bigger ticket features are coming.
farmjope
3687 days ago
The new android app crashes regularly now, it did not before the update. Can we at least go back to the out-of-date-but-stable version?
ortwin
3691 days ago
reply
Great update!
Germany, Düsseldorf
smilerz
3691 days ago
reply
Love the update!
Any chance image zoom or save image are coming?
Chicago or thereabouts
samuel
3691 days ago
I would love to get these two in. I have some ideas that might make it in a release or two.

BloombergBusinessweek: UNC fraud just the start

1 Share

The reporting that Dan Kane started in 2010 is finally garnering some national attention from non-sports outlets. Last week, the The NY Times, and today, BloombergBusinessweek:

The corruption of academics at the University of North Carolina’s Chapel Hill campus could turn into the most revelatory of all of the undergraduate sports scandals in recent memory. Beginning three years ago with what sounded like garden-variety reports of under-the-table payments from agents and improper classroom help for athletes, the affair has spread and deepened to include evidence of hundreds of sham courses offered since the early 1990s. Untold numbers of grades have been changed without authorization and faculty signatures forged—all in the service of an elaborate campaign to keep elite basketball and football players academically eligible to play.

After belatedly catching up with the UNC debacle in this recent dispatch, I’ve decided the still-developing story deserves wider attention. Or, to put it more precisely, the excellent reporting already done by the News & Observer of Raleigh merits amplification outside of North Carolina.

The rot in Chapel Hill undermines UNC’s reputation as one of the nation’s finest public institutions of higher learning. Officials created classes that did not meet. That’s not the only reason more scrutiny is needed. There’s also the particularly pernicious way that the school’s African and Afro-American Studies Department has been used to inflate the GPAs of basketball and football players. The corruption of a scholarly discipline devoted to black history and culture underscores a racial subtext to the exploitation of college athletes that typically goes unidentified in polite discussion. (UNC’s former longtime Afro-Am chairman, Julius Nyang’oro, has been criminally indicted for fraud.)

Dan Kane, the News & Observer‘s lead investigative reporter, does old-school, just-the-facts-m’am work—and more power to him. Digging up the basic data has been a lonely and arduous task for which Kane has been rewarded with craven accusations of home state disloyalty. As he wrote last month, the six official “reviews” and “investigations” of the wayward Afro-Am Department have all failed to connect the dots in any meaningful way. In coming weeks and months, I hope I can supplement Kane’s dogged efforts with some long-distance perspective. Valuable tips from concerned local people, some of them UNC alumni, are already pouring in, and that’s part of the reason I’m going to pursue the story. Keep those e-mails coming.

One source of insight is Jay Smith, a professor of early modern French history at UNC. A serious scholar who understands the university’s sports-happy culture, Smith has developed a powerful distaste for the way his employer has obfuscated the scandal. “What’s going on here is so important,” he told me by telephone, “because it’s emblematic of what I think goes on at major universities all across the country,” where the business of sports undermines the mission of education. That sounds right to me.

I suspect there are folks in the administration who will go to great lengths to prevent Jay Smith’s book from being published, and then go to even greater lengths to discredit him after it is released.

Hopefully Smith will answer the question about Nyang’oro’s motivation, because without proper incentive for the chronic, rampant fraud, his actions are wholly irrational.

The post BloombergBusinessweek: UNC fraud just the start appeared first on StateFans Nation.

Read the whole story
TLKoontz
3754 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

N&O’s DeCock Gets Main Point Right, Key Subpoints Wrong

1 Share
I was gladdened to read the unfortunately named Luke DeCock’s piece in this morning’s paper. Without question, the Hole faculty’s silence is cowardly and indefensible. As I have noted previously, the only true “rogue” “rouge” in Chapel Hill is history professor Jay Smith. He’s the only person there who gives a damn, apparently. He’s certainly the [...]
Read the whole story
TLKoontz
3918 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete