Animal Instagram

[a photo]

jennathesnake   new skin, y’all! #ootd  #sheddingaddict
vindowviper   perf!
yomamba   OMG so shiny!!!! obsessed!
anacondawantsum   dat tongue tho


[a photo]

xyzebra The Watering Hole  #takemeback #tbt #dranktoomuch #besttimeever
lionking80   lemme know when ur comin
lenahyena   @lionking80 LOL!!!!!!
wildebeestmode   :-/ 


[a photo]

ant43687   hard work pays off
ant32485   another tunnel?
ant43687  @ant32485 u know it— 243rd since Sunday. also set a gym pb this week, benched 4678x my body weight #earnednotgiven  
grazzhoppr   tired just looking at this


[a photo]

_misterwolf   Me in the forest
_misterwolf  #woods  #forest  #ecosystem  #predator  #fangs  #whitefang #callofthewild  #cotw  #jacklondon
_misterwolf  #instagood  #tagforlikes  #likeforlike  #teamfollowback  #sexy #sleek  #hot  #cool  #fur  #softfur  #picoftheday
_misterwolf  #friends  #needfriends  #solonely


[a photo]

xxsuperstarfish   Introducing the little one!!!
bigtuna24   WOW! Congrats on the new addition!
lauraisalamprey   congratulations SO excited for you!!!
trill.krill   wait is that ur baby looks like one of ur arms fell off or smth
lenahyena   @trill.krill LOLOLOLOL!!!!!


[a photo]

kookaburra   Thanks to all the fans who came out! It was an amazing concert! #blessed
tapirfekshun   OMG I LUV UR SOnG SOOO MUCh DON CHANGE
w0000dthrush_   Animals say I look lik u plese follow me it will make with joy
newt   U got kik?
great narwhal   Get more food in NO time!!!! Contact me for tips and tricks to start getting more food TODAY!!!
m_ock.in.berd   Pls everyone check my profile and follow me pls I sing the same songs!!!


[a photo]

karebear4   Turn down for what? Metabolic suppression! #hibernatesohard #nightnight  #seeuinsevenmonths  #justfivemoreminutes
pandamonium   Aww we’ll miss youuuuu (cute eyeshade!)
da.real_weasel   dream about me baby @karebear4
pandamonium   Ew


[a photo]

culturevulture   Best. Lunch. Ever.
crowzac   Amazing composition! What is it though?
culturevulture   @crowzac 4-day-old roadkill! #nofilter
soflesh_sofly   yum! jealous i hate u jk luh ya bish! <3 <3
yo_armadillo   pretty sure that’s my cousin smh


[a photo]

peacock.123   But first … let me take a #selfie!!!!

Restaurant Review: Rattle

To arrive at Rattle is no cinch. The journey begins at a downtown bodega, where commences a Kabuki dance. You ask the man behind the counter the prescribed secret question, and he, whispering, gives you the secret answer, to which you then react with the set secret wisecrack and he, in turn, with the appointed secret pique. Then comes your secret smooth-over, his secret grudging forgiveness, and, finally, the secret laugh-it-off, after which his face turns serious as he beckons you follow him, please, into the kitchen. Back, back into the kitchen you go, now downstairs, upstairs, watch your head, crawling on all fours, was that a skeleton, and finally you emerge into the darkened, serene space that is Rattle.

You have, of course, already been granted a reservation after you were contacted months ago by someone calling from an undisclosed number who said he had received the package you discretely dropped behind a park bench, thanks very much, reviewed its contents—including notarized copies of your and your companions’ unexpired passports and a one-page letter explaining your group’s desire to dine at Rattle—and determined that, though you neglect the serial comma, he would fit you in on a Tuesday in November at 4:13 p.m. You had really been hoping for something closer to early May but said, “Thank you. We’re so looking forward to it,” and then agreed to meet with associates of the unnamed caller to begin negotiations over collateral for the reservation just accepted.

But you’re here now, and the seraphic hostess whisks you to a table.

There are, to be sure, no menus at Rattle. There is but one option: a pre-fixe offering of dishes of the chef’s choosing. The cuisine is not difficult to place: it is baby food.

Bibs are proffered, and shot glasses appear before you and your companions. “Amuse-bouche of chilled stewed prune and mashed little finger carrot soup,” says your server. “The chef suggests overturning the contents on the table and finger painting with them.” And so you do, each creating his own scenic worlds of purple and orange. The colors are robust, and when you lick the table the flavors reveal themselves as even more so, the coy tartness of the prune playfully batting the carrot’s sweetness. The server returns and scolds you while cleaning up the mess.

Now the sommelier stops by and suggests a Darkhan Uul 2009, Mongolian yak milk, and you accede, ordering a half gallon. It is excellent, rich, the high fat content that in certain Nepalese vintages can overpower is here restrained, deliciously nourishing. You lap the stuff from sippy cups.

A word about the chef, Breccan Thomas. Several years ago he dropped out of design school to pursue his psychotic dream of recreating infancy. He regressed to his childhood home, sequestered himself in the playroom, and underwent nine months of concentrated study of Piaget’s oeuvre, while subsisting on nothing but Gerber pureés and formula. “It was the cupcake craze that started it,” Thomas said last year (he has since ceased bestowing interviews). “The popularity of such a patently stupid dessert was significant to me. I thought, ‘If a food can turn grown people into five-year-olds, why not into little babies? Fetuses, even. How far could we go?’” Rattle is his bid to find out. 

Back to the table. The first course at Rattle is usually a pureé, as are most of those subsequent, an homage, perhaps, to Thomas’s months of isolated, mush-fueled lucubration. These dishes are, almost without exception, delectable. This afternoon you slurp down a gazpacho-like concoction made from luscious Brandywine tomatoes, brightened with a dollop of cilantro foam and a crushed jungle green crayon. Another occasion brings a luscious goopy rice mixture atop which have been crumbled bits of animal crackers, tigers and monkeys only. And in yet one more offering, sweet corn and cranberries provide the base for a further mélange of complex flavors. The texture you sense here? Legos.

You have been spoiled rotten. But Thomas saves the best for last, his creativity sparkling brightest with the onset of the dessert course. After several bites, you begin to feel, well, a touch odd—something, you think, isn’t right here. And then it happens. Magically, intensely, you puke. Your companions puke, too, uncontrollably, authentically, spilling their undigested dinner on the table and the wall, the floor and their shoes. It is at this moment, when the house-made syrup of ipecac madeleine has you on hands and knees, panting and heaving, that it happens: you are verily borne back through the years.

You see a familiar, friendly face. A young woman guides a spoon into your mouth, taking her time, mimicking the undulations and reverberations of aircraft. She smiles. You smile. You disgorge the food she just gave you. She sighs, chuckles, and wipes your chin. And you realize that this afternoon, at Rattle, you have been fed by a genius.

**** (Four stars)

Stop the [Juice] Presses!

COWABUNGA BAY — For 17 years, from 1972 to 1989, I served as that globally recognizable, sly but lovable, zany yet approachable Hawaiian Punch mascot, Punchy.

To be chosen was a great honor. I still often recall the moment when, mere days after barely escaping elimination in the Jellyfish Challenge, the Tribal Council of the American Beverage Association placed upon my head Punchy’s fabled straw hat, dyed Fruit Juicy Red, and said together in one solemn voice: “The Board of Directors of Dr. Pepper/Snapple Group, Inc. has spoken.”

And though that memory remains with me, it has been sadly diminished. For today, it seems, most Americans have all but forgotten this country’s great history of artificially flavored beverages.

Just look around: fresh juice, everywhere. Blenders and presses and gear-laden gadgets on every kitchen counter. College graduates giving up on their dreams to hawk liquefied roughage from trendy trucks. Children, who once lived for their snack-time sugar highs, now forced to choke down cups of collards. And Hawaiian Punch, for years so venerated, now scoffed at, when not wholly ignored, by the new juicerati.

How did this come to pass? How did we as a nation come to turn our backs on such a delicious, nutrional-ish, fruit-esque-y beverage? The question is worth asking, for the story of Hawaiian Punch is in many ways the story of America. It is also my story.

It began mere feet from where I write today, in the shadow of Mount McGarrett, where for hundreds of years my ancestors lived, harvesting the aspartame trees that thrive in the calcium-rich volcanic soils. They learned to brew a restorative liquid and called it “Hawai‘ian Punch”—as red and sweet, according to legend, as the blood of one’s hyperglycemic enemies.

But the world changed, and when our islands became part of the United States we were faced with a choice: to shelter our ways, or share them. Taking inspiration from the indigenous X-treme Snowboarding Peoples of Nepal who had earlier elected to unveil their own land’s mystical neon dew, my ancestors decided to make Hawai‘ian Punch available to Americans of every color and creed.

And so our elixir was branded, and within no time “Hawaiian Punch,” as it came to be called, had become America’s drink. It didn’t matter who you were or where you came from or whether your cultural customs did or did not generally involve straws: Hawaiian Punch was there for any person with a thirst, a few coins, and a decent dental plan. It was a democratic drink for a democratic nation.

Fresh-pressed juice, on the other hand, is no democratic drink. It’s a drink of Eastern Bloc supermodels, equatorial despots, and Gwyneth Paltrow—and certainly not of hard-working, hard-chugging Americans who don’t want to blow the rent money to daintily sip sour salad in a glass.

We also hear lots of talk today from “medical doctors” who attended “medical schools” and who tell us that drinks like Hawaiian Punch contain subpar ingredients. Subpar? That would come as a surprise to my grandfather, Volcom‘ahea O‘Neil, who won the 1918 Nobel Prize in Chemistry after decades spent synthesizing the world’s reddest Red 40. It would surprise the brewmasters, who ensure only corn syrup of the highest high fructose is oozed into the bubbling Hawaiian Punch vats. And it would certainly surprise a sluggish six-year-old, who but after just a few sips of the red nectar would rocket from his torpor and remain awake, alert, and twitching for several glorious days.

That six-year-old, floating in a blissful Hawaiian Punch-induced mania? Yes. He was me. 

And so: it’s time for us to revivify that neglected Polynesian potion. To step away from the juice presses, to drop the kale—and to pick up a frosty can of heavenly Hawaiian Punch. 

The author, a former Punchy, has just finished his seventh novel, ‘Among the Finery,’ to be published by Alfred A. Knopf in the fall.

A Bro Writes the Wright Bros, 1904

My Dearest Bros Orville and Wilbur,

Without post-ponement, allow me to convey to you my heartiest congratulations on the invention of flying. Such an achievement is indisputably Straight. Up. Bad. Ass. To wit, your inspired revision of the lift equation’s Smeaton Coefficient. Clutch!

But in my enthusiasm I am dis-courteous; it is right I should introduce myself. I am Silas Jeptha Ulysses Gable III, but most of those with whom I am acquainted refer to me simply as CrayTrey. Gentlebros, I put pen to paper this hour with purpose: to kindly request that you, dear fucking studs, will attend, with your dope-ass flying machine, an upcoming massive fete I am to host and which I have tentatively titled: “Aviators; & Sluts!!!”

There is per-tinent information that will no doubt be of inter-est to you. Primary is that the place will be mad crawling with chicks. Or, rather, many of the chicks will be mad and crawling, their legs having been severed by a machine at the local textile mill. None-the-less! The mill is sited mere minutes from my tenement and when the women in its employ end their 19-hour shifts they are ready to party, legs or no. Moreover my fast friend Rhino—right and true boozehound, he!—has the hookup at the turpentine dispensary; the drank situation, thereby and so forth and such-thus-have-you, is covered.

I mention these facts for I have it on good account that you yourselves, kind bros, are some serious ragers. Reports abound! Frequenting saloons, abusing the lame betamales therein, regaling harlots with stories of flight just to get mad laid? Sick!

I must confess it: I, too, am weak for the saloon’s siren song. And yet; the nearby gymnasium is the locale, I do believe it!, the more conducive for scoring babes. Just two Thursdays past I was in the gymnasium hoisting aloft a weighty iron box (do you bros hoist?) when I spotted a woman, a solid 8, gazing at me intently from across the premises. Her yoga pantaloons I found divinely touched & basically fucking sexy as fuck; & I approached her.

“Greetings. Silas Vanderbilt at your service,” I offered. And the Vanderbilt ruse worked! My good sirs, we smashed eleven times that very day! “Telegraph me!” she implored as I took my leave. Yeah—not happening.

A fine occasion, and one most unlike that which befell me this week-end when my wankcheese bedmate returned home with two boardinghouse hags most foul. Their rounded foreheads and indistinct nose lobes portended ill, but I—foolishness!—paid no heed and, as is my custom, aided the wankcheese; for the team, I took one, engaging half of the hag-pair for the night’s duration. Alas, a mistake. Total psycho clinger, and I am quite certain that on her account I have also contracted whooping cough. FML.

I digress! Dear bros, I beseech you: alight in your flying apparatus upon this looming epic wenchapalooza! Camisoles, bare-knuckle boxing, flammable fluids most delicious, immoral rookery groupies, &c!

LET US DO THIS!

Yours most truly and shit,

CrayTrey

Nobody Believes You're Brazilian

Jessica, Phil, as your good friend it’s time we had a talk. There’s something you both really need to hear. You’re not fooling anyone: nobody believes you’re Brazilian.

I realize that’s hard to take, especially because you’ve clearly put so much effort into pretending to be Brazilian. But it’s just not working and, frankly, it’s getting on everyone’s nerves.

I think it all started last year at Jamie’s Confederations Cup party when you arrived wearing matching Neymar jerseys despite not knowing anything about Neymar (including how to pronounce his name) or about soccer generally, or having even the most distant, strained, thread of a connection to Brazil.  

After that, things snowballed. I remember you had me over for Caipirinhas. And then you started taking samba lessons, and waxing obsessively, and super-gluing fruit to all your hats.

Which was fine, I guess. But when you announced your plans to “blanket our yard in incandescent orchids” despite the entirely unsuitable soil composition and clear climactic differences between Manaus and Des Moines, I began to think you might have a problem.

Please don’t get defensive. Pretending to be Brazilian is common, especially when there’s an international soccer tournament everyone’s talking about. But you should know that what seems harmless can have real and lasting consequences.

Like what? Well I didn’t want to mention this, but I overheard Phil say that last month you two spent more than $800 on acai products? I don’t give a damn about the antioxidants, Jessica, that level of berry-related outlay is obviously unsustainable and irresponsible.

And speaking of irresponsible, you guys cannot seriously expect to raise that jaguar to adulthood without incident. I mean, seriously.

Look, I’m not trying to be harsh. But understand you’re starting to lose friends over this. The chronic tardiness has become an issue, plus it’s clearly deliberate because you’re exactly 43 minutes late to everything. And Cheryl’s still upset about her wedding, you know. Obviously “smart-casual” doesn’t mean canary-colored thongs.

Don’t tell me to relajão, Phil! Stop making up Portuguese words! And stop saying “Life’s a beach!” all the damn time. It’s a stupid expression and I’m pretty sure it’s not even fucking Brazilian.

Sorry. I’m sorry. It’s just hard. I feel like I barely know you two anymore. Sure you’re tanner, happier, and way, way more fun than you used to be. But at what cost?

You’re adults, though. You can make your own decisions. And deep down I know there’s no way you’ll stop pretending to be Brazilian any time soon. But maybe now, as World Cup memories recede and the weather turns shitty, you’ll recall who you are and where you’re from, and you’ll slowly give up your healthful diets and newfound sex appeal and let this radiant façade grow cold and dull again.

What? Yeah, actually, I’d love some coconut water.