Et si notre réalité n’était qu’une simulation ?
Découvrez la bande-annonce du premier film d’animation de Quentin Dupieux, LE VERTIGE, présenté en clôture de la Quinzaine des Cin��astes
Avec Alain Chabat, Jonathan Cohens, Anaïs Demoustier, Jean-Marie Winling
Le 10 juin au cinéma
We're blown away by this user-created mod for the PC version of Hades II, which lets you play through the original game's encounters as Melinoë!!🤯
Trailer and details here if you want to check it out:
https://t.co/1owtxEWrt7
NASA is one of the few governmental entities that isn't a colossal taxpayer waste of funds because it's autistic guys going hard on their autistic interests.
Double their budget.
In Irish mythology, fairies—known as the Aos Sí—are descended from the Tuatha Dé Danann, a race of powerful, semi-divine beings who once ruled Ireland. After being defeated by the mortal Milesians, the Tuatha Dé Danann retreated into the earth, taking up residence in burial mounds, sacred hills, and hidden places in the landscape. These mounds, called sídhe, became portals to the Otherworld—a mystical realm where the fairies dwell. The Aos Sí are not tiny, delicate creatures but tall, radiant, and powerful figures who exist alongside the human world, entering it at liminal times like Samhain, when the veil between realms is thin.
Irish folklore warns that the fairies are not to be trifled with. They are known for their beauty and mystery, but also for their unpredictable temper. Humans who disturb fairy places—such as cutting down a fairy tree or blocking a fairy path—risk illness, misfortune, or even death. Many rural Irish traditions include rituals to appease or avoid offending the Aos Sí, such as leaving offerings of milk or bread. Stories of changelings, banshees, and mischievous leprechauns are all part of the broader fairy tradition, reflecting the belief that fairies are both a part of the natural world and something entirely beyond it—guardians of an older, deeper magic.
via The Irish Abroad
#irishmythology #fairies #FairyTaleTuesday
When I was building spacecraft, one of our engineers would stand behind us while we were laying wire harnesses and read from the Bible.
We would sometimes pray before a large operation. He brought his Bible into the cleanroom and privately prayed over a vehicle before we sent it into test.
I'm pretty sure he prayed over the Orion that is being flown on Artemis II as well. The Orion team was just as religious, if not more religious, than we were.
We are "the science" and we're glad Astronaut Glover is as faithful as us.