索引串[ ゚ω゚]
#798386
是的,这就是为什么我跑去喝酒了!!!我好开心,我在喝酒!!!
#798388
>>Po.798345
看串首,是索引串
看串首,是索引串
#798397
如果我死后的骸骨能做成电吉他-
#798402
>>Po.798397
Media outlets around the world appear to have fallen for yet another music-themed prank – this time one about a “skelecaster.”
A Florida man who claims his name is Yaago Anax and performs heavy metal music as Prince Midnight, said he crafted a playable guitar using parts from a Fender Telecaster and the bones of his uncle, who died in a 1996 motorcycle accident in Greece.
“My uncle Filip died in the 90’s (sic) and donated his body to science,” reads a post on Prince Midnight’s Instagram. “However, the schools in Greece discontinued using actual skeletons and he ended up in a box in a cemetery that the family has had to pay rent on … So, we finally made the move to bring him to the US.”
Anax did not provide Filip’s surname or identify the university that had the bones. On Instagram, he thanked the Thessaloniki Municipal Cemetery in Greece. (According to a local news report, the cemetery charges families a fee to store bones in its ossuary.)
Tampa media outlets, however, reported this week that Anax is almost certainly the local artist who calls himself Odilon Ozare.
In 2018, Ozare got into the Guinness Book of World Records for having made the tallest hat. A year later, he was recognized by Guinness for having the longest nail extensions.
At the time, the Tampa Bay Times reported there was “no voter registration, driver’s license, phone or address records for anyone by that name” – but a Guinness official said record holders are allowed to use stage names.
Appearing on a podcast in 2018, Ozare admitted: “I slightly altered my birth name.”
Ozare has also been accused of being Justin Arnold, frontman for punk band Feral Babies. Arnold famously pranked a Tampa alt-weekly in 2014 with a photo of a two-headed alligator.
This week, Times reporter Christopher Spata noted that Ozare “bears a striking resemblance to Prince Midnight, who also bears a striking resemblance to Justin Arnold.” (Ozare told the Times he only listens to Barbra Streisand and described the skeleton guitar as “dreadful.) Creative Loafing Tampa Bay writer Ray Roa opined that "locals might think the skeleton shredder looks familiar—and they wouldn’t be wrong."
On Thursday, the fact-checking site Snopes listed the skeleton guitar as "unproven." The site noted: "We reached out to Prince Midnight for more information and will update this article accordingly."
The sale of human skeletons is legal in most American states, including Florida. Online, the average price for a full skeleton is $5,000 U.S. and a torso like the one used in the guitar runs about $2,800 U.S.
Last month, media outlets were pranked by Thomas Dodd of England, who claimed to have legally changed his name to Céline Dion after having a few too many drinks. In fact, he had simply purchased documents online. Twitter later suspended his account.
Media outlets around the world appear to have fallen for yet another music-themed prank – this time one about a “skelecaster.”
A Florida man who claims his name is Yaago Anax and performs heavy metal music as Prince Midnight, said he crafted a playable guitar using parts from a Fender Telecaster and the bones of his uncle, who died in a 1996 motorcycle accident in Greece.
“My uncle Filip died in the 90’s (sic) and donated his body to science,” reads a post on Prince Midnight’s Instagram. “However, the schools in Greece discontinued using actual skeletons and he ended up in a box in a cemetery that the family has had to pay rent on … So, we finally made the move to bring him to the US.”
Anax did not provide Filip’s surname or identify the university that had the bones. On Instagram, he thanked the Thessaloniki Municipal Cemetery in Greece. (According to a local news report, the cemetery charges families a fee to store bones in its ossuary.)
Tampa media outlets, however, reported this week that Anax is almost certainly the local artist who calls himself Odilon Ozare.
In 2018, Ozare got into the Guinness Book of World Records for having made the tallest hat. A year later, he was recognized by Guinness for having the longest nail extensions.
At the time, the Tampa Bay Times reported there was “no voter registration, driver’s license, phone or address records for anyone by that name” – but a Guinness official said record holders are allowed to use stage names.
Appearing on a podcast in 2018, Ozare admitted: “I slightly altered my birth name.”
Ozare has also been accused of being Justin Arnold, frontman for punk band Feral Babies. Arnold famously pranked a Tampa alt-weekly in 2014 with a photo of a two-headed alligator.
This week, Times reporter Christopher Spata noted that Ozare “bears a striking resemblance to Prince Midnight, who also bears a striking resemblance to Justin Arnold.” (Ozare told the Times he only listens to Barbra Streisand and described the skeleton guitar as “dreadful.) Creative Loafing Tampa Bay writer Ray Roa opined that "locals might think the skeleton shredder looks familiar—and they wouldn’t be wrong."
On Thursday, the fact-checking site Snopes listed the skeleton guitar as "unproven." The site noted: "We reached out to Prince Midnight for more information and will update this article accordingly."
The sale of human skeletons is legal in most American states, including Florida. Online, the average price for a full skeleton is $5,000 U.S. and a torso like the one used in the guitar runs about $2,800 U.S.
Last month, media outlets were pranked by Thomas Dodd of England, who claimed to have legally changed his name to Céline Dion after having a few too many drinks. In fact, he had simply purchased documents online. Twitter later suspended his account.
#798404
>>Po.798402
啊,某渠道的报道就不能翻译完全篇啊
啊,某渠道的报道就不能翻译完全篇啊
#798409
漏墨???
#798414
酒助眠,三小时!
#798780
【中字】「背後傳來的陽角訕笑聲一定是在嘲笑我的吧」「這世界人類不需要人類」孤獨搖滾廣播第4回cut 网页链接
#799094
\NANA/\NANA/\NANA/
#799175
怎么说,一直抱有的念头终于能够看到了。
#799205
我靠,这种事情不要啊,淦。
#799229
>>Po.799205
不要啊!蚊子去死啊啊啊
不要啊!蚊子去死啊啊啊
#799270
杀人诛心啊矢泽爱