stairway to heaven
many people are too fat to make it (including me)
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Barret
We don't allow frightening things such as fireworks here in our country, so I wouldn't know.
Barret
They banned everything except those tiny launchers you place on the ground, and some tiny balls pop out.
Barret
Decent fireworks that you shoot up in the sky, and not just slightly off the ground, were banned years ago.
BILLYMAYSHERE
theyve never been allowed in shitty commie ran calfifornia...got time for a long story?...ok here goes..back when i was a little soapyeller,we'd take trips back to the midwest to meet with semi-retarded relatives.. and we'd stock up on the "illegal" kind of fireworks (things that explode or discharge exploding things) and import them into the shitty state of california..we could have made that into a little small business had we had warren buffets big brain.but alas,we were not very bright as it turns out..but we were the coolest motherfuckers in a 4 sq km range (im using km for my euronigger buddies)
megaFAGGOT
California can suck a fucking dick, they take away and regulate all my cool shit
Bono
California can indeed suck dicks... the cost to start a business is fucking ungodly.I have to pay the franchise tax board $800 a year for the privilege of paying them taxes.
Barret
Good story BM, its so weird imagining him as a young teen or kid though...I imagine he had the same beard even back then.
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glandmilker
Chinese artist Cai Guo-Qiang is known for highly-publicized public spectacles that fill the sky with shimmering fireworks or colorful smoke.A new documentary film on the artist, Sky Ladder: The Art of Cai Guo-Qiang, released on Netflix October 14, goes in a slightly different direction. It is based on piece carried out in secret in a small Chinese fishing village under cover of night.
Perhaps Cai‘s most compelling, personal work yet, Sky Ladder is a 1,650-foot-tall ladder, held aloft by a giant balloon and rigged with explosives. As the massive sculpture ignites, it creates a fiery vision that miraculously ascends to the heavens.
When a video of the June 2015 event was leaked online some months afterward, it was an instant hit. “Within two days there were 30 million views,” Cai told artnet News during a visit to his East Village studio. By comparison, there were only a couple of hundred people present on the day of the event.