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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
petermorwood vryka
injuries-in-dust

I want to try this one.

petermorwood

You could ring some Interesting Changes on this by using flavoured crisps: Roast Chicken, Smoky Bacon, Buffalo, Thai Sweet Chilli, Salt ‘n’ Vinegar or even that great Irish standby Tayto Cheese 'n’ Onion.

But if you do, on your own head be it, because Interesting is not the same as Good.

Or indeed sensible.

food and drink dylan's kitchen
bladesandstars sweets-and-fire
tricky-bastard-pokemon

ok so

image

everyone knows about this meme, right?

but does anyone else know the woman who made the food? no? time to educate!

image

This is “Mother Mary”, the owner of Blackberry’s mother.

She made all the cakes for the restaurant while it was open. Chef Gordon Ramsay tried her red velvet cake, and spoke this meme-able line:

image

He then called Mary over, complimented her food, and gave her a peck on the cheek.

image
image

Look how happy she was to hear that!!!

anyways, I hope she has been able to continue her love for baking since the restaurant closed down.

tasmanianstripes

For these who don’t know: The restaurant she worked at closed down but she left before that and opened her own bakery, that’s apparently very successful!

reggies-jam

She has a youtube channel where she shares recipes and cooking advice!

neil-gaiman neil-gaiman

faillen asked:

Hello Mr. Gaiman,

I’m requesting permission on behalf of my roommate for them to write a musical about Good Omens for a theater class they’re in. Their professor is requiring them to ask for author permission if the work isn’t in the public domain, as he would like his students to publish their works.

I’m not entirely sure how this whole permission thing works, but we believe a simple “okay” would suffice if you are alright with this.

Thank you!

neil-gaiman answered:

as long as it’s non-commercial, sure!

neil-gaiman

And to clarify, @faillen, that doesn’t mean I’ve given you any rights at all in Good Omens.

It means that, as long as it’s non-commercial, you (well, your room mate) can write a musical for Theatre Class.

I’d need to hear exactly what the professor means by “publish your works” because at that point we are probably talking about rights I don’t have to grant, as all publishing rights in Good Omens are already tied up, and it would take a lot of formal applications through channels which would probably have to be rejected because they cross into rights we don’t control, if you wanted to publish anything.

(And if their professor is actually asking people to go and get the publishing rights to stories they want to adapt, I’m not convinced that that professor entirely understands how these things work, and would strongly suggest that they advise students only to adapt Public Domain works.)