Cul de Sac by Richard Thompson for June 08, 2013
Transcript:
DIll: Can you still control bees with your mind? Alice: No. Ive lost my power. Kevin: Ha! I don't think you ever could control bees with your mind! Alice: Butterflies attack! Kevin: Ngyaaaah! Dill: So now it's butterflies? Alice: In the right hands, they're surpassingly aggressive.
margueritem over 11 years ago
They bow to your will, Alice.
Linux0s over 11 years ago
Butterflies 1Bucketheads 0
Sisyphos over 11 years ago
Kevin, disbelief will lead to severe consequences. You have been warned! Do not tempt the Mighty Alice!
gijoe76 over 11 years ago
Thanks Cul de Sac, I just woke up my wife laughing.
Kokopelli over 11 years ago
@ Doctor Toonthat is going to make one heck of a storm.
Daringdan over 11 years ago
this would petrify my brother he used to be scared to death of butterflies, that may or may not have been do to his older brother telling him they are poisonous to the touch. :)
ChessPirate over 11 years ago
That “Butterfly Effect” theory is at the core of the movie “A Sound of Thunder”. It didn’t get good reviews, but I enjoyed it.
Stellagal over 11 years ago
In the wrong hands they are rather squishy.
Gokie5 over 11 years ago
I had an old neuron saying something about “The Butterfly Effect” phrase originating with Isaac Asimov, but
http://askville.amazon.com/phrase-Butterfly-Effect-originate/AnswerViewer.do?requestId=50157543
believes that it originated with another SF writer, Ray Bradbury, in 1952. The Butterfly Effect idea was, according to this source, based on a theory that was originated in the 19th Century.
Kip W over 11 years ago
I controlled bees with spoken commands for about fifteen minutes one day in high school. Then I decided I’d better not waste my great gift. I don’t think the bees even know who I am any more.
Kip W over 11 years ago
I remember an article in Reader’s Digest back when I cared, called “On the Length of Cleopatra’s Nose,” which discussed how small changes could have made large differences on a greater scale.