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I'm Jessie, I live a Kate Winslet Appreciation Life.

I co-own the tumblr: silentmovies

My url is James Dean's birthdate
My blog title is a Judy Garland lyric


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Posts tagged Pushing Daisies.

(via freecocaine)

Chuck: I can’t even hug you? What if you need a hug? A hug can turn your day around.
Ned: I’m not a fan of the hug.
Chuck: Then you haven’t been hugged properly. It’s like an emotional Heimlich. Someone puts their arms around you and they give you a squeeze and all your fear and anxiety come shooting out of your mouth in a big wet ‘what’ and you can breath again.

(via peakingoranges)

suppose dying’s as good an excuse as any to start living.

(via aneveninginroma)

hobanwashburnes:

“At that moment, in the town of Coeur d’Coeurs, events occurred that are not, were not, and should never be considered an ending. For endings, as it is known, are where we begin.”

Pushing Daisies, Season Two

hobanwashburnes:

“The truth is that there are a lot of people like you, us, with strange hobbies or talents or gifts and we try to hide it because we’re afraid that it makes us seem weird or it will turn people off, but that’s a mistake. What makes me unique has brought every person I love into my life.”

Pushing Daisies, Season One

Only Prince Charming could know how the Pie Maker felt upon looking at her. Great thought was taken as to where to touch her. The lips? Too forward. The cheek? The cheek.

(via deforest)

Poster Remake | Pushing Daisies  
Life. Death. And life again.

(via peakingoranges)

This is not strange. Unusual maybe, eccentric, in a quaint way like dessert spoons.

(via imminenteminence)

Narrator: Young Ned could touch dead things and bring them back to life. But if he touched the dead thing twice, it died again forever. The consequence of touching a dead thing twice was as cruel as any consequence, and that was something else had to die. Young Ned rationalized this consequence was beyond his control: he was not to blame. But to remain blameless, he had to understand. He realized to give life, he had to take it. Death, however, had a grace period. What young Ned did not know was how long that grace period was: one minute. Fearing the consequences of his actions, Ned vowed to never, ever again bring the dead back to life for more than a minute. Until he did it again.

 
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