Join the most popular community of Irish swingers now
Login

Funy Images to brighten your day

last reply
105 replies
9.6k views
0 watchers
0 likes
:laughabove::laughabove:
What some people will do in the name of Art
Volunteers posed for Spencer Tunick, the American artist, in a park in Salford as he aimed to reflect the work of LS Lowry in a large-scale installation.
Over 4,000 people applied for 1,000 places for Everyday People, which is being staged in eight secret locations around Salford and Manchester, with volunteers ferried between each location in heated buses.
Speaking after the event, Tunick said: “I think being naked creates a new meaning for the background. It creates a relationship between the concrete world and the real 
Joyce Stevens, 56, a secretary from Liverpool, was among the naked volunteers.
She said: “I wanted to push my boundaries and see how far I could go.
“When I was registering initially I didn’t know what it was letting myself in for. Towards the end it was a bit chilly but I feel like I’ve accomplished something.
“Liberated is probably not the word but maybe that will kick-in when I’m back sitting on the bus and a bit 
“People say that it’s a sexual experience but it’s actually more tribal. We are bonding with a good group of people.
“Some people view naturism a bit like a scene from Carry on Camping but they need to understand that it’s not like that any more. It’s about celebrating the body and being with like-minded people of all shapes and sizes.
"It’s not to everybody’s tastes but it shouldn’t be frowned 
"When you look at it to start off with, quite often don’t realise that it’s naked bodies being photographed. It becomes a single entity.
“Immediately you feel that it’s a piece of artwork. As soon as we stripped-off and walked down the first hill it didn’t look like naked bodies, it looked like art straight away.
“As Spencer puts you all into position and tells you what to do, you begin to see what it’s going to look like. I’m really looking forward to seeing it when it’s finished so I’ll be coming back up to Salford for that.
“There was one very drunken man, who we came across on the street, for a look who will have wondered what was in his cider last night.
"But there was nothing sexual at all and it wasn’t like exposing yourself because everybody else was in the same 
“When you’re getting your kit off in a situation like this you have a laugh about it with your mates, because there’s a safety in numbers thing.
“At times we all had to move in one direction. Whether getting naked in a park is the right direction to be moving-in is a different question, but maybe something will come from 
“There’s something about people taking their clothes off that is a real leveller. Prejudices and concerns go out the window. It was about learning and expressing what it is to be human."
not to be out-done the irish did take part earlier in the year

What an experience. I stripped naked with 2700 other brave souls in a cold windy and eventually wet midsummer morning on the South Wall at Dublin Port. The South Wall extends out to sea and next stop is Wales so we were somewhat exposed.
But what a crowd. While naked and waiting for the instructions, the crowd started a spontaneous Mexican wave. I could only think to myself where else would 2700 naked people think about doing a Mexican wave to pass the time. My next abiding memory is the arrival of the port traffic in the form of 2 ferries from the Uk. They passed within a few hundred metres of the South Wall and what a sight must have greeted those passengers. For those on their first trip to Ireland, I reckon they will never forget that greeting, and the guy doing the naked cartwheels along the wall.
The first setup comprised 3 positions: 1 - standing looking out to sea, 2 - sitting back sunbathing and 3 - the foetal position where we hugged the granite for some warmth, such was the chill in the air.
Then the rain came, it chucked it down and the second setup on the wall was abandoned and replaced by an impromptu dash into the sea and 2 poses, one facing the camera and another looking away out to sea, both with heads bowed. One participant actually sang "Singing in the Rain" and the crowd took it up. A lovely moment shared by all which will remain with me long long after the ripples in the sea have disappeared. Sandymount Strand will never be the same. I'm sure James Joyce would approve.
To say I enjoyed the experience simply does not go far enough. It was the most exhilirating, exciting, challenging and fun filled night I have ever experienced, bar none.
Alan-ball I have two friends in that picrotflmao:rotflmao::rotflmao: They said it was a gas expererience:rotflmao::rotflmao: I can pick their butts out from here:rotflmao::rotflmao:
Arghhhhhhhh my worst nighmare, a pussy with a gun. RUN AWAY RUN AWAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
:laughabove: the pussy has got you in it`s sights:laughabove:
Cow Tipping ...but why bother, surely there are more fun things to do.

Myth and reality
According to popular belief, cows can easily be pushed over without much force because they are slow-moving, slow-witted and weak-legged, have a high center of gravity and sleep standing up. Numerous publications have debunked cow-tipping as a myth. Cows only doze instead of sleeping while standing up, and they are easily disturbed. A variety of calculations have been performed to determine if cow tipping is physically possible. A study led by Margo Lillie, a doctor of zoology at the University of British Columbia, concludes that cow tipping by a single person is impossible. Her calculations found that it would take at least two people to apply enough force to push over a cow if the cow does not react and reorient its footing. If the cow does react, it would take at least four people to push it over. Professor Lillie noted that, contrary to the myth, cows are well aware of their surroundings (they have excellent senses of smell and hearing) and are very difficult to sneak up on.
The British media outlet Times Online has posted a detailed illustration of the force necessary to push over a cow.
History
Cow tipping began as a trick to be played on people such as city folk visiting the country. Like snipe hunting, it was used to send those on whom you are playing the trick on a wild goose chase, with a task that could not be done.
A similar belief was held about elephants in medieval Europe: in 1255, Louis IX of France gave an elephant to Henry III of England for his menagerie in the Tower of London. Drawn from life by the historian Matthew Paris for his Chronica Majora, it can be seen in his bestiary at Parker Library of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, with an accompanying text revealing that at the time, Europeans believed that elephants did not have knees and so were unable to get up if they fell over. The bestiary contains a drawing depicting an elephant on its back being dragged along the ground by another elephant, with a caption stating that elephants lacked knees.
In the news
In 2004, Brigham Young University–Idaho (BYU-Idaho) reportedly garnered criticism when the University's bookstore began selling "official BYU-Idaho cow-tipping team" T-shirts.
In April 2008, four men in Naples, Florida, who were arrested for damaging a gate to a communications tower in an open field, told police deputies that they had gone into the field and tipped over a cow. However, police stated this was impossible because there were no cows within several miles of the field.
In January 2009, a cow reportedly knocked a woman off her bike and stepped on her legs in Boulder, Colorado. The Associated Press wrote that, "It's not another instance of cow-tipping. In this case, it was the cow that did the tipping." The woman was not seriously injured. Other news sources cited the incident as the result of a "Cow engaging in people-tipping"; compare "man bites dog".
In popular culture
Cow-tipping has appeared in a variety of media and entertainment. In the popular computer role-playing games Fallout 3 and Asheron's Call, players can push over cows. In the 2006 animated movie Barnyard, a group of tough talking cows from New Jersey go "boy-tipping" in response to similar behavior against cows. In another 2006 animation movie, Cars, characters go "tractor-tippin'". In a 1994 episode of the popular animated television series Beavis and Butt-head, the two titular characters, after watching a milk ad on television, set out to tip over a cow. Cow-tipping is also featured in the 1989 black comedy Heathers as well as the 1995 Chris Farley-David Spade comedy film Tommy Boy.
The Maryland Lottery/Bovines Unite, Famous Dave's restaurants ("Angus with attitude") and Coffee Mate television ads have all featured cows engaged in people-tip