The awkward moment when you’re eating dinner at someone else’s house and you don’t like the food, but you have to pretend to like it..
http://thatfunnyblog.tumblr.com/
Then they ask you if you want more:
:’D
LOOOOOOOOOOOOL^
This is a Japanese dish called, Odori-don, (dancing squid rice bowl), where:
A live squid with its head removed is served on top of a bowl of sushi rice, accompanied by sashimi prepared from the head (usually sliced ika (squid) and ika-kimo (squid liver)) as well as other seafood. Seasoned soy sauce is first poured on top of the squid to make it “dance”. The body is then removed and prepared by the chef, to be served up again as a side dish.
Ok, this freaks me out.
That squid was probably thinking “fuck you , chinese bitches” I mean, look at his face!
If you had to guess the scene in this photo, what would your answer be? A group of friends prepping lunch? Maybe a local cooking class?
If you guessed prison, then you guessed correctly.
Above, inmates at the upscale Halden Fengsel prison in Halden, Norway prepare food in a common room meant to be a meeting place for prisoners and guards.
From photographer Alex Masi’s Halden photo project:
Individual cells come with an en-suite bathroom, a flat-screen TV and various comforts. They measure 12 square meters and are divided up into units (10 to 12) which share a living room and kitchen, similarly to a students’ dormitory.
The windows are not fitted with bars, but thick glass is used instead.
The prison - the second-largest in Norway - costs 165m Euro and accommodates 248 male inmates. Some 760,000 Euro were spent just on artworks, some of which commissioned to Norway’s most renowned street artist, Dolk.
The inmates can attend a vast range of formative courses at a official high school located inside the prison. Subjects can include languages, IT, science, catering, music, (there is even a professional sound studio) art and handicraft and several sports.
Interestingly, statistics show that in Norway only 20% of inmates (1 in 5) commit another crime and return to prison within two years of their release.
Read more on the Halden prison at Foreign Policy. [Photo: Alex Masi]
We’re doing it wrong.






