Say something in the comments of this post if you wana be in the sanity tier list
Say something in the comments of this post if you wana be in the sanity tier list
Susssex sus
^Most sane dinopedian
Nope You do realize Outside of fandom I am deemed mentally insane right
If you think I’m sane on DinoPedia, check out the insane sh*t I used to do on the FNaF wiki before I was almost blocked. (Idk if the posts are still there, but I used to make memes about getting f*cked by school buses as a joke)
Savage, what about me
Personally, "Ram Ranch" is a 2012 song by Toronto-based outsider musician Grant MacDonald. The song features a heavy metal musical backdrop with explicit homoerotic spoken-word lyrics about an orgy of cowboys taking place at the titular ranch. The song became an internet meme later in the 2010s, inspiring humorous remixes, parodies, fan-made music videos and reaction videos, and has also been used for bait-and-switch trolling. In 2022, the song gained mainstream attention for its use by counter-protesters against the Canada convoy protest. Since 2018, MacDonald has produced more than six hundred follow-up songs. Some bear the "Ram Ranch" title and all of them expand on the "gay cowboy" storyline. Little is known about MacDonald, except that he lives in a condominium in Toronto, Canada where he records his music. In an interview with Rolling Stone, MacDonald said he initially created "Ram Ranch" as backlash for being turned away from Nashville radio stations for producing LGBTQ-themed songs. MacDonald used the royalty-free song "Flying Through the Sky" by Anubys as the backdrop for the song. The song came to prominence in 2022 during the Canada convoy protest. The song was used by counter-protesters to flood Zello channels, to troll protesters attending and organizing the protests. The hashtag #RamRanchResistance was formed on Twitter as a means of identifying counter-protesters. MacDonald said he was "totally elated that my song could be used to stand up for science" in response to the use of his song in counter-protesting. On February 14, with the occupation still in progress, MacDonald released an EP, Ottawa Truckers, which referenced both Ottawa protests and "Ram Ranch". The EP's single 20-minute track was later featured on MacDonald's album Truckers. As of July 31, 2022, MacDonald has written 600 different versions of "Ram Ranch". They can stretch up to nearly thirty minutes in length and feature the same repetitive, arrhythmic vocal delivery.
And also, i believe that The Arapaima, pirarucu, or paiche is any large species of bonytongue in the genus Arapaima native to the Amazon and Essequibo basins of South America. Arapaima is the type genus of the subfamily Arapaimanae within the family Ostoglossidae. They are among the world's largest freshwater fish, reaching as much as 3 m (9.8 ft) in length. They are an important food fish. They have declined in the native range due to overfishing and habitat loss. In contrast, arapaima have been introduced to several tropical regions outside the native range (within South America and elsewhere), where they are sometimes considered invaasive species. In Kerala, India, Arapaima escaped from aquaculture ponds after floods in 2018. Its Portuguese name, pirarucu, derives from the Tupi language words pira and urucum, meaning "red fish".
Arapaima was traditionally regarded as a monotypic genus, but later several species were distinguished. As a consequence of this taxonomic confusion, most earlier studies were done using the name A. gigas, but this species is only known from old museum specimens and the exact native range is unclear. The regularly seen and studied species is A. arapaima, although a small number of A. leptosoma also have been recorded in the aquarium trade. The remaining species are virtually unknown: A. agassizii from old detailed drawings (the type specimen itself was lost during world war II bombings) and A. mapae from the type specimen. A. arapaima is relatively thickset compared to the remaining species.
Something
What do you think?