Pizza Thot Comic

Pizza Thot Comic




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Pizza Thot Comic
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Updated
6 months ago
by
Autumn Able .

Pizza Thot is a fictional pizza delivery restaurant featured in a series of fan art illustrations surrounding a voluptuous pizza delivery girl named Tips.
On March 13th, 2018, the webcomic artist Gats tweeted illustrations of a character wearing a shirt with the word "Tips" printed on the front along with the message "sketched a new oc" (shown below). [1] Within two months, the tweet gained over 3,600 likes and 670 retweets.
In the coming week, Gats released additional illustrations of Tips and other character portrayed as employees of the Pizza Thot restaurant on his Twitter feed and Tumblr [3] blog (shown below).
On March 20th, YouTuber HeroTheHero released a video on the origins of the Pizza Thot character (shown below).
On March 28th, Redditor A_Creepy_Uncle launched the /r/PizzaThot [2] subreddit for fan illustrations of the character. On April 28th, DeviantArtist telehypnotic [4] uploaded a 3-D depiction of the character (shown below).

My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic

[4] DeviantArt via Wayback Machine – Welcome to PizzaThot!

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PIZZA THOT - PAPE SERIES - "Customers"




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The fourth entry in the Pizza Thot Wallpaper Series. Is this canon? Who knows! Why does Pizza Thot have a mysterious red room?
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People must CUM there a lot am i right
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Moscow, December 25, 1991 by Conor O'Clery.


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Preview — Moscow, December 25, 1991
by Conor O'Clery




History always comes down to the details. And when it comes to the fall of the Soviet Union, the details are crucial, especially when such an era-defining event hinged on the bitter personal relationship between two powerful men, Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin. On the twentieth anniversary of the end of the Cold War, Conor O'Clery has built his compelling and brilliant
History always comes down to the details. And when it comes to the fall of the Soviet Union, the details are crucial, especially when such an era-defining event hinged on the bitter personal relationship between two powerful men, Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin. On the twentieth anniversary of the end of the Cold War, Conor O'Clery has built his compelling and brilliantly constructed narrative of the fall of the Soviet Union around one day, December 25, 1991, the date Gorbachev resigned and the USSR was effectively consigned to history. From there, O'Clery looks back over the events of the previous six years: Gorbachev's reform policies of glasnost and perestroika ; Yeltsin's ignominious fall and then rise to the top; the defiance of the once docile Soviet republics; the failed August coup by the hardliners; and the events that swiftly followed until a secret meeting in a central European forest sealed the fate of the communist monolith and the clock ticked down to the last day. The result is an intricately detailed, thoroughly researched book, based on interviews with many of the key figures in a drama of Shakespearean intensity as well as contemporary reportage, the memoirs and diaries of key political figures and official documents. The book is written at a breathtaking, dramatic pace, drawing the reader in as it focuses equally on the personal and historical stories. Moscow, December 25, 1991 is set to become a defining book on the fall of the Soviet Union.
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Published
June 21st 2012
by Transworld Ireland


(first published January 1st 2011)



184827114X
(ISBN13: 9781848271142 )


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Start your review of Moscow, December 25, 1991: The Last Day Of The Soviet Union

Jan 18, 2012


Shawn


rated it
it was amazing

 · 
review of another edition








Conor O’Clery’s Moscow 25 Decem­ber 1991 fol­lows a not­ably grow­ing trend for pick­ing a pivot point in his­tory and revolving round it to find a pop­u­lar audi­ence (wit­ness 1066, 1421, 1434, 1491, 1492 etc. All good books by and large but adopt­ing a very sim­ilar tact). The date provides a recog­niz­able focus and then the space is open for provide the back­ground and the after­math in a pop­u­lar fash­ion. O’Clery breaks the mold though in a most enga­ging fash­ion with the book. I am alw
Conor O’Clery’s Moscow 25 Decem­ber 1991 fol­lows a not­ably grow­ing trend for pick­ing a pivot point in his­tory and revolving round it to find a pop­u­lar audi­ence (wit­ness 1066, 1421, 1434, 1491, 1492 etc. All good books by and large but adopt­ing a very sim­ilar tact). The date provides a recog­niz­able focus and then the space is open for provide the back­ground and the after­math in a pop­u­lar fash­ion. O’Clery breaks the mold though in a most enga­ging fash­ion with the book. I am always in praise of those who can man­age to effect­ively uses flash­backs within chronologically-driven nar­rat­ives and the still hold the thread. In Moscow 25 Decem­ber O’Clery very effect­ively picks the day that Mikhail Gorbachev signed the legal doc­u­ment dis­solv­ing the USSR as his pivot. The day is divided into a series of peri­ods and as time cov­er­less on the act of sign­ing the paper, the author steps back to the gen­esis of the two prot­ag­on­ists careers. The careers of Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin lead up to the day and as time slows as they con­verge on the act, the inter­ming­ling of the story lines con­verges. The struc­ture and exe­cu­tion of the writ­ing is superb. This is not to down­play the actual events tak­ing place. The cyc­lical nature of revolu­tion in Rus­sia (both polit­ical and eco­nomic) is thought­fully doc­u­mented and exposed and the author takes advant­age of a priv­ileged pos­i­tion on the side­lines to high­light much inform­a­tion that simply didn’t make it above the fold in the West. In my opin­ion Gorbachev comes of far worse than Yeltsin in the author’s hand­ling. I am grate­ful for this as I feel that west­ern media treat­ment of him may well have been lately shaped by cul­tural bias and the polit­ics of the time. Neither of which should sur­prise. How­ever, it is very good to have some cor­rect­ive applied. Non­ethe­less, one is struck by how much the pet­ti­ness and per­sonal anim­os­it­ies can play a huge role in the des­tiny of a nation (or in this case of nations). I hung on to the few events that I felt I had a degree of famili­ar­ity with such as the failed 1991 coup and the rise of Vladi­mir Putin, and O’Clery thank­fully fills in some gap­ing holes. The char­ac­ter treat­ment of Yeltsin gave much to con­sider and appre­ci­ate how his por­trayal by west­ern media as merely and oppor­tun­istic drinker misses a huge swath of his char­ac­ter and denies a truer appre­ci­ation of his motiv­a­tions and accom­plish­ments. The con­trast­ing (less than com­pli­ment­ary) por­trait of MIkhail Gorbachev sur­prises me, yet provides me with a cor­rect­ive that illus­trates how much a care­fully man­aged pub­lic per­sona might hide simple human frailties. Both warn the reader that we much be more crit­ical con­sumers of the media — for­give my rather naive moment here. This is a grip­ping read. The pace of the nar­rat­ive holds you in thrall and the rich­ness of the story envel­ops. A true pleas­ure. I was fas­cin­ated by much of the detail that I simply would not have come to appre­ci­ate at the time of the events tak­ing place and dis­mayed that I feel that I was starkly out of touch with the moment­ous things going on. I am grate­ful for O’Clery’s work in craft­ing such a fine account and shar­ing his exper­i­ences. Highly recom­men­ded!
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I lived through these events and still had no idea of the scope of the problems and infighting that occurred. Having young children at the time will be my excuse, but to my shame I have no recollection of the events of Dec. 25, 1991, the day the Soviet Union dissolved. The material was very well presented in a way that carried you along in real time while fitting in the background facts without being a distraction.




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Mar 27, 2014


John Carter McKnight


rated it
really liked it

 · 
review of another edition








An excellent journalistic account of the end of the USSR, using the day of Gorbachev's resignation as a frame for examining the last few years of his rule. Fast-paced but never shallow, O'Clery gives a first-hand account of the final day's events, contextualizing them well. The end of the USSR is one of history's more extraordinary stories, and O'Clery spins it out as a tale of unintended consequences, personality conflicts, and habits of public obeisance and private back-stabbing developed over
An excellent journalistic account of the end of the USSR, using the day of Gorbachev's resignation as a frame for examining the last few years of his rule. Fast-paced but never shallow, O'Clery gives a first-hand account of the final day's events, contextualizing them well. The end of the USSR is one of history's more extraordinary stories, and O'Clery spins it out as a tale of unintended consequences, personality conflicts, and habits of public obeisance and private back-stabbing developed over the course of Soviet history. The main lesson for the contemporary reader is in how little things ever change: the absurd propaganda lies acted on by people who should have known better, the constant turning on enemies and then on friends, the textbook tactics of attempting to overthrow neighboring countries, the lack of any conception of subjugation of power to law. Nothing ever changes.
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Shelves:
history ,
geopolitics




The Fall of the Soviet Union is a convoluted, rapid, and even mysterious event worth exploring from many different angles. The country ceases to exist during the last week of December in 1991; some would argue that it had ceased to exist before this. However its the day to day ceremonial aspect that's the most fascinating to explore and its what this book tries to focus on. The Soviet flag is lowered from the Senate building from the last time, people wake up in a different country, a Soviet cru
The Fall of the Soviet Union is a convoluted, rapid, and even mysterious event worth exploring from many different angles. The country ceases to exist during the last week of December in 1991; some would argue that it had ceased to exist before this. However its the day to day ceremonial aspect that's the most fascinating to explore and its what this book tries to focus on. The Soviet flag is lowered from the Senate building from the last time, people wake up in a different country, a Soviet cruise ship has to change its national emblem mid voyage, Gorbachev resigns. It's the latter event that’s the center piece here, taking place on the eponymous date. The book also however covers the well tread ground of the historical forces leading up to the fall of the Soviet Union. It is fine to go over Perestroika, the Yeltsin Gorbachev rivalry, and the August Coup, but they take up about half of the book, as the narrative alternates between the fateful day of Gorbachev's resignation and summaries of the historical background. I would have preferred more focus on the daily aspect, more curious personal details about one of the most momentous events of the 20th century, which at the ground level was just another day in the life of millions of individuals.
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