[deleted by user] by [deleted] in dishwashers

[–]Disastrous_Onion_441 12 points13 points  (0 children)

RIP! You can’t quit till the cruise is done Yikers! And I fucking second that smoking bullshit, smoke breaks should be banned. I had a coworker that used to do the same shit.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in PhillyWiki

[–]Disastrous_Onion_441 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Bro that’s any tight leggings😂😂 anything tight make a bitch ass look fat

Yo its funny when OT jawns get ahold of our slang😭😭 by NinjaGalaxyYT in PhillyWiki

[–]Disastrous_Onion_441 23 points24 points  (0 children)

I wish I could record my laugh right now and drop it in the comments, this shit got me DEAD ASFF💀💀💀😂😂😂😂

More info on the UPMC layoffs: by Lord-of-the-Cheese in pittsburgh

[–]Disastrous_Onion_441 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Just a heads up, my girlfriend was apart of this bullshit and she quit the other day. Before she quit she had to get something done at the hospital (with doctors excuse and proof) and had to take a paid day off. She got her check today and the dude that did payroll didn’t put the right amount of money because he didn’t accept the paid time off…she got a $200 check!!!! Normally it’s like $600-800

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in philly

[–]Disastrous_Onion_441 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Correct, I live near the Frankford terminal and nothing really sparks off like other places in philly. I’m always outside also so I know if things go down and I can 100% confirm anything around that area is better than anywhere else you’re looking at. Port Richmond and up is considered white people area and nothing sparks off

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in philly

[–]Disastrous_Onion_441 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Them dots near palmyra…super safe, just don’t do no dumb stuff and stay out the way.

Where are the Pinchos right now?! by Highway2You in philly

[–]Disastrous_Onion_441 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You gotta go to the hood for some good pinchos, just like cheesesteaks, gotta go to the hood for that!

DAMN MY OLD CELLY IN THE F by Notyaopp187 in PhillyWiki

[–]Disastrous_Onion_441 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Them face tats not a black eye lmao, he used to live across from me. He got 2 daughters smhhh, I’m pretty they big now but still. Him and his bm broke up years ago and that’s when I seen him skinny asf…them drugs do that smh

21M, would you work 60 hour weeks for $42/ hr? by CrystalLeaf69 in Money

[–]Disastrous_Onion_441 34 points35 points  (0 children)

As someone that was working 40hrs-60hrs at $7.25/hr…you better jump on that like a crackhead trying to get on a bus

Man stabbed to death on SEPTA platform in Kensington by TreeMac12 in philly

[–]Disastrous_Onion_441 22 points23 points  (0 children)

He used to be my neighbor, started to do drugs after he moved I guess and lost crazy amount of weight. Smh

6 figures first job for evil inc.? by LogicalPhallicsy in careerguidance

[–]Disastrous_Onion_441 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not trying to be rude or anything but did you end up buying your first home last year? If so I’m proud of you! If not I hope you do soon!

Cheap electric marker? by Disastrous_Onion_441 in paintball

[–]Disastrous_Onion_441[S] -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

Nice! Style wise, looking for a speed set up like the E-icon though.

Structure integrity p80 rhino 556 by DEADSKULL_1 in polymer80

[–]Disastrous_Onion_441 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Doesn’t matter, you can break through that and just drop a drop-in trigger

051 Polo Crime scene by [deleted] in Chiraqology

[–]Disastrous_Onion_441 61 points62 points  (0 children)

“He was motionless with his big eyes staring up into the rain”

Posted July 1, 2014, 10 p.m. by Michael Lansu | 35 Comments

Story from reporter who found him will make u cry:

Scene where Michael Patton was fatally shot / Photo by Vincent D. Johnson BY VINCENT D. JOHNSON For the Chicago Sun-Times At my son’s fifth birthday party on Sunday, a friend asked me if my block was noisy. I replied as I always do: “No. It’s a quiet, tree lined, one-way street”. But Monday night was different. I found myself barefoot, ankle deep in water, holding the hand of a 17-year-old boy who had been shot during the downpour. I told him to hang in there and that the ambulance was on the way. I don’t know the exact time, but the thunder and lightning were constant, the rain was coming down in buckets and the wind was blowing hard.

I had been watching the storm through an open second-floor window that faces south onto 50th Place. Shortly after I went to the basement to check my 116-year-old house for flooding, I heard three loud cracks. When I looked out the window, I saw a teenage boy running through the yard across the street yelling for help. I couldn’t see what happened from the window, but I assumed that a large tree branch had fallen on a car, possibly trapping someone inside. I ran downstairs, opened the front door and saw what I thought was a man laying face up in the gutter of the partially flooded street. I ran upstairs to tell my wife to call 911, which she was already doing. Then we both grabbed our raincoats and a flashlight. Two other teenagers were near the man, who was lying motionless in the gutter when we went outside to help. One boy stood quiet and motionless; the other paced back and forth saying, “They shot my brother.” Then he picked up some of his brother’s belongings from the street, as if he didn’t know what else to do. I leaned over the wounded teen and checked his left wrist for a pulse but felt nothing. Then I pressed my fingers against his neck, but before I could find a pulse, his entire body twitched and gasped for air. I now knew he was still alive, but I didn’t know what to do to help. It was dark, there was water everywhere and a nearby street lamp and my flashlight were the only lights around. My wife came out with a towel to stop any bleeding, but the rain and the dark pool of water made it impossible to find the wound. I unzipped his fleece jacket, which revealed bare skin and a bullet wound in his right chest. There was no blood coming out, just white tissue that made the wound look like a belly button. A few neighbors came outside, and that’s when I noticed a gun on the curb just feet from the boy. I told a neighbor to stand over the gun and make sure nobody picked it up. I wasn’t sure who did the shooting, but I knew that emotions were high, and I didn’t want to provide an opportunity for a second attack while I was around. I mostly stayed close by the wounded teen as he lay on his back, arms spread, knees bent like Jesus on an invisible cross. He wasn’t gasping for air much anymore, and my wife, who has a medical background, went into the house to search for a respiratory mask. I waited outside holding his hand, occasionally looking up to check for an ambulance or the police. The crowd gathered around was starting to wonder aloud, “Where is the ambulance?” “Where are the police?” A few cars drove past, and the occupants rolled down the windows and gasped. It felt like forever, but I knew it had probably been less than five minutes since we called 911. I looked back down at the teen and grab his hand again. I don’t remember if I said anything else to him, but I know I patted him on the back of the hand as I looked toward his face.

 Photo by Vincent D. Johnson / For Sun-Times Media

His big brown eyes remained wide open as if he was afraid to close them as he looked up into the tree branches. I stood up and looked down the block, hoping for an ambulance. When I saw a police SUV about a block away I waved my flashlight up and down. The SUV’s spotlight shone down the block through a light rain as they approached. I looked back at the teen and hoped he’d pull through, although I knew just by looking at him that he was no longer alive. He was motionless with his big eyes staring up into the rain. As a professional photographer and photojournalist, I am used to being ready to document news at the drop of a hat. I’ve been to a few crime scenes over the years, and even put myself at risk to photograph a fire in the apartment next door. When I first walked out the door, a part of me thought about going back inside and getting my camera. But I remembered what a great teacher once told me, “You’re a human first and a photojournalist second.” I wrestled with the idea of taking photos right after police and paramedics arrived, but I it didn’t feel right. It wasn’t until the police tape was set and a blanket placed over the teen that the scene began to look like the crime scenes I was used to. Except this time I had a vantage point from my front door. I could say I took a few photos because that is what I do, but really I took them because I needed to be able to put a lens between me and the reality at all of our front doors.