File: rotisserie_channel.swf-(5.75 MB, Loop)
[_] how long until you get hungry? Anonymous 10/09/12(Tue)11:51 No.1781119
How long can you watch this without getting hungry?
>> [_] Anon-sama 10/09/12(Tue)12:59 No.1781137
Watched since it went up. Still not hungry.
>> [_] Anonymous 10/09/12(Tue)13:02 No.1781140
joke's on you, I was already eating lunch when I clicked this.
>> [_] Anonymous 10/09/12(Tue)13:55 No.1781164
I'm vegetarian.
>> [_] Anonymous 10/09/12(Tue)14:25 No.1781179
Why is this considered delicious? The answer seems obvious, doesn't it? There are images of dead
animals, metal, and subtle peals of heat off in the distance all of which have an appetizing
effect. But from our point of view, we are in front of a grand chicken, now decrepit as it is
slowly reclaimed by the roaster. And it is that aspect of this flash that is most appealing. It
caters to the human desire to devour nature and tear down the walls of modern meals. Because the
Grand Chicken is not completely burnt but instead in a state of great neglect (in modern living
standards), it represents an appealing balance between man made structure and the degenerating
flesh which spring from the Earth. This flash is delicious because we as an audience can GAZE
into it and imagine, if only for a moment, that this is where we dine, that the stresses and
hunger of Modern Living are naught but a distant memory.
>> [_] Anonymous 10/09/12(Tue)14:49 No.1781190
>>1781179
I want to chop you up into small pieces and eat you.