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Successfully unscrewing



song chart memes

Successfully Unscrewing

Graph by: algarbonzo via Graph Jam Builder

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» 46 TPS Reports

  1. RiderLeangle says:

    Could have been worded better but still funny.

  2. goondar says:

    GENIUS!!!!!!! This is the funniest thing I have seen all day!

  3. Aidan Geurro says:

    Third! Maaan I’m so SWEET!

    • Div says:

      The Iliad (Greek: Ἰλιάς, Iliás) is an epic poem recounting significant events during a portion of the final year of the Trojan War — the Greek siege of the city of Ilion (Troy) — hence the title (“pertaining to Ilios”). In twenty-four scrolls, containing 15,693 lines of dactylic hexameter, it tells the wrathful withdrawal from battle of Achilles, the premiere Greek warrior, after King Agamemnon dishonoured him — an internecine quarrel disastrous to the Greek cause. This poem establishes most of the events (including Achilles’s slaying of Hector) later developed in the Epic Cycle narrative poems recounting the Trojan War events not narrated in the Iliad and the Odyssey.[1]
      The Iliad, and its sequel, the Odyssey, are attributed to Homer, but his sole authorship is doubted by some scholars who think the poems exhibit different poetic styles (dialect, idiom, metre) which may indicate several authors, a presumed characteristic of the Ancient Greek oral tradition. [2] Twentieth century scholars dated these poems to the late-ninth and early-eighth centuries BC, [3] notably G. S. Kirk, Richard Janko, and Barry B. Powell (who links its transcription to the invention of the Greek alphabet); however, Martin West and Richard Seaford, posit either the seventh or the sixth centuries BC, as the composition time(s) of this oldest extant literary work of Ancient Greece.
      The titles of the poem — the Greek Iliad and the Latin Ilium — derive from the city’s name. The Trojan War subject-title derives from the English Troy, derived from the Greek Τροία and Troía; and the Latin feminines Troia and Troiæ, each denominates the State whose capital is Ilium. Moreover, Kauffman posits that the Ilios city-name derives from Wilusa, a Hittite region-name.

  4. Peter says:

    Nay, it can be done.

  5. toolulah says:

    daaahlink, tres funny, should be a national billboard.

  6. StCyr says:

    I don’t know, those coke bottles can be pretty tricky.

  7. Kang says:

    Abortions for some, miniature american flags for others.

  8. Lalas says:

    Sad…. I’m 100% successful at unscrewing a soda bottle cap…. and much closer to 100% successful at unscrewing a light bulb. Keep practicing Timmy, you’ll get there someday.

    • TheObject says:

      A pair of vice grips can push the first 4 categories up to 100%, I’ve not tried them on the fifth. But I’m certain that they will prevent any future screwing.

  9. Steve says:

    My Blue Heaven classic! Sweet graph!

  10. Casa says:

    I laughes my ASS off!!! oh this was a GOOD one! ^^

  11. Madsen says:

    You screwed it, you can’t unscrew it!

    (I can’t believe nobody said that yet!)

  12. rilol says:

    Genius :D

  13. papajon0s1 says:

    I’d say #5 is accurate in that I wouldn’t call any ended pregnancy “unscrewing”. How does one “unscrew” sex anyway? Some form of “unorgasm”?

    And I think #4 is rapidly becoming %0. But I don’t have enough beer to get into it right now…. :)

  14. Valiant Defender says:

    So funny! I had to say something. Perhaps the political category should go into the negative percentile? Is that mathematically possible? If not, even better!

  15. Jared C says:

    *FACEPALM*

  16. cipher_nemo says:

    This is in clearly very bad taste. Are we promoting graphs done by teenagers now?

    • cougartrax says:

      sure, why the hell not? I mean, it’s not like the ones by “adults” aren’t in bad taste too. ;)

  17. teguki says:

    4 and 5 should be reversed…

  18. colBoh says:

    I LOSFL’ed (Laughed Out So Freakin’ Loud)

  19. Giga_Platypus says:

    the average person has a 10% chance of unscrewing current political issues. I would wanna try the pregnant lady first.


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