Gonna have myself a delicious chocolate croissant.
But I better heat it up first. Much yummier that way.
The question I’ve gotten the most on this trapdoor murder basement microwave post is “why???” and while there is a perfectly reasonable explanation, I’m tempted to let it remain a mystery.
However one thing that saddens me is the fact that no one has noticed you have to pretty much stand on top of an actual well to use the microwave.
there ain’t no party like a slytherin party because a slytherin party don’t stop. ever. they keep extending the party into a more magnificent and lavish party to outdo the original party-thrower and it’s been seven weeks draco just give it a rest
On 26 Jan. 1967, Luigi Tenco and fellow singer Dalida (Tenco and Dalida had recently announced their plans to get married) sing the same song written by Tenco (“Ciao Amore Ciao”) at the Italian Song Festival in Sanremo. According to some reports, Tenco reluctantly attended the festival and performed the song horribly in rehearsal and began drinking heavily.
Tenco and Dalida are both eliminated from the competition in the evening, and Tenco berates the judges. While Dalida attends the customary dinner, Tenco does not. Instead, he returns to their hotel room and continues to drink. Tenco reportedly called a former girlfriend and tells her that he wants to meet her in Rome in a few hours. He says he wants to buy a house together, and he talks about the conspiracy behind his elimination from the competition, which he will expose at a press conference in the morning.
Dalida returned to the room around 2 am on 27 Jan, and found Tenco lying on the floor, with a gun at his side. A note was found on a nearby table: “I loved the Italian audience and spent 5 years of my life in vain. I do this not because I am tired of life (on the contrary) but as a protest against a public and jury.”
“Io ho voluto bene al pubblico italiano e gli ho dedicato inutilmente cinque anni della mia vita. Faccio questo non perché sono stanco della vita (tutt'altro) ma come atto di protesta contro un pubblico che manda `Io tu e le rose´ in finale e ad una commissione che seleziona `La rivoluzione´. Spero che serva a chiarire le idee a qualcuno. Ciao. Luigi”.
27 gennaio 1967: Luigi Tenco viene trovato senza vita nella sua camera dell'Hotel Savoy di Sanremo.