Think you got what it takes to write for Cracked.com? Then submit an article or some other pieces of content.
It's hard to screw up something that could run your car for free, which makes what we're about to show you that much more incredible.
It must be tough to sell cheap, greasy pizza to a demographic that thinks malt liquor and Bugles are a balanced breakfast, Pizza Hut.
A good movie prop master can create the most realistic device from any old cheap piece of shit lying around.
If you've watched it, this was probably the thought running through your head: 'How did we go from such a great movie to ... this?'
Last week, New York state senator Greg Ball made a tweet, which as we all know is never a good idea for an elected official whose name sounds like genitals.
Last weekend, rookie news anchor A.J. Clemente debuted in his very first live broadcast at Bismarck, North Dakota's own KFYR-TV. It didn't go well.
Fundawear, vibrating underwear controlled via smartphone app to keep you and your long-distance significant other from masturbating like normal human beings. Or, more likely, to fingerblast some stranger you just met on the Fundawear forums.
We're beginning to notice a disturbing trend with each new Superman preview -- every single character in the movie seems to be a massive shithead.
Every now and then these gimmicks come along and are so hilariously misguided that you wonder if the artist's real goal is to drift back into obscurity.
We're not going so far out on a limb to say that Google Glass is the next Virtual Boy because, well ... we all still want one. Also, they already did it for us. Just watch the video, which, like the Virtual Boy ads, simply can't manage to downplay its own faults.
In case you don't want to sit through the two and a half minutes of agony, we've broken it down for you.
Creating something new is hard. It's certainly much easier to patent things that have already been invented, which is exactly what these people did.
A commercial has to pass before several sets of eyes before it even gets filmed, let alone before it makes it to television. This is why GE's new ad for its hospital equipment is so confounding.
Sometimes it's not enough to simply inform people of what happens in the world -- you have to jazz it up for the fearful and/or easily distracted.
The 'Catching Fire' trailer was released on Sunday, in which it was revealed that the film has been shot in two colors.