>Say hello to my chocolate blend

>Everyone wants my Dunkaccino
>Can't get enough of my Dunkcaccinor
>Kids from seven to seventino

>Lining up for my Dunkaccino

youtube.com/watch?v=2S6eUFbOfIU

What in the fuck was he thinking

Other urls found in this thread:

youtube.com/watch?v=kNG-BlH-PWY
youtube.com/watch?v=JXYk3HBrqZE
youtube.com/watch?v=V14PfDDwxlE
youtube.com/watch?v=6i7ycxiog40
twitter.com/AnonBabble

>want new sports car
>your movies havent been killing it for a long while
>some fat donut fuck waddles up to you and says him and his group of rotund friends are ready to pay you an absurd amount for half a days work

id do it every now and then to top my bank account up

Is this the saddest fall from grace?

reminds me of this:

youtube.com/watch?v=kNG-BlH-PWY

No this is

Jon Voight fighting a dog

youtube.com/watch?v=JXYk3HBrqZE

>It's a whole new game
Breakfast Kino

Wew

>blocked in your cuntry

FUCK

What country blocks a video of a man fighting a dog?

straya

...

...

>In mid-2010, Pacino learned that his business manager, Kenneth I. Starr, had been arrested for embezzling his clients’ money in a Ponzi scheme. (Starr is currently serving seven and a half years in prison.) There had been warnings. Early on, Mike Nichols, who had taken his money out of Starr’s company, had raised suspicions. “I’ll get to it,” Pacino told Nichols. “Then I never got to it,” he said. “Millions of dollars were gone,” Sola said. “Gone.”

>Pacino took the loss in stride. “I thought, Hey, this is the world. It’s real,” he said. “Not one day I saw him down or depressed,” Sola said. “He was, like, ‘O.K., now what do we do? Roll up our sleeves and go to work.’ ”

>Pacino’s agent, John Burnham, told me, “In his halcyon days he made around fourteen million a picture, but the industry’s changed. Nowadays, he gets five million. With a gun—seven million.” It has taken Pacino four years to work himself back to a position where, he says, “compared to a normal person, I have a significant amount.” He sold a Snedens Landing property, did commercials, took out a loan, and signed on for Adam Sandler’s dismal but profitable “Jack and Jill” (2011)—a “kids’ movie,” according to Pacino, in which he sent up both his legend and his financial predicament. In the film’s best moment, a hip-hop ad for Dunkin’ Donuts, Pacino can be seen dancing and pitching the “Dunkaccino”: “You want creamy goodness / I’m your friend / Say hello to my chocolate blend.”

>Dunkaccino
>Starring Al Pacino
>Directed by Quentin Tarantino

This is unquestionably the only thing that could ever be called the one and only "KINO". Everything else is just cheap illegitimacy that can't even pose a proper pretense.

kekatino

It takes balls to laufg at yourself like that.
The film's Paccino's situation reflects his real life situation at the time.

witnessino

Everyone forgetting the worst fall from grace.

For shame

youtube.com/watch?v=V14PfDDwxlE

But have you checkerioned by doubleinos?

youtube.com/watch?v=6i7ycxiog40

they should put the poor fuck out of his missery