In 1991, Lemmy Kilmister and Phil Campbell of Motörhead performed a cover of Chuck Berry's *Let It Rock* on Late Night with David Letterman. The appearance featured a notable moment where Letterman mistakenly introduced their album 1916 as "Motörhead."
Tom Hanks on how he came up with the idea for "Cast Away" (2000):
"I made 'Cast Away' (2000) because I wanted to examine the concept of four years of hopelessness, in which you have none of the requirements for living—food, water, shelter, fire and company. But it took us six years to put together the alliance that would actually examine that. I only had a third of it, and Bill Broyles only had a third of it, until Bob Zemeckis comes along and provided that other third. I had that original idea. I was reading an article about FedEx, and I realized that 747s filled with packages fly across the Pacific three times a day. And I just thought, "What happens if that goes down?"
(Actor Roundtable, The Hollywood Reporter, 2017)
P.S: Happy 70th birthday, Tom Hanks!
BOOM🔥🔥🔥
Day 60 flower clone.
One of the most challenging techniques in cannabis cultivation is cloning a plant deep into flower.
I often take backup clones from some of my favorite phenos near harvest to preserve the genetics and create monster crop clones for future mothers.
At BeLeaf, we practice the finer art of cannabis cultivation with Passion, Love and Raspect 💥🔥
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That dancing and stage style…when Red Hot Chili Pepper’s Anthony Kiedis saw it in the ‘Epic’ video he was incensed with Faith No More’s Mike Patton.
Then he saw this video and he was ‘Falling To Pieces’.
1 - 0 FNM!
Em uma entrevista, Haaland comentou sobre esse momento com Gabriel Magalhães:
"Se eu caio, é cartão vermelho. Nunca faria isso. Poderia ter feito o Gabriel ser expulso por essa cabeçada, mas meu pai me ensinou a ficar de pé."
A 7-year-old boy became Disney World’s 200 millionth guest and was awarded free admission for life. Nearly 40 years later, he is still taking advantage of the prize, visiting the parks with his wife and children.
In July 1985, seven-year-old Virgil Waytes Jr. of Miami unknowingly became Walt Disney World’s 200 millionth guest as he passed through the entrance gates during his family’s first visit to the park.
Disney marked the milestone with live music, fireworks, and a special ceremony that left the young boy completely surprised. As part of the celebration, he received one of the company’s rarest rewards: a lifetime pass granting free admission to Disney theme parks around the world.
Nearly four decades later, Waytes still makes regular use of the extraordinary pass. It has no blackout dates and allows him to bring up to three guests on each visit. Now living in North Carolina, he often takes his wife and children to the parks, saying the greatest reward has been creating lasting family memories without the high cost of admission. Disney continues to honor the lifetime pass, and on some visits it has even covered food and merchandise purchases.
The Beastie Boys were parodying party anthem rock and yet with ‘Fight For Your Right’ they ended up creating one of the biggest party blasters of all time. Whoops!