CONGRATULATIONS ON ONE HELL OF A LEGENDARY CAREER:
Last season may have been the final time we see Russell Wilson on the field in his historic career.
9× Pro Bowler
All-Pro (2019)
Super Bowl Champion (XLVIII)
Pro Bowl MVP (2016)
Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year (2020)
Stats
• 353 passing TDs (12th)
• 114 INTs
• 5.8-1.9 td/int ratio
• 64.6% completion percentage
• 46,966 passing yards (16th)
• 99.3 passer rating (5th)
• 5,568 rushing yards (4th)
• 31 rushing TDs (16th)
League Records:
Most wins by a QB in his first nine seasons (98)
One of only five QBs with a career passer rating over 99
Second-highest career TD percentage in Super Bowl era (min. 3,000 attempts)
Most fourth-quarter comeback wins since 2012
Only QB with a winning record in each of his first nine seasons
Tied rookie record for most passing TDs (26 in 2012)
Led the NFL in fourth-quarter passer rating multiple times
Seattle records:
• Most career passing yards (37,059 with SEA)
• Most career passing touchdowns (292 with SEA)
• Most career completions
• Highest career passer rating
• Most 4,000-yard passing seasons
• Most rushing yards by a QB
• Most wins as a starting QB
One of the greatest quarterbacks of all time.
If this is it, it has been one hell of a ride.
🫡
This is the sweetest thing I’ve seen today 🥹
A deaf dad signs to his newborn daughter in ASL
"I’m your daddy. You are a beautiful girl. Green eyes. You’re so cute. I love you.”
He will never forget this beautiful moment.
Father of 22-year-old Logan Federico screaming at Democrats in Congress after his daughter was dragged from bed, forced on her knees, and executed...
...by a man arrested 39 TIMES with 25 FELONIES...
May be the most powerful and heartbreaking video I've ever watched.
Everyone who let this demon walk freely, should be in prison.
HOLY SMOKES: John Solomon reports BOMBSHELL memos from the FBI
Revealed by @FBIDirectorKash
They document how J6 was a planned entrapment setup—exactly as I describe in @PatriotPlea
THEY DESTROYED OUR LIVES FOR A LIE
Most people remember him as Saruman, Count Dooku, or Dracula. But those iconic roles were merely shadows of the man behind them.
Christopher Lee didn't live one life. He lived several—each more extraordinary than most people's entire existence.
Born in London in 1922, Lee grew up in a family of old European distinction. His step-cousin was Ian Fleming, who would go on to create James Bond—a character whose elegance and danger some say carried echoes of Lee himself.
Then the world erupted into war.
Lee volunteered immediately. Poor eyesight kept him from flying, so he joined RAF Intelligence instead, eventually moving into special operations—the kind of work that remains partially classified even today. He worked behind enemy lines in the final stages of the war and beyond, doing things he would almost never discuss.
Years later, on the set of The Lord of the Rings, that silence broke for just a moment.
Peter Jackson was directing a scene where Saruman gets stabbed from behind. He suggested Lee let out a dramatic scream.
Lee calmly interrupted: "Have you any idea what kind of noise a man makes when he's stabbed in the back? Because I do."
The set fell silent. Jackson quietly adjusted the scene.
After the war, Lee turned to acting—not chasing stardom, but simply working. And he worked relentlessly. Over 280 films across seven decades, in multiple languages.
He spoke fluent English, French, Italian, German, and Spanish, with working knowledge of Swedish, Russian, and Greek. Long before Hollywood embraced international stars, Lee was one—performing across Europe with the same commanding presence he brought to British cinema.
He became the face of Dracula for a generation. He brought menace and sophistication to villains that could have been cartoonish. He made every role—great or forgettable—watchable simply by being in it.
Then, at age 88, he did something nobody expected.
Christopher Lee released a heavy metal album.
Not as a novelty. Not as a joke. A serious, symphonic metal concept album about Charlemagne—sung in multiple languages, backed by actual metal musicians who respected his vision.
Critics were stunned. It was genuinely good.
He released another album at 91. Another at 92. His final recording was a thunderous metal cover of "My Way"—less Frank Sinatra's croon, more Viking battle cry.
A man born before television existed was recording metal music in the streaming era.
But perhaps his most profound connection was literary.
In the late 1950s, long before The Lord of the Rings became a global phenomenon, Christopher Lee met J.R.R. Tolkien briefly at a pub in Oxford. Lee was already a devoted fan who read the trilogy every single year.
Decades later, when Peter Jackson assembled his cast, Christopher Lee was the only actor who had actually met the author himself.
He desperately wanted to play Gandalf. He was cast as Saruman instead.
And he gave that role a gravity no one else could have—because he wasn't just performing Tolkien's words. He had heard Tolkien speak. He understood the weight of that world from the source.
Lee never retired. His final film roles came in 2015—the year he died—at 93 years old. He worked until the very end, not from necessity, but because creation was simply how he lived.
Think about the span of that existence:
Born in 1922. Fought in WWII. Worked in intelligence operations that remain classified. Witnessed the birth of cinema, television, and the internet. Moved from silent films to CGI blockbusters. Played Dracula, wizards, Sith Lords, and sang heavy metal in his nineties.
Legends grew around him—some exaggerated, some untrue. But the truth never needed embellishment.
Christopher Lee was a war veteran, a polyglot, a cinematic titan, a metal musician, and the last living bridge between Tolkien's world and its retelling on screen.
He once said: "Every actor has to make terrible films from time to time. The trick is never to be terrible in them."
#archaeohistories
🚨 AWESOME! SecWar Pete Hegseth just REENLISTED Joey Jones to the Marine Corps
JONES: "I'm doing it because I have a debt left to give... It means the world to me to be here to finish the story that I started writing twenty-one years ago."
PATRIOT. 🇺🇸👏🏻
This picture won the Pulitzer prize in 1960. It shows a priest giving the last rites to a Cuban farmer, owner of his land. He refused to work for the Castro regime. He died by a firing squad after a "trial" by Che Guevara that lasted 4 minutes.
This is a picture of Socialism.
This is the most detailed MRI scan of an unborn baby.
At just 20 weeks, she is moving, turning her head, kicking—even standing. Her beating heart is also visible.
Human life is a miracle.