I don't want to sell, buy, or process anything as a career. I don't want to sell anything bought or processed, or buy anything sold or processed.#Horrorfam#SPN
True @lyft story…
Me: This is me, with the carport.
Lyft driver: Is that a skull 💀 wreath?
Me: Indeed. And that’s an Elizabeth Bathory Inn sign, two plastic pumpkins and a “Come in for a bite”/haunted house stencil welcome mat.
Lyft driver: That’s kinda psychotic.
Me:
82 years ago today, General Eisenhower issued this Order of the Day to the Allied troops preparing for D-Day.
“The eyes of the world are upon you. The hopes and prayers of liberty-loving people everywhere march with you.”
The next morning, they stormed the beaches of Normandy and changed the course of history.
90% of the soldiers on the first boats to hit the beach didn't live to see the end of the day. Look at those faces. Some of them never made it to 18.
Never forget that they paid the ultimate price for our freedom. We live our lives the way we do because of them.
The 23-minute D-Day landing in Saving Private Ryan (1998) cost $12 million, about a fifth of the film’s budget. Filmed over a month with 1,500 actors and 400 crew, it remains one of cinema’s most intense sequences.
Eighty-two years ago today, the fate of the free world turned on the courage of ordinary men asked to do the extraordinary.
On June 6, 1944, more than 156,000 Allied soldiers crossed the English Channel and stormed the beaches of Normandy — many knowing they might never return.
They came not for glory, but for something far greater: the liberation of a continent crushed under tyranny. D-Day was not simply a military operation — it was the moment the tide of history changed, purchased at an almost incomprehensible cost in blood and sacrifice.
As we mark the 82nd anniversary, we don’t simply remember a battle. We remember the men behind it — their fear, their faith, and their extraordinary willingness to give everything so that others could live free. That debt does not expire with time. It only deepens.
@Normandy@WW2Facts
#dday #normandy #dday82 #ww2 #ww2history
82 years ago today, nearly 160,000 Allied troops stormed the beaches of Normandy on D-Day, launching the liberation of Europe.
We are free because they were brave. 🇺🇸
INVADERS FROM MARS was released 39 years ago today.
Tobe Hooper approached the film as a child’s nightmare brought to life, deliberately using oversized sets, distorted perspectives, and surreal visuals to make the world feel unsettlingly dreamlike.