@VirginiaPeraR@dahiamarinez El que lleva en Twitter un tiempo, sabe que eso no fue de forma "eficiente". Es el mismo grupo, el mismo amiguismo, no fue algo genuinamente en beneficio de controlar crisis o darle alcance a noticias importantes.
Adam Silver on LeBron’s free agency decision:
“I would like him to make his announcement already, so he can finish the schedule. Because as you might imagine, the teams are calling us, the networks are calling us, and everybody wants to lock in the schedule. But it will influence how we set the schedule, how we set opening week, Christmas Day, etc.”
(via @andrewrsorkin)
@ElTioElie Al parecer le gusta jugar basketball, porque nadie durado tanto tiempo jugando, tiene más de la mitad de su vida dedicada al juego. Quizás, solo quizás, estamos viendo a alguien que genuinamente le gusta jugar basketball.
No, THANK YOU! Truly a honor to wear the 💜💛 while trying to continuing the greatness & legacies that came before me! Hope I made a few proud during my stint. 🙏🏾🫡👑
@Shane00 Crazy that he's the one with the "right play" mentality and a "pass first" guy and still holds the most buzzer beaters in the playoffs, when it matter most. I don't know how these narratives are alive
Cristopher Sánchez's scoreless innings streak has reached 34.2 IP 😳
He passed Cliff Lee for the longest streak by a @Phillies pitcher in the Live Ball era (since 1920)!
It’s a masterclass in modern corporate compliance: a third-party booking system makes a glaring mistake, but the system doesn’t care about nuance. It only cares about data.
The hotel is fully booked. A father is processing the reality that a family of four is expected to share a single king bed, despite a phone screen proving they reserved otherwise. The employee is stuck inside a procedural loop, holding a printout from a third-party site like it’s a legal shield, unable to offer anything but an ultimatum: take it or leave.
Then comes the breaking point. A bystander attempts to step in to apply basic human logic, but logic has no jurisdiction here. High stress leads to bad tempers, respect goes out the window, and the reservation is canceled altogether.
This is the state of hospitality in a fully automated world. Frontline workers are trapped with no actual power to problem-solve, customers are entirely on their own when technology fails, and third-party sites hide behind fine print while people sleep in their cars.
Who is actually at fault when the system breaks like this? Is it the customer for losing their cool, the employee for refusing to budge, or the broken corporate infrastructure that forced them into this standoff?