My favourite moment in my 20+ year career. Entering to #ItsComingHome in front of a sold out Queenstown crowd, my home ground!
This place was on 🔥 and I couldn’t be more thankful. It meant the world 🍺
Full FREE Match - https://t.co/YdL3Khgljg
#ThreeLions 🏴
I’m going to be shameful here. I have tried to help a lot of people in this job for 40 years. I never want a thank you. My lad works and has work hard. Please rt this as a thank you to me.
I was confident I could of played a major part this summer for my country after the season I’ve had. I’ve been left shocked and gutted by the decision.
I’ve loved nothing more than putting that shirt on and representing my country over the years.
I wish the players, all the best this summer 🏴
I followed WWE around from 97-2001 like Phish and experienced a ton of @steveaustinBSR's entrances along with 2 world title wins. You'll never see another sumbitch over like that again. Fans (at least in the south where I lived at the time) would turn into apes and trample each other at the very sight of him. Now cameras are gone, no flashbulbs, every fan is filming on their phone.
No matter how advanced WWE's entrances get or how many yeets and lasers they shove up our ass, you'll never replicate the natural roar of pure support Austin received on a nightly basis from arenas full of 90s wrestling fans when he walked through the curtain. We did NOT fuck around. Having a literal 100% of fans' attention in every city for every second he was out there is a level of connection we'll never see again. Plenty of other wrestlers have been over and beloved, but no one touches the sight of 15K+ asses instantly flying off their seats the moment that glass breaks. There was NOTHING like it.
Ricky Gervais on 60 Minutes Makes a Crystal-Clear Case for Free Speech
He put it perfectly: the great thing about freedom of speech is that I can say what I want, and you can say you're offended, and I get to decide whether I care or not.
Because let's be honest, there's nothing you can say that someone, somewhere won't find offensive.
That's why blasphemy laws are so absurd, they're basically trying to protect an all-powerful deity from having its feelings hurt.
At the end of the day, we should be free to criticise any idea.
Just because you're offended doesn't automatically mean you're right.
Spot on, Ricky. Free speech isn't about never upsetting anyone, it's about the right to speak anyway.