Happy Father’s Day
Age 5 – Dad knows everything!
Age 7 – Dad knows a lot.
Age 10 – Maybe Dad doesn’t know everything?
Age 12 – Dad doesn’t know anything.
Age 14 – Dad lost his mind!
Age 16 – I can’t take Dad seriously.
Age 18 – What does Dad even know?
Age 22 – Dad talks nonsense!
Age 24 – I know more than Dad!
Age 26 – Turns out, Dad actually knows a few things.
Age 30 – I should probably ask Dad about this…
Age 40 – How did Dad make it through all of that?!
Age 45 – Dad was always right.
Age 50 – If only Dad were here… I’d have so much to learn.
Former basketball player Shaquille O'Neal bought his mom a house after his sister passed away, moving her to live closer to him, as he had only seen his family a handful of times that year. Speaking on his relationship with his mother, he said, "I never wanted to be rich, I just wanted to be able to buy my mother anything she wants. That's it."♥️
Will this be on your movie list? 🍿
Mel Gibson just wrapped filming
on “The Resurrection of the Christ”,
and it's not a small project.
The movie was shot over about 7 months and is reportedly coming out in two parts, with a budget around $250 million.
That's a huge jump from the original The Passion of the Christ, which already had a massive impact when it released.
Splitting it into two parts suggests it's going a lot deeper into the story this time instead of trying to fit everything into one film.
How is this celebrated?!?
What the hell is wrong with people?!
Where are the coaches? Umpires? What parent in the right mind wouldn’t drag their son off the field if he did that? Pathetic!!
McDonald's locations in Tennessee are drawing attention for their public display of faith.
The restaurants owned by Tony and Gina Wolfe proudly display the message of Easter in their windows.
Awesome to see! 🙌
Andre Rison is too underrated 🔥
— 5x Pro Bowler
— SBXXXI Champion
— 743 catches + 10,205 receiving yards
— Scored a TD with 7 different teams (NFL record)
Former Alabama running back Trent Richardson weighed in on Nick Saban’s stance against paying players.
“Honestly, I don’t get why he’s even commenting on it, they gave me and my family $75,000 just to commit, plus $10,000 a month to stay at Alabama.”
In the early 1990s, while filming Mrs. Doubtfire in San Francisco, Robin Williams made a quiet request.
He asked the crew to hire a few people from a nearby homeless shelter.
No press. No explanation. He didn’t want anyone to know why.
Later, an assistant director revealed that Robin did this on every film. He insisted that at least ten people from shelters be given jobs—catering, cleanup, production help. By the end of his life, nearly 1,500 people had worked because of him.
One man hired on Mrs. Doubtfire said, “He treated me like I’d been there forever. Joked with me every day like we were old friends.”
Robin never talked about it. Others did—after he was gone.
In the late 1980s, after a stand-up show in New York, Robin slipped into a shelter alone. No cameras. He brought pizza, sat on the floor, and listened. One man said later, “He didn’t ask about our mistakes. He asked what made us laugh as kids.”
During Good Will Hunting, he again asked the studio to hire from shelters. One man saved enough to rent an apartment. Robin bought him a suit for job interviews. “Everyone deserves a second act,” he said.
Shelters later discovered large anonymous donations. One Los Angeles shelter only learned the truth when a thank-you letter came back marked “no such address.” A worker recognized the handwriting.
Whoopi Goldberg once said, “He didn’t want applause for helping. He wanted action.”
While filming Patch Adams, Robin visited a shelter in West Virginia carrying boxes of socks, gloves, and coats. When asked why, he smiled and said, “The weather’s turning. Cold doesn’t care if you’re tired.”
Even on tour, he’d walk streets at dawn, handing out coffee and sandwiches. When a guard asked why, Robin replied, “Because this is where people are.”
Robin Williams didn’t perform kindness.
He practiced it—quietly, consistently, without witnesses.
And that may be the greatest role he ever played.
Credit to the rightful owner
🚨 BREAKING: A principal in Pennsylvania just drew a line and didn’t blink.
Students tried to stage an anti ICE walkout during school hours.
Daniel Weber walked straight outside and shut it down.
His message was simple. You want to protest on school time? You’re suspended.
That’s called leadership.
Schools are for learning. Not activist field trips. Not political theater.
Parents send their kids to get an education, not to join street rallies in the middle of the day.
More backbone like this.
Less chaos.
More adults in the room. 🇺🇸