This is truly horrendous. Curaçao have just scored their first ever World Cup goal and have momentum and then they stop the game for commercials. Absolutely detest this. No place for this nonsense in football.
Nobody wants a city on Mars. Nobody wants AI in every app. Nobody wants a robot butler. Nobody wants data centers everywhere. Nobody wants flying cars or humanoid robots. We want clean water, we want bees to survive, and we want a habitable planet.
Remember when Musk challenged the World Food Program to explain how he could solve world hunger with just $6 billion, they did, and he just completely ignored them?
Daily History Lesson: In 1905, 1000 Koreans migrated to Yucatán to help with the harvest of agave. They stayed and fought during the Mexican Revolution. Then, during the Korean War, 100,000 Mexicans travelled to Korea to fight for the South. We been homies ever since.
I saw a post on Reddit that said that “The underlying purpose of AI is to allow wealth to access skill while removing from the skilled the ability to access wealth.” And I don’t think I’ve ever seen AI described so incisively.
Comme on l'annonçait il y a des mois, les pauses fraîcheur n'ont rien à voir avec la santé des joueurs mais sont là pour placer des pubs au milieu des mi-temps
L'arbitre de Mexique 🇲🇽 - Afrique du Sud 🇿🇦 a par exemple dû faire attendre les joueurs lors de la seconde pause fraîcheur après discussion avec un coordinateur car la Fox, le diffuseur américain, était toujours en coupure publicitaire...
Malgré les délais imposés à l'arbitre et la reprise tardive, la Fox diffusait toujours des annonces publicitaires lorsque le jeu avait recommencé sans que les téléspectateurs ne puissent le voir
In 1966, All African counties boycotted the World Cup to protest apartheid and how black South Africans were marginalized
In 2026, All African countries supported Mexico against South Africa in protest against their xenophobia
Live long enough
we live in age of great moral panics about things that don’t matter and zero moral outrage over some of the most egregious societal sins we’ve ever seen