@NYCWal1Crawler@selinasbrekker Funnily enough brosnan always comes to mind for me because those were the first ones I saw when I was a child 🤣🤣
Connery though it will be hard to ever beat
New The Wolf Among Us 2 Details from someone who played a demo of the game:
- It is a Telltale Game through and through
- A lot of the team are old Telltale folks that worked on the old game
- Expanding on exploration sections as Bigby with full 360 control
- More Interactive Gameplay with Finding Clues & Puzzle Solving
- Has a button that will give you hints if you are stuck
- Bigby works with Faye who has reached out to him to help him catch a serial killer who committed gruesome murders
- More interactions between Fables & Humans
- Direct sequel set 6 months after the first game
- All OG voice cast is returning from the first game ex (Bigby, Snow White, Colin, Bluebeard)
- Jared Emerson-Johnson returns to do the score
I did not know about this...
I am not hige into tennis but I do watch and just thought this guy has been a good competitor over the years and it was nice to see him pick up a title.
However this certainly changes my thoughts.
Lot of Zverev discourse today.
As someone who stands strongly in the anti-Zverev camp, I’d like to better articulate my thoughts.
1) Alexander Zverev is very likely a domestic abuser. The odds are, in my opinion, at least 80% (2 women, timelines/stories corroborated by others, reported photos/messages, etc).
2) There is a non-zero chance the allegations are false/made up. No charge against him has ever been proven, and the ATP’s investigation couldn’t substantiate the claims.
3) Given 2), it is not possible/fair for him to be removed from the tour.
4) This situation is objectively horrible for tennis, and there is no easy way to deal with it; taking action isn’t feasible but not taking action means lots of people will be, justifiably, furious.
5) Stuff like this is worse for tennis vs team sports because bad actors can more easily be hidden if there are 10 others on the field; in tennis there’s only one.
6) All of this is complicated further by the fact that Zverev is really good, and seemingly destined to be a fixture at the top of the game for years to come (despite being a lifelong underachiever). Also because there are parts of his story––diabetes, injury recovery, constantly coming so close and finally crossing the line––that are very inspirational.
If I knew there was an 80% chance someone punched and strangled their girlfriend, I wouldn’t send them to jail, because that is not beyond a reasonable doubt.
I would not, however, want them to be the face of a sport, or see them idolized and held up as examples for young people and fans.
For all those saying there wasn’t enough proof to convict and therefore the sport shouldn’t address it, or that we should separate one’s actions on and off the court: sure, but that strategy is bad for the long-term health of this sport. I’ve spoken to ~a dozen people this week (men and women, mostly women) who aren’t big tennis fans but are aware of the allegations and either stopped watching or expressed displeasure towards the tour because of them.
I love tennis, and want to be able to enjoy it knowing that, even if my guy loses, the other guy kinda deserves it—or at least that I don’t *actually* hate him. As a big Alcaraz fan, it stinks when Sinner beats him, but it doesn’t ruin me: Sinner is a decent guy, a good role model.
Zverev very likely isn't, and it sucks that someone who is almost certainly a horrible person has now cemented himself in tennis history.
In summary: Alexander Zverev won a grand slam, and everything is worse now.
@SwitchUpG@PaneerDevourer I think when fighting sometimes it feels like you're fighting the camera more than the opponent.
Same for shooting it's very tricky