Your wallet shouldn’t be a pain in the back.
We’ve normalized sitting on bulky wallets, even though they wreck our posture and literally cause "Fat Wallet Syndrome" (yes, wallet-induced nerve pain is real).
Introducing the Frido Wallet. Ultra-slim, surprisingly spacious, and designed to carry cards, cash, coins, keys, receipts, and an AirTag without the bulk.
Comfort-first. Front-pocket friendly. Elegant. Functional. Just the way a wallet should be. Link below 👇
Long time no giveaway! So here we go.
We’re planning to gift Frido Wallet to 5 people(3 above 1000 followers and 2 below 1000) who will have to post a fair and honest review clearly mentioning as a paid partnership.
Comment below if interested 👇
We will give a preference to those who comment and retweet. Let’s go 🚀🚀
This was probably the most expensive package ever sold costing over 1.2M Bonvoy Miles!
and now, a part of it can be yours!
A luggage tag, a cap, a bucket hat and a polo from India's World Cup Winning campaign in 2026 is now up for grabs! ICC x Marriott Bonvoy co branded.
Simply RT to participate.
Labor Day is around the corner. We’re giving away ONE Osmo Pocket 4! 🎁
Ready to level up your travel content? Enter now!
How to enter:
Follow @djipowerglobal
Like, comment, and repost
Ends May 14
Winner announced May 15 (EST)
Open worldwide
Fingers crossed!
Did you take an L on the Virgil Abloh Archive x Air Jordan 1? 🤔
We’ve linked with The Better Generation to give a few of you the chance to win a pair at retail price! 👀🔥
TWO STEPS TO ENTER:
- Follow @TBGeneration
- Quote tweet with your US size
Winners announced 5/4 🗓️
Rafael Nadal was diagnosed with Müller-Weiss syndrome at 19 years old. The navicular bone in his left foot was collapsing. There is no cure. The condition is degenerative. It only gets worse.
The navicular is the keystone of the human foot. It catches the head of the talus and connects to the first three toes. It absorbs the majority of load when you change direction. In tennis, players change direction hundreds of times per match. On clay, where the surface forces you to slide into every shot, the stress on that bone multiplies.
His sport demands exactly the one thing his body could no longer do without pain.
He won 22 Grand Slams after the diagnosis. Fourteen of them at Roland Garros, the clay court tournament that punished his foot the hardest. His record there: 112 wins, 4 losses. A 97% win rate across 23 years at the single venue that required the most from the bone that was failing him.
For context, the other Grand Slam dominance records: Djokovic at the Australian Open has a 91% win rate. Federer at Wimbledon had 88%. Nadal's 97% at Roland Garros isn't just the best in tennis. There may not be a comparable number in any individual sport at any single venue, ever.
He once told reporters he doesn't remember what the feeling of playing without pain is. The condition is most common in women aged 40 to 60. He got it at 19 and kept winning for 19 more years.
The Rafa documentary drops May 29. During the French Open. The tournament he won 14 times will be happening without him while 300 million subscribers watch what it actually cost him to own it. He turns 40 on June 3.
Netflix timed this so the stadium that was his is full of players trying to fill a void that 97% says might be permanent.