Here are 5 documentaries you should watch this weekend when you find time:
1. The Mask You Live In
2. Unknown Number: The High School Catfish
3. Cover-Up
4. BLKNWS: Terms & Conditions
5. The Solo Economy: Why Living Alone is a Global Megatrend
Even in a relationship, women appear to be single JUST IN CASE a better man is passing by. There's a reason why she isn't putting Facebook photos of her "boyfriend" being with her. She wants the relationship benefits without the relationship commitments.
The European mind can’t comprehend The retractable grass field
Brother, this is an NFL stadium in Las Vegas.
The grass field lives OUTSIDE.
When it's game day, the entire field rolls into the stadium on a giant tray.
The grass field weighs around 19 million pounds and sits on a giant movable tray. Before Raiders games, the entire field is rolled into the stadium. After the game, it gets rolled back outside so the grass can receive actual sunlight.
Which is objectively insane.
The field travels about 600 feet between its outdoor position and the stadium. It takes roughly 90 minutes to move.
Nobody thought:
"Maybe we should use artificial turf."
No.
America looked at a 9-acre field and said:
"What if we made it mobile?"
We're the same country that built Hoover Dam, put a man on the Moon, races Oscar Meyer Weinermobiles and deep fries Oreos at state fairs.
Subtlety has never been our thing.
🇺🇸
If you are very good at taking quality photos with your smartphone, this update is for you.
Go to Shutterstock, Adobe Stock, or Getty Images on your Chrome browser and create a free contributor account. It costs nothing.
Then start taking high quality photos of anything and everything around you. The sky. Beautiful places. Trees. Markets. Cars in motion. People walking. Celebrations. Landscapes. Those clean, aesthetic shots that people use for designs, wallpapers, and creative projects.
Upload them. Every time someone downloads your photo, you earn a royalty. You do not have to be present. You do not have to do anything extra. The photo earns for you while you sleep.
Photographers with large portfolios earn between $200 (about 300k Naira) and $2,000 (about 3 million Naira) every month from stock photography alone.
You are already taking photos for fun. You might as well get paid for it.
Do not sleep on this.
Above all, love God.
Camavinga and Foden are going to miss out of the World Cup for the same reason, being too useful everywhere without completely owning one position in the team. Versatility is their curse.
With Phil Foden, every coach looks at him and thinks, “he can play left wing, right wing, as a 10, false 9, interior midfielder…” but then when it’s time to build a knockout tournament XI, specialists usually win. If you already have a natural creator, a natural winger, and a natural runner, the versatile guy becomes the tactical glue piece instead of the irreplaceable centerpiece.
Same thing with Eduardo Camavinga. He can play as a 6, 8, left-back, hybrid midfielder, even emergency wide roles. But for France, when you compare him directly to pure specialists, Deschamps starts asking difficult questions:
Is he a better controller than Tchouaméni?
Better destroyer than Kanté?
Better attacking midfielder than Griezmann-type profiles?
Better actual left-back than Theo Hernandez?
And suddenly versatility becomes a trap instead of an advantage.
The irony is both players are elite in fluid systems at club level. But this season, they have suffered from the same problem. Football at Club level rewards multifunctional players because you train together every day. International football is different. Tournament football is brutal and simplified. Coaches want certainty, role clarity, chemistry and defined tactical jobs not someone that can plug in every role.
That’s why you hear managers say things like “we’re not sure of his best position” about Foden. It sounds ridiculous because the talent is obvious, but tactically it matters a lot.
Both players also suffer from expectation inflation. Because they’re technically gifted, people imagine them becoming dominant “franchise” players. But sometimes they end up becoming luxury connectors instead of system-defining stars. Still world class talents, just not players a national team automatically bends around.
And honestly, there’s another uncomfortable truth, specialists age better in international football or even at club level. If you’re clearly “the best RW” or “the best DM,” coaches force you in. But if you’re a hybrid profile, one bad season or slight dip in form makes you look expendable because the manager convinces himself he can recreate your functions collectively.
That’s the major problem with both of them, specialist have gone ahead of them to the World Cup. That’s the issue with both of them.
Oh mate, the English tabloids aren’t just going to crucify Tuchel, they’re going to invent an entirely new dialect of pure, weaponized venom.
Picture this: The morning after England get absolutely rinsed 4-1 by some plucky nation that still uses horse drawn carts, The Sun’s front page won’t say “Disaster.” It’ll scream:
“TUCHELLED: England manager becomes first man in history to be simultaneously ‘Kloppcrushed,’ ‘Flicked into oblivion,’ and ‘Hansi’d like a cheap German sausage.’”
Daily Mail will coin “Tuchelwankery” defined as the act of overthinking yourself into sporting oblivion while looking mysteriously handsome in a puffer jacket.
The Telegraph will go full Shakespeare: “A Teutonic Tempest in a Three Lions Teacup.” And Piers Morgan will just repeatedly scream “BETRAYAL BY SAUSAGE” until his veins pop.
By day three they’ll have created the verb “to Tuchel” meaning to arrive with tactical genius, tactical graphs, and tactical brooding, only for your team to defend like they’ve just discovered legs for the first time.
The English media won’t just be angry. They’ll achieve linguistic transcendence. New words will be born in the fires of their humiliation. And somewhere, deep in a Berlin flat, Tuchel will sip his espresso, raise one eyebrow, and whisper: “Ach… they finally understand art.”
There are places we pass through in life… and there are places that become part of who we are.
Manchester will forever be my home.
To the city, the club, and every supporter, my sincerest thank you. These past four years have been unforgettable, filled with moments my family and I will carry with us for the rest of our lives. There simply aren’t enough words to describe the happiness and warmth we’ve felt here.
Thank you for every cheer, every memory, and for making us feel at home from the very first day.
Forever a Red Devil ❤️
Airlines don't know who you are and they don't care. The "clear your cookies" hack is one of the most persistent myths in travel, and the real reason prices change is way more interesting.
A single economy cabin has 7 to 12 invisible fare classes, each assigned a letter. Q-class might have 40 seats at $250. When those 40 sell, the system closes Q and opens H-class at $350. When H sells out, M-class opens at $475. The price jumps you see aren't the airline punishing you for searching twice. They're inventory depletion in cheaper buckets happening in real time as other people book.
A major US carrier with 500 daily flights manages roughly 2.5 million booking limits at any given moment. The yield management system optimizes over a hundred fare bucket combinations per route, updated continuously based on booking velocity, competitor pricing, seasonal demand, and days until departure. Your browser cookies are not a variable in that equation. Your individual search history has the same effect on the algorithm as yelling at a vending machine.
The price went up between your first search and your second search because someone in Dallas bought the last seat in the cheap bucket while you were debating. That person would have bought it whether you were on a library computer, your phone, or a 1997 ThinkPad running Netscape Navigator.
The real hack for cheaper flights is boring. Book 6 to 10 weeks out for domestic, 8 to 12 weeks for international. Fly midweek. Set fare alerts and wait for the airline to reopen a cheaper bucket when demand underperforms their forecast. That actually works. Clearing your cookies saves you exactly zero dollars.