This year we have a real opportunity to prove that there is no such thing as a permanently red state or district.
@JonesForAR is a scientist, devoted to his community, and knows how to build coalitions - just the kind of leader we need in Congress.
I'm proud to be in his corner and looking forward to campaigning with him in Little Rock next week.
https://t.co/3uZZjvLNf8
What keeps people from voting? Why does civic engagement matter? And how do we build communities where every voice feels heard?
Chris Jones joined The Real Underground for a powerful conversation on the importance of voting, why so many people feel disconnected from the process, and what’s at stake when we choose not to participate.
This snippet is just a piece of a much deeper conversation centered around community, accountability, and the power of showing up. 🎙️
Tap in and join the conversation. 🐝
https://t.co/9jTve0YhuD
Reminder that our latest poll shows Chris Jones leading incumbent French Hill by 3 points.
Join our movement to flip the house this November at https://t.co/iwGkcW34jL
#25thAmendmentNow ... or we have become a Godless nation. I can't believe he is posting this insane, egomaniacal, mockery of Christ and that I am compelled to post again and again to ask ALL good people, and REAL CHRISTIANS, when is enough ENOUGH. He is destroying the greatest country in the world, spreading division worldwide, waging unjust wars, killing innocents, blaspheming multiple religions simultaneously, and MOCKING GOD. I mean ... WHAT THE FUCK!
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
So me and my son went to Popeyes and got 3 of the $5 3 piece chicken deals. They of course screwed our order up…. We were supposed to get 3 breast 5 wings and one leg.
Breast are our favorite. They ended up giving us 8 breast a wing and a leg. We done hit the chicken lottery!
@loudibella I met you during “Bad Intentions” prime at the Underground Pub in LR with my best friend and biggest boxing fan I know John, along with my girl Danielle. You were cool as shit to us, hell I’m pretty sure you even bought us a round.
Be well and to hell with the haters!