For anyone experiencing DUBBING in #StreetFoodLatinAmerica, #StreetFoodAsia or #ChefsTable on @netflix that would prefer SUBTITLES and ORIGINAL AUDIO, you can change your audio settings in Netflix to get subs + native language. That's how we make and edit the shows! Thank you!!!
One thing about Jon Scheyer is that each time he has lost Heatbreaker in back-to-back years, he rolls up his sleeves without sulking, re-flexes, reloads, and goes after it again.
The more I read about this Duke deal with Amazon, the more I think it’s a huge deal. Duke isn’t only playing the games on Amazon, Amazon is also committing to doing NIL with Duke players
And the games will air globally, which is huge. This is innovative thinking we have to have
BREAKING: Duke is entering into a first-of-its-kind partnership with Amazon that includes exclusive rights to three games next season:
Nov. 25: vs. UConn in Las Vegas
Dec. 21: vs. Michigan at MSG
Feb. 20: vs. Gonzaga in Detroit
Details with @PeteThamel:
https://t.co/flVOGBojVU
Ironically, most penguins don't know that today is World Penguin Day and think it's just a regular Saturday. The reason, of course, is that they refused to adopt the new Gregorian calendar in 1582, and still adhere to the old Julian one, for tax purposes.
In addition to legitimately being the funniest thing I've ever seen, the John Mulaney/Langston Kerman 'Bubbles Jackson' segment is kinda the definitive cultural document on post-LEAVING NEVERLAND Michael Jackson discourse.
Last weekend — for the first time in the puzzle’s 84-year history — ‘The New York Times Magazine’ printed an unsolvable crossword. Clues didn’t align with their corresponding answers or were missing altogether. The grid was correct online, but for print-magazine solvers, the damage to their weekends, and esteem, had already been done.
Some solvers who complete the Sunday puzzle in the print magazine (often with pen) complained on crossword forums and social media, saying they were “nearly in tears,” some with fears of “sudden onset dementia” or, worse yet, ineptitude.
When Mike McFadden, in New Jersey, couldn’t crack it, he thought, “something was wrong with me. I didn’t think that they would have an error.” It nagged at him all day. For others, the error triggered an existential crisis. “We trust that it’s always going to be something that at least somebody can figure out,” Irene Papoulis, a former writing instructor at Trinity College, said. “The world is making less and less sense. So it’s like, ‘The crossword puzzle? Not you, too!’”
Several people said they felt robbed of a sacred morning routine. “Maybe I’m overreacting,” McFadden said. “But it ruined the best hour of my week.”
Maggie Duffy reports on the crisis in the crossword community after an erroneous grid was published in the ‘Times’: https://t.co/Ax9hC2By6m
ppl w adhd do shit like procrastinate for 3 months straight & then in one 24-hr day knock out 3 months of tasks. you either know this life or you don’t lol.