Marlon Wayans was CONFUSED when a news host started FREAKING OUT live on TV after he put his feet on the counter to show off his pedicure and revealed she has a fear of feet 🤣🦶👀
2028 6”0 Mekhi Young @Mekhi_Young0 showing out early here in @RealTWoodB_ball second game. Quick trigger guard super shifty with the ball. Rebounds well out of the guard position.
2028 6”0 Lester Watson turning up here in the second game. Such a fun guard to watch go about his business scoring in a variety of ways. Big year loading in South Holland for the junior guard. @RealTWoodB_ball
2027 6”3 Jordan Johnson @JJohnson_2027 with another nice game for @RealTWoodB_ball. Has had a nice offseason. Using his strong frame well to belly into the lane. Smooth stroke from outside.
Lisa Hardy, an Indianapolis woman who famously lived in an abandoned, company-owned house for nine years without paying rent after her employer went to prison for mortgage fraud and the real estate company collapsed.
Her remarkable situation unfolded through a specific set of circumstances:
In 2005, she was working as a leasing agent for a property management company that offered her the perk of living in one of their properties rent-free as long as she remained employed.
Her boss was sent to prison, and the company went under, leaving her without a landlord or anyone to pay rent to.
The "Forgotten" Years: Because the local city government was overwhelmed with thousands of foreclosed homes during the housing market crash, Hardy's house slipped through the cracks of the system. No bank, landlord, or government official ever came to claim the property or demand rent.
The Outcome: She stayed for nine years, treating it as her own by paying utilities, tending the garden, and installing appliances, until the house was eventually auctioned off to an investment firm.