Arsenal Title Celebrations:
Arsenal fans converge to celebrate EPL title
Celebrations in major towns around the country
It is Arsenal's first league title in 22 years
#CitizenSundayLive
🚨 DAVID LETTERMAN PANICS AS BILLIE EILISH SUFFERS A TOURETTE’S TIC ATTACK ON CAMERA
What starts as a normal interview flips in seconds, after Letterman notices Billie physically ticcing and he asks, “What’s going on, is there a fly?”
• Billie pauses mid-sentence: “I’m ticcing… I’m sorry”
• Letterman visibly thrown off, scrambling to understand what’s happening
• Admits he thought he said something wrong
• Billie explains people often laugh… thinking it’s a joke
• She reveals how misunderstood Tourette’s actually is in real life
The energy shifts instantly.
He’s trying to recover.
She’s calmly explaining it.
He realizes he has no idea how to respond.
Did he handle it like a veteran… or did it completely catch him off guard?
📹: My Next Guest Needs No Introduction with David Letterman / Netflix
I missed my flight in Nairobi once because of traffic on Mombasa Road.
Like fully missed it. I got to the airport sweaty, exhausted, dragging my suitcase like it personally betrayed me.
I already knew there was no chance, but I still ran to the counter hoping for mercy.
The woman checked her screen, looked at me, then said, “You were the last passenger.”
I laughed a little because what else do you do at that point?
Then she lowered her voice and said, “The plane is still on the ground.”
Next thing I know this airport employee is SPEED WALKING me through the terminal like we’re in an action movie.
Security waved me through, another worker grabbed my carry-on to help me run, and I’m apologizing to literally everyone while fighting for my life.
I got to the gate completely out of breath.
The guy scanning boarding passes looked at me and said, “Eh, Nairobi traffic. We understand.”
People on the plane actually clapped when I walked in looking half dead.
I have never respected airport workers more in my life. Big up to them.
@KenyanSays How 'Ozempic neck' took over the red carpet as fat jab stars' sagging skin shows brutal side effect of 'miracle' drug https://t.co/hI0xilaJP8
There's a whole industry built around African poverty. NGOs, consultants, conferences, awareness campaigns, celebrity endorsements.
Billions of dollars flow through this system every year, employing thousands of well-paid Westerners.
None of those people have an incentive for the problem to actually be solved, because if African poverty disappeared tomorrow, they'd all need new jobs.
I'm not saying they're evil.
I'm saying the incentive structure is broken, and incentives shape behavior more than intentions do.
The Japanese Samurai had a rule: never make a decision before you can answer this one question.
In feudal Japan, elite samurai were trained never to act until they could honestly answer one question their masters repeated for decades: "If I die tomorrow, does this choice still matter?"
It wasn't philosophy. It was a mental filter designed to cut through fear, ego, and short-term emotion in seconds.
Most modern decisions are made under invisible pressure: deadlines, social approval, FOMO. The result is a life built on reactions instead of clarity.
When you start applying the samurai question daily, something shifts. Small irritations lose power. Big risks become obvious. You stop chasing things that won't matter next year.
The samurai understood that true strength isn't speed. It's the ability to see clearly when everyone else is rushing.
NOW: King Charles gets a laugh at the White House State Dinner.
"I cannot help noticing the readjustments to the East Wing, Mr. President, following your visit to Windsor Castle last year."
"And I'm sorry to say that we British, of course, made our own small attempt at real estate redevelopment of the White House in 1814."