@glenn_tunes That’s because you’re complete idiots in Europe. You’ve let Islamic Nazis take over your countries, but are too afraid to do anything about it. You’ve completely bankrupted yourselves and your descendants for generations to come, and still think you’re in the right!
🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
Hey!!
@habsbuzztap
SHOOT THE FUKN PUCK!!!!
You should be completely embarrassed with only 13 shots in 60 FUKN MINUTES!!
You’re in the conference final for gods sake!!!
#nhlplayoffs
Comprehensive list of grounded anomalies in Artemis II launch & early mission coverage (April 1, 2026) that sparked widespread public reactions:
• No internal cabin video or photos of the four crew members (Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, Jeremy Hansen) during liftoff, high-G ascent, or immediate post-launch transition.
• No continuous fixed “looking-back” external camera feed showing Earth visibly receding, shrinking, and curving in real time from the spacecraft.
• Multiple black screens, total feed cutouts, or freezes in the official NASA livestream (including blackouts in the first 10 seconds and during key ascent moments; mirrored on CNN/BBC feeds).
• Broadcast entirely missed the exact moment of liftoff (cut to black, crowd shots, or mis-timed engine close-ups instead of the rocket leaving the pad).
• Missed booster separation and stage events (switched to unrelated crowd/ground shots rather than showing the actual separation).
• Countdown timer repeatedly disappeared or showed incorrect times during ascent with no on-air explanation.
• Extremely limited, low-quality, jerky, or “Blair Witch”-style shaky onboard camera feeds (described as “super broken” or low-res, resembling outdated 2007-era streams).
• Heavy reliance on CGI visualizations, rendered simulations, shaky amateur ground telescopes, or composite/edited footage instead of raw, continuous, high-resolution multi-angle live feeds from inside Orion.
• On-air anchors and commentators directly questioned the source, mounting, or nature of certain footage segments, with NASA personnel explaining portions as CGI or simulated.
• Brief communication dropouts and glitches reported post-launch (e.g., momentary comms issues during satellite handovers, with partial loss of contact).
• Pre-launch technical troubleshooting (FTS glitch, battery temperature spike in Launch Abort System) declared “NO-GO” shortly before window, followed by on-air explanations that raised questions about overall readiness and transparency.
• Overall poor production quality: jerky camera tracking, bad fixed angles, random cuts to unrelated shots, and repeated failure to capture expected key visual moments for a historic crewed mission.
These are the specific, observable presentation gaps and technical oddities repeatedly highlighted in high-engagement discussions as “why isn’t the straightforward, obvious verification footage being shown live and unedited?” They create skepticism precisely because they contrast with public expectations for verifiable, high-fidelity coverage of a crewed deep-space mission.
@MarkJCarney You dumbshit!! The carbon tax increase, just wiped out any wage increase minimum wage earners might have seen!!
How the hell were you ever a banker???
@MegynKellyShow@megynkelly Love your show Megyn, but as a Canadian, yes the USA won the gold, but they were SEVERELY outplayed by the Canadian team, and the USA goalie won that medal for them! Huge congrats to the team, but you may wanna savour this win, it might be another 40 YEARS before your next one.
@RWApodcast@barnes_law Keeping Russians out of the olympics, while allowing Ukrainians, is absolutely shameful!!
Ukraine started the war by killing their own citizens!!
It takes 2 to fight a war.
@smcroasters USA wouldn’t even make a medal round if it were really best on best at these Olympic Games.
By not allowing Russia in the games, it’s not really best on best.
Jordan Binnington will be the reason the Canadian men’s hockey will possibly get a bronze medal instead of a gold one!!
#Olympics2026#TeamCanada#OlympicsHockey