Minnesota student Wyatt Neus, who has Down syndrome, went viral after sinking a deep "Curry range" shot at school. The moment reached Stephen Curry, who surprised Wyatt with a personal video message and an invite to a Golden State Warriors game.
For the full story click the link below https://t.co/o6GyLYgXVi
A group of high schoolers in 1964 go see the Beatles. They didn’t get into the concert but while driving, Ringo pulled up beside them and snapped a photo. No one believed them. 50 years later, Ringo publishes his book of photos and they were in it! The “kids” reenacted the shot!
As you watch Aaron Rai in the PGA Championship, you might notice he uses iron covers for his clubs and wears two gloves — two habits often viewed as golf faux pas. But both are actually inspiring.
Rai grew up in a working-class family in England, where his father sacrificed heavily to support his golf career. When Aaron got an expensive set of irons as a kid, his dad would clean every groove with a pin and baby oil after practice because the clubs meant that much to them. The iron covers became a reminder to appreciate what you have.
And the two gloves? Rai started wearing them as a kid during cold-weather golf in England and eventually became so comfortable with the feel that he never stopped.
Not gimmicks. Just gratitude… and comfort.
For years, Rudy Gobert didn’t get to sit at the NBA cool kids’ table at lunch.
He played on.
Now, matched up anew vs. the league’s greatest active offensive big man, there’s no denying the Timberwolves center’s impact on winning.
Who’s snickering now?
https://t.co/l3Wjx1PjsB
31 players defended 200+ isolations this year. Rudy Gobert ranked #1, allowing 0.77 points per iso. Evan Mobley was 3rd & Bam Adebayo was 5th to give some context for the company he's in. Gobert a more complete, dominant defender now than when he won his 3 DPOY in '18, '19 & '21.
Don’t fret, you didn’t misheard. These athletes have stood out of the herd. Here is your All-NA3HL Third Team. 🚨
#NA3HLAwards
🔗: https://t.co/H3HPpuLQwn
When Ronald Read passed away in 2014, he left behind an $8 million fortune. This surprised everyone who knew him because he was a modest man, having spent much of his career as a gas station attendant.
When Read passed away, the headline in The Wall Street Journal read, “Route to an $8 Million Portfolio Started With Frugal Living.” To be sure, thrift played an important role in building wealth for Mr. Read and others like him. But I don’t think that is the only explanation. In my view, thrift is just the superficial explanation. If we take a closer look, I believe another factor is equally important: Ronald Read was 92. If you save and invest regularly over that many decades, the fact is you don’t need to have a high income to amass a seven-figure net worth.
You can’t control how long you will live, but you should always be aware of the power of time in building wealth. It's never too early to start saving, and no amount is too small.
In 1974, photographer Dan Jury, then 23, removed his 81-year-old great-grandfather Frank Tugend from a nursing home to care for him personally until his death.
He and his brother Mark documented the experience in a raw and intimate photo book called Gramp, published in 1976.
It sold over 100,000 copies and is credited with helping shift public conversation around death, dying, and elder care in America.
In December 2025, former US Senator @BenSasse announced that he had been diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer. That's the primary topic for this @UncKnowledge conversation about mortality, faith, and what truly matters when time is short.
Talking to host @P_M_Robinson, Sasse reflects on "redeeming the time"—holding ambition lightly, loving family more deliberately, and resisting the urge to make politics or professional success the center of life.
The discussion also covers Sasse's thoughts on the failures of Congress; the dangers of a fragmented, attention-starved republic; the crisis of higher education; and the moral challenges of technological abundance.
He speaks candidly and movingly about regret, forgiveness, prayer, and suffering—arguing that while death is a real enemy, it does not get the final word. Watch the full conversation on X:
"Non-Profit" just built a 40-unit affordable housing building in Humboldt Park
Cost: $31.6 million, that's $790K per unit
Their other development? $42.9 million for 64 units, $670K unit
That's 104 units across two buildings for $74.5 million
400 people applied in 72 hours, 90% got turned away, the demand is massive
If the goal is reducing displacement and keeping families in the neighborhood, $74.5 million buys A LOT of existing housing stock in Humboldt Park
Rehab it. Rent it below market. House 3-4x the people
One day we'll look back and see this system was built to reward the wrong people and not the people who needed it the most
Was just watching Brady and Matthew Tkachuk break down the Quinn Hughes trade for the first time on @Wingmenpod and it's really amazing how perfectly accurate they predicted he'd fit in, especially starting around 8:30 mark
https://t.co/naYGVWyzOf