In May 1992, Michael Jackson starred in his FINAL commercial for Pepsi during their historic partnership.
In the campaign, Michael was seen singing “I’ll Be There” at the piano in an emotional duet with his younger self. The song, originally released by The Jackson 5 in 1970, received a softer and more nostalgic interpretation especially for the commercial.
The ad was part of the Dangerous era and showcased a more sensitive and emotional side of the King of Pop, touching fans all around the world.
43 years ago, Michael Jackson stepped onto the stage in that fedora and gave the world the moonwalk for the very first time 🕺✨
A legendary Billie Jean performance that still feels untouchable today 🔥🔥
A very special delivery for David Attenborough, beloved by people (and animals) everywhere 💚
To honour Sir David’s 100th birthday, His Majesty The King is supported by a cast of stars from British nature to relay his handwritten message in time for the celebration at the Royal Albert Hall.
Watch David Attenborough’s 100 Years on Planet Earth on @BBCiPlayer.
https://t.co/yZojhLlUXp
We will never see anything like this again in our lifetimes.
If you have a few minutes, watch it. Probably the greatest music video ever made.
Michael Jackson - Thriller (1983)
ARGUMENT BREAKS OUT ON #IMACELEB LIVE SHOW‼️
Jimmy Bullard and David Haye accuse ITV of poor editing and call out Ant & Dec for taking Adam Thomas's side with Jimmy quitting the show
Grown Adults
Absolutely mental
Still amazes me that so many people don't know that Ireland has its own language, aside from English. This is probably one of the single greatest clips of our beautiful native tongue being used.
Some days you can’t love social media enough. This is one of those days. It began like this. Someone stole 12 tons of KitKats.
And then the replies started coming in. Scroll down.
The Notes app on your iPhone is one of the most powerful tools available.
But 99% of people don’t know its true potential.
Here are 15 amazing features you must know:
My name as Gaeilge is Aoife Ní Fhoghlú.
In Irish, surnames change depending on gender, Ó Foghlú (descendant of) becomes Ní Fhoghlú for a woman, and the séimhiú softens the “F” to “Fh” (which is silent). That’s why it’s pronounced more like Nee Oh-loo.
As Translations by Brian Friel shows Irish names often have differently spelt versions because of anglicisation and translation over time.
Irish originally used an 18-letter alphabet (A B C D E F G H I L M N O P R S T U) and didn’t include letters like “z” because those sounds weren’t needed. Instead of adding new letters, Irish changes sounds using a feature called a séimhiú (pronounced shay-voo), which softens a consonant. Long ago, this was shown with a dot above the letter (like ḃ, ċ, ḋ), but when printing became more common, it was replaced with an “h” after the letter (bh, ch, dh), which is what we still use today.
Hiberno-English speakers and Irish people will know there’s no “z” in the Irish (Gaeilge) alphabet, so when we’re calling out a phone number (or any numbers, really), we tend to say “oh” for zero. It’s a thing 👇🤭☘️
The typeset of the letters is or was also different. 🫶🏻🐐👇
This millennial would like Gen X to sit down. Does he understand what would happen to the world if we decided to do that??
Take a listen to this response.
It is perfection! 👌🏼
Andrew Lloyd Webber shared the most lovely congratulatory message for Jessie Buckley following her first Oscar win 💖 The composer and musical theatre legend, 77, reminisced on his time getting to know her and her incredible talent on the 2008 BBC reality competition series 'I'd Do Anything', remembering how blown away he was by her powerhouse vocals. "If by any chance beautiful, lovely Jessie ever gets to see this, well done darling."
📸 : #AndrewLloydWebber, BBC
#Oscars
Liza Minnelli e Jessie Buckley cantando “Maybe This Time”, de Cabaret.
No vídeo de 2008, Liza diz “você é uma vencedora” para a Melhor Atriz do Oscar 2026.
Attention travelling Scotland rugby fans! 🏉
Help can be purchased in Boots in T2 on your way home. Just ask for “Sudacrem”.
That’s “Suda” as in “shoulda woulda coulda” and “crem” as in “couldnae beat them”.
Safe travels home - See you in 2028! 🏴
Leonardo DiCaprio’s #Oscar acceptance speech for Best Actor has 59 million views on Youtube for a reason: it sounded like Leo was waiting 25 years to give this speech. He is beyond eloquent. These are the sort of moments that make the Academy Awards special. What a moment.