Brady Neal talks about gunning down Ezra Essex, trying to steal second in the bottom of the 10th. Head Coach Rob Vaughn also added that when Neal disappeared into the dugout in the bottom of the eighth inning, Neal had to pop his thumb back into place.
Vaughn: "What makes that even more impressive is just talking about toughness, right? When he disappeared into the back, that thumb was not in place when he disappeared in the back. And he popped that thing back in, in the back, and said, I'm good to go. Like, not only after that he made that big-time throw, then he hits the homer like, man, I can ride with tough dudes like him any day of the week."
Neal: "Throwing guys out is really a pitcher's thing. I should be able at this level to make a throw on the bag. Like that should be across the board, but like that's a team thing, man."
The Bible completely changed for Tim Allen.
He’s been reading the entire Old Testament — in Aramaic, French, Latin, and Greek, page by page. The story that wrecked him the most was the Book of Job. When Job asks God why he’s suffering, God essentially replies: “You weren’t here when I created the world. You don’t understand why the waves stop at the shore or why the stars move… so why are you questioning me?”
It left him humbled and in awe.
In a world obsessed with quick answers, certainty, and self-importance, the Book of Job stands as a profound philosophical reminder of humility. It teaches us that true wisdom begins with acknowledging how little we actually know and how vast the mystery of existence truly is. There’s something deeply honest about the raw exchange between human suffering and divine perspective.
What part of the Bible (or any ancient text) has surprised or moved you the most?
I’ve never been to LA. I’ve never wanted to visit LA. As soon as @spencerpratt gets elected and starts cleaning it up, I’m booking a flight and going to celebrate common sense back in local elections of a major metro area!
Who’s with me?
After Pratt’s first response the camera goes back to the TMZ bros.
The body language of the guy in the green says it all. Arm across stomach guarding the midsection.
Then puts hands in pocket.
He knows he messed up.
Alex Karp says Palantir will "take money out of our pocket" if it helps the US:
"We are highly monogamous in our work."
"The only thing we put above [a customer] is US national security."
"We prioritize US war fighters over everything else."
"When we believe or know that the US war fighter is in danger, we put the whole company against it."