Total clutch points scored in the Playoffs since 2023:
144 - JALEN BRUNSON
84 - Shai Gilgeous-Alexander
69 - Nikola Jokić
65 - Jayson Tatum
@jalenbrunson1 and New York have a 1-0 series lead in the NBA Finals!
SHAKUR WOULDN'T BE DENIED 😤
Highlights from Shakur Stevenson's dominant decision victory over Teofimo Lopez 👏
The Ring VI | Buy now at https://t.co/AxmwuHu4GB 🥊
I won't let people rewrite history about Kobe.
When LeBron and Kobe had equal teammates, Kobe stepped up and led his team to a win. LeBron shrunk, switched off Kobe, asked Prince to guard him on the last shot, then proceeded to not even hit the rim on his final shot.
Kobe was being instantly doubled in a game with the best players in the world- only Kobe was getting instant doubles.
Let that sink in.
Mamba was one of one. That's why Coach K recruited him- Bron wasn't good enough to lead Team USA to gold. They had to go get Kobe to do that. 👊
The Neighborhood Nip Foundation held their first toy giveaway “Christmas on Slauson,” gifting over 7,000 toys & 650 bikes to more than 1,000 families ahead of this year’s Christmas holiday.
“The highest human act is to inspire…”
-Nipsey Hussle
Ever get that shrug and "Fine" when you ask your kid "How was school today?" You're not alone—it's basically the universal parent struggle.
But psychologist Amy Morin (author of "13 Things Mentally Strong Parents Don't Do") shares 7 way better questions that actually get kids talking. More importantly, they quietly build habits like gratitude, empathy, resilience, and curiosity—without turning it into a lecture.
Here are a few standouts:
• "What was the best part of your day?" – Trains their brain to spot positives and boosts optimism.
• "What mistake did you learn from today?" – Normalizes failure and turns it into a growth lesson.
• "Who were you proud of today?" – Shifts focus to seeing good in others, growing empathy.
• "Who did you help today?" – Makes kindness feel natural and rewarding.
• "What was the most interesting thing you learned?" – Fuels genuine curiosity beyond grades.
• "What's one thing you could have made better today?" – Encourages self-reflection and problem-solving.
• "What's something new you want to try?" – Sparks courage and creativity.
The magic? These aren't interrogations—they're invitations into your child's world. Over time, kids open up more, think deeper, and feel truly seen.
I've seen parents try these and say the dinner table chats get richer, the eye rolls fewer. Small shift, big connection.
Which one's hitting home for you? Drop it in the replies—I'd love to hear how it goes when you try it.
Full breakdown in the 2:25 video below (trust me, it's gold).