🧵 Their backstory is pure defiance:
In 2014, three 14-year-old Muslim girls from a tiny conservative village in Garut, Indonesia—Marsya (vocals/guitar), Widi (bass), Euis (drums)—discovered System of a Down on a school computer.
Their teacher encouraged them to form a band as a positive outlet. They named it Voice of Baceprot (“noisy” in Sundanese) and started jamming metal.
But the backlash was brutal: labeled “devil’s music,” they faced stones thrown at them, death threats, smashed windows, even cars trying to run them over. Power cut during gigs. All because hijab-wearing girls dared to play heavy metal in a place where it was seen as haram.
They responded with songs like “God, Allow Me (Please) to Play Music” and “School Revolution”—calling out hypocrisy and rigid norms.
Fast-forward: Debut album Retas (2023), viral covers, first Indonesian band at Glastonbury, endorsements from Flea & Tom Morello… and now their explosive 2025 EP TRANSISI + slot at Copenhell 2026.
From hated “noise” to global icons proving metal has no borders. 🤘🖤
#VoiceOfBaceprot
Secretária de imprensa da Casa Branca Karoline Leavitt encerrou abruptamente a coletiva de imprensa da Casa Branca segundos antes de completar 65 minutos.
Na plataforma Kalshi, havia um mercado apostando se a briefing duraria mais de 65 minutos. Minutos antes do fim, as odds davam 98% de chance para “sim”, tornando a aposta no “não” muito barata.
Quando ela parou exatamente antes da marca, quem apostou no “não” lucrou cerca de 50x em segundos.
Suspeitas de insider trading surgiram porque Leavitt olhou para cima (possivelmente para um relógio ou sinal) antes de cortar.
Nas redes, muitos acreditam que alguém da equipe ou próxima à Casa Branca apostou no “não” nos momentos finais, usando informação privilegiada.
Scientists identified ribose (used in RNA) and – for the first time in any extraterrestrial sample – glucose, a major energy source for life. These sugars join nucleobases and phosphates previously found, demonstrating the full suite of RNA building blocks were present on the ancient asteroid.
BREAKING: Sugars essential for life have been found in pristine asteroid Bennu samples collected by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft. Combined with previous detections of amino acids and nucleobases, we see that life’s ingredients were widespread throughout the solar system: https://t.co/Tb3HpwZG9J
More on the study led by Yoshihiro Furukawa of @TohokuUniPR⤵️