It really isn’t that hard you guys 😂
With the 1/3 and the £12 he has spend half of his money.
So we know 1/3 + £12 = 1/2 his money. Therefore £12 = 1/6 of his money (cause 1/2 - 1/3 = 1/6).
1/3 = 2/6 so to know how much 1/3 of his money is, we must multiply £12 with 2.
2*£12=£24
No it’s so funny cause what do you mean Gaga made one of the best Untucked moments happen while also accidentally ruining all future seasons Untucked episodes
Shout out to Vivacious. She broke the whole “ coming back to Drag Race after it’s been 10+ season since your original season narrative/edit”. She did so well in all her episodes. She was ready for this competition.
dare I say Vivacious had the BEST makeover of the night? 😭 like yes it's simple BUT— it's SO well branded, and both Vivacious and her makeover partner absolutely ATE that walk. #DragRace#AllStars11
The critique or challenge „I wanna see if she can do pretty“ really infuriates me. It is not on the „alternative“ queens to prove that they can do other type of drag, when that is not expected of other types of queens. #dragrace#allstars11
After Avatar Aang ended the 100 years war due to Roku negligence, he created Republic City so all nations could live together, but here is what he didn’t realize, His good intentions became a problem for Korra:
— The rise of inequality in Republic City
Aang helped create Republic City so all nations could live together peacefully. But over time, non-benders began feeling oppressed by powerful benders, gangs, and political elites. That imbalance eventually fueled Amon and the Equalist movement in Book 1.
—The bloodbending crisis
Aang spared Yakone instead of fully eliminating the threat. Yakone later raised his sons, Amon and Tarrlok, in abuse and revenge, creating one of Korra’s biggest enemies.
—An overly centralized world order
After the Hundred Year War, Aang’s era focused heavily on stability and peace through institutions like Republic City and international cooperation. But that system became rigid and politically weak. By Korra’s time, corruption, class divides, and power struggles had built up beneath the surface.
—The Southern Water Tribe’s dependence
During Aang’s lifetime, the South became more connected to the modern world and somewhat dependent on Northern support and influence. That tension later exploded in the civil conflict manipulated by Unalaq.
—The spiritual disconnect of the modern age
Even though Aang deeply respected spirituality, the world became increasingly industrialized after his era. By Korra’s time, many people were disconnected from spirits and tradition, contributing to the chaos surrounding the Spirit World in Book 2.
—The imbalance caused by removing the Fire Nation threat
Aang succeeded in ending Fire Lord Ozai’s tyranny, but peace created a new kind of problem: rapid technological growth, nationalism, and ideological extremism. Instead of one obvious evil empire, Korra faced many smaller, more complex threats:
-Equality extremism (Amon)
-Spiritual extremism (Unalaq)
-Anarchism (Zaheer)
-Authoritarian nationalism (Kuvira)
That’s part of the theme of the Avatar cycle:
Each Avatar fixes the crisis of their own age, but the solution changes the world in ways the next Avatar has to deal with.
END 📌