RandyStrait-Hennessy
31.8K posts

RandyStrait-Hennessy
@RandyDStrait
Lived in Key Largo most of my life. Love the tropical life. Love to workout and eat healthy. Always looking for new friends so drop me a tweet.
Key Largo, Florida Beigetreten Ağustos 2009
1.7K Folgt473 Follower

@KhanSaba1278 Fake post. This guy is one of thousands in the burbs that do yard work shirtless. No one gets hurt physically or mentally. Again Fake Post. Do not send me a community note either.
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Jamie Lee Curtis and Mariska Hargitay for Variety's #ActorsOnActors
variety.com/2026/tv/news/j…

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On May 21, 2026, The Late Show with Stephen Colbert broadcast its final episode, bringing down the curtain on one of the most celebrated chapters in American late-night television history.
Stephen Tyrone Colbert, born May 13, 1964, in Washington D.C. and raised in Charleston, South Carolina, had first risen to national prominence as a correspondent on Comedy Central's The Daily Show under mentor Jon Stewart in the late 1990s, before launching his beloved satirical program The Colbert Report, which ran from 2005 to 2014, and then stepping into the iconic Late Show chair in September 2015, succeeding David Letterman, who had launched the franchise in August 1993.
Throughout his ten-year tenure, Colbert welcomed an extraordinary range of guests to that storied Broadway stage, from sitting presidents and world leaders to the greatest names in music, film, and literature, building a program that balanced sharp political wit with genuine warmth and intellectual curiosity in a way that felt wholly unique in the landscape of American television. Under his leadership, The Late Show remained the top-rated late-night program for nine consecutive seasons.
CBS canceled the show in July 2025, calling it purely a financial decision against a challenging backdrop in late night. The announcement landed like a sh*ck. Colbert told his audience directly: ""It's not just the end of our show. It's the end of The Late Show on CBS. I'm not being replaced. This is all just going away.""
CBS called Colbert irreplaceable and retired The Late Show franchise entirely rather than find a successor, stating that he had taken CBS late night by storm with cutting-edge comedy, a must-watch monologue, and interviews with leaders across entertainment, politics, and news.
The final week of broadcasts brought a celebrated lineup to the Ed Sullivan Theater, including fellow late-night hosts Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel, Seth Meyers, John Oliver, and David Letterman himself returning to the stage he had made famous decades earlier.
Colbert had spoken often in his final months about what he would miss most. ""You can do comedy in a lot of different places,"" he said. ""There's no place like the Ed Sullivan Theater. But it's really the people. That's what I care about. That's really what I'm going to miss more than anything.""
In a final note of recognition, the show won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Talk Series after the cancellation was announced, Colbert's first Emmy while leading the program.
For ten years, five nights a week, Stephen Colbert showed up at the Ed Sullivan Theater and made something that mattered to millions of people. He did it with seriousness and silliness in equal measure, with a Catholic faith he wore openly, with a grief he had carried since losing his father and two brothers in a plane cr*sh when he was ten years old, and with a genuine love for his audience that never felt performed.
The Late Show franchise, which Letterman launched in August 1993, ran for 33 years on CBS before going dark for good.
The theater on Broadway will go on hosting other things.
But there will not be another Stephen Colbert behind that desk.
CBS said so themselves.
He was irreplaceable.
On May 21, 2026, he proved it one last time.

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@Monica55dzrh OK Stop with the FAKE neighbor crap already. If this were true you would be hated by the entire neighborhood for being a Karen!!!
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I honestly feel sick every time I pull into my driveway now.
My neighbor suddenly installed this huge metal fence directly on our property line and I had absolutely NO warning it was happening. One day everything felt open and normal… the next day it looked like the entrance to a warehouse yard.
I cannot explain how drastically it changed the feel of my home.
What used to feel welcoming and open now feels cramped, cold, and boxed in. Every time I drive up, it’s like staring at a giant steel wall.
And the part that really bothers me?
Nobody said a word to me beforehand.
No conversation.
No heads up.
No “hey, just letting you know.”
Nothing.
I understand people can do what they want on their property, but when you put up something THAT massive directly affecting your neighbor’s space, wouldn’t basic courtesy tell you to at least talk to them first?
Maybe I’m overreacting, but it genuinely feels like my property changed overnight and I had zero say in it.
What would you honestly do in this situation?

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I know people are allowed to mow their lawns during the day, but 7 a.m. every Saturday is starting to feel rough 😅
My neighbor fires up the mower like clockwork every weekend, and Saturday is usually my one morning to sleep in after a long work week.
I did ask once if he’d consider waiting until around 9 a.m., especially since the yard only takes about 30 minutes, but he said he likes getting it done early.
I get it. It’s his yard, and he’s not necessarily doing anything wrong. But when the whole street is still quiet, that mower feels extra loud.
I’ve tried earplugs, white noise, and closing the windows, but nothing really blocks it out.
Maybe I’m just tired, but I do wish there was a little more consideration for neighbors on weekend mornings.
Be honest, is 7 a.m. too early to mow on a Saturday, or is that still fair game?

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