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DAAAAM!
@DriveEmMild
I've eaten dim sum in Hong Kong and throwed rolls at Lambert's Cafe. Football road trips and classic Top 40 countdowns are fun. Anti-communist, anti-globalist.
United States Katılım Kasım 2024
710 Takip Edilen240 Takipçiler
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Ok, this one blows my mind…
The #Sabres are now 32-6-2 in their last 40 games.
No team has had more wins in a 40 game stretch of a season since the 1995 Detroit Red Wings (33). 🤯
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NEW: Singer Afroman celebrates his big win in court with a crowd of people chanting "USA USA USA."
"WE DID IT AMERICA! GOD BLESS AMERICA LAND THAT I LOVE !!! FREEDOM OF SPEECH!!!!!!!!!!!" he shared on Instagram.
The jury ruled in favor of Afroman on all counts and that he would not owe the deputies millions of dollars in monetary damages.
Collin Rugg@CollinRugg
BREAKING: Jury sides with Afroman, who was sued by sheriff's deputies after he made a music video with surveillance of them raiding his home. The deputies said posts & the music video caused "humiliation, ridicule, mental distress, embarrassment, & loss of reputation." Afroman says his home was wrongly searched, and he accused the deputies of causing damage to his home. He also said they disconnected his security footage and stole $400.
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Flooding causes more damage in the U.S. than any other weather-related event equating to ~$5.2 billion/year over the last 20 years. Flooding can occur in any of the 50 states during any time of the year, but flash flooding is most common May-Sept in PA. #FloodSafetyPA

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@rickdees Sorry about your loss tonight.
🏀💥😞
Greensboro Police Department@GSO_Police
Please don't call us about UNC and your bracket.
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BREAKING🚨: A massive meteor fragment discovered in northern Ohio could be the largest ever found in the state’s history, measuring a staggering 9 inches wide. The measurement remains unofficial and has not yet been confirmed.
The rock was reportedly found near Cuyahoga County after a bright fireball streaked across the sky, triggering a powerful boom heard across multiple states.
Officials say the space rock was originally about 6 feet wide and nearly 7 tons, with most of it burning up in the atmosphere as it broke apart. Only fragments are believed to have reached the ground.
📸: oregoncoastagates/ig


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We just saw the exact moment a star exploded for the first time ever.
Astronomers have achieved a rare feat: imaging the exact moment a massive star detonated—and the explosion was anything but spherical.
SN 2024ggi, a supernova located 22 million light-years away in the spiral galaxy NGC 3621, was detected a mere 26 hours after ignition. This extraordinarily early discovery allowed researchers to train the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope in Chile on the event while it was still in its infancy.
Using the technique of spectropolarimetry—which analyzes the polarization of light to reveal geometric structure—the team uncovered a surprising truth: the expanding shockwave was distinctly aspherical, elongated into an “olive” or prolate shape along one primary axis.
This asymmetry means the catastrophic rebound following the star’s core collapse did not propagate uniformly in all directions, directly contradicting the long-standing assumption that the deepest layers of a core-collapse supernova explode spherically.
The progenitor was a red supergiant 12–15 times more massive than the Sun that had exhausted its nuclear fuel, triggering gravitational collapse of its iron core. In most supernovae, the initial shape of this breakout is quickly obscured as the blast wave slams into the star’s outer envelope. Here, however, astronomers captured polarized light signatures of the still-unobscured ejecta, freezing the explosion’s geometry in time.
The discovery carries far-reaching consequences. It strongly suggests that asymmetry is common, if not universal, in the earliest phases of massive-star deaths. Current theoretical models, which often assume spherical symmetry at the core, will need significant revision. Moreover, these distorted explosions could help explain observed peculiarities in supernova remnants, the production of gamma-ray bursts, and the kicking of neutron stars and black holes to high speeds at birth.
By catching a star in the act of dying asymmetrically, SN 2024ggi has given us a vivid glimpse into the violent, chaotic physics that govern the final heartbeat of the universe’s most massive stars.
[🎞️ Artist’s animation of a supernova explosion]
[Unique shape of star’s explosion revealed just a day after detection. ESO, 2025]
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