INEJI

20.4K posts

INEJI

INEJI

@IIneji

We are nothing but flashes in time.

Katılım Temmuz 2020
186 Takip Edilen49 Takipçiler
INEJI retweetledi
Owokintan Of Lagos🇳🇬🇿🇦🇧🇪🥇
Goddamn what creature is Ye! 😱🤯 Without Sponsors, without promo and while blacklisted by those who control the industry, Kanye was able to sell out the SOFI STADIUM. Over 75k people were present and no one got bored at any moment . Kanye is the only artiste that the system has FAILED to control . There is absolutely nothing that can stop him at this time . 75,000 people? and tickets were not cheap . Congratulations YE 👏👏👏
Owokintan Of Lagos🇳🇬🇿🇦🇧🇪🥇 tweet media
English
3
8
123
5.4K
INEJI retweetledi
yezos
yezos@yeeeeezos·
@Kurrco hard to be humble when you're stuntin on a jumbotron
yezos tweet media
English
3
16
1.3K
23.7K
INEJI retweetledi
Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Cillian Murphy said yes to Oppenheimer before he’d read a single page of the script. Nolan flew to Dublin to hand him a copy, printed on red paper so it couldn’t be photocopied. From that point on Murphy disappeared for six months. He dropped about 28 pounds, ate so little that Emily Blunt said it was “like, one almond” most nights, and skipped every single cast dinner. Matt Damon said they invited him every night. He never came. He was in the bath learning lines. He read American Prometheus, the Pulitzer-winning biography the film was based on. He read the Bhagavad Gita, a Hindu holy text that Oppenheimer quoted after watching the first nuclear bomb test. Then he found old recordings of the real Oppenheimer giving physics lectures and started walking beaches near his home in Ireland, reciting them out loud to his dog Scout. At one point he hit a scene where Oppenheimer gives a lecture in Dutch. He asked Nolan what they’d do about it. Nolan: “You mean what are YOU going to do about that.” So Murphy got the film’s cinematographer, who happens to be Dutch, to record the lines into his phone. Slowed the audio way down. Spent three weeks memorizing the whole thing. Robert Downey Jr. said the rest of the cast would plan weekend trips around Santa Fe while Murphy would just go, “I have to learn 30,000 words of Dutch. Have a nice time.” The weight loss got competitive. His own words: “You become competitive with yourself a little bit, which is not healthy. I don’t advise it.” During the 57-day shoot he pulled 18-hour days and said he hit a zone where food just stopped mattering. Nolan kept the air conditioning cranked during the interrogation scenes because the character is being humiliated, and Murphy was so hungry and so cold it actually helped the performance. The real Oppenheimer lived the same way. Ran on cigarettes and double-strength martinis. Throat cancer killed him at 62. Murphy’s wife Yvonne once described what happens when a character finally leaves him. Her words from his years playing Tommy Shelby on Peaky Blinders: “OK. Tommy’s gradually leaving. I’m getting Cillian back.” Murphy puts it his own way. “I cancel reality for a while.” Oppenheimer won 7 Oscars and pulled in $950 million at the box office. It gave Murphy his first Best Actor win after decades in the business. So when a doctor asks how he copes with playing deeply traumatized characters and he laughs and calls being a doctor “a real job,” he means every word. The job costs him six months inside someone else’s head, a body he has to starve into someone else’s shape, and a family that has to wait for him to come home.
Emir Han@RealEmirHan

Cillian Murphy once got asked by a doctor how he copes with playing such deeply traumatized characters, and his response was: “You’re a doctor? See, now that’s a real job”

English
18
303
4.4K
1.1M
INEJI retweetledi
A.
A.@ThisIsAgam·
If you have to announce you’re the only smart one in the room, you’re probably not. Let’s break this down properly: - Losing to Southampton isn’t some ‘context-heavy anomaly’. It’s a structural failure. Rotation doesn’t excuse being outplayed in key moments. Elite systems absorb rotation, they don’t collapse from it. - You say nothing was learned tactically yet admit the game became ‘basketball-y’. That is the tactical failure. Mikel Arteta’s entire model is about control. If chaos creeps in that easily, the system isn’t as robust as advertised. - Blaming individual errors is lazy analysis. Repeated ‘unforced errors’ are usually a symptom of poor spacing, bad rest defence or lack of structure and not coincidence. - The ‘second string XI’ argument is exaggerated. Good teams don’t go from dominant to dysfunctional because 2–3 profiles change. That drop off is on coaching. - Saying ‘they’ll be prepared next time’ after getting tactically schooled by Pep Guardiola isn’t analysis, it’s hope. - And calling Sporting the ‘weakest team left’ in the UCL? That’s not analysis either. That’s arrogance before a knockout tie. For someone claiming to educate the masses, you should start with yourself.
EBL@EBL2017

I am beyond calm about Arsenal from here until the end of the season. Last night's emotional outburst from the masses was predictable, but also predictably illogical. In moments like this, true analysts comes to the fore and the weak are separated from the chaff. The charlatan's reveal themselves in broad daylight. Unfortunately, they take up 99.9% of the population. Anybody who complained about Arteta's system, the balance, certain players not succeeding because of the coach, or even those complaining about certain individuals not being up to par are almost all completely mistaken. We learnt nothing new about Arsenal last night. Not one thing. From a tactical or player-based point of view. The reality of the situation is that Arsenal came up against the most in-form team in England and played a rotated team due to injuries. This is not an excuse, as Arsenal should still be beating Southampton, but losing to them becomes less of a surprise when considering the context. Arteta's selection was incredibly balanced. I only saw one other analyst on this platform say this, and he is correct. Completely. Yet he is being 'dragged' for it. The first half performance proved that to be entirely correct, too. Arsenal were dominant against a Southampton team who didn't press. However, Southampton did have some moments. Why? Because Mosquera, White, and Gabriel all made unforced individual errors which negatively impacted the flow of the game. That's football, and it can happen, but it certainly happened far too often last night which made the game basketball-y. Then, as the game wore on, Arsenal got weaker due to their injury situation. It was 1-1 at the time and Arsenal had Dowman in the #10 - a role that is instrumental to organising Arsenal's press and exerting control on the game. As good as Dowman is going forwards, his non-existent attempt at a counter-press for the first goal conceded, lack of defensive intensity, and immaturity to organise the press is why he will only be used as a wildcard late on in games against deep-lying defences or when Arsenal need a goal. Right now, he is a total passenger defensively. Then, to make matters worse, Gabriel came off injured and Havertz came off as well (no doubt to manage his load). Arsenal were simply not as well co-ordinated as they typically are defensively as a consequence of these factors all taken together. Arteta picked a rotated team which got weaker as the game went on. The second goal summed up their issues. Southampton kicked long from a goal kick down Mosquera's side, he failed to win the initial aerial duel, and instead of Arsenal having one of Rice, Merino, or Havertz to compete for the second ball on the left, they had Zubimendi, who also failed to win the duel. From here, Southampton scored in transition. Would that have happened if Arsenal didn't have injuries or need to rest Gabriel, Rice, Merino, or Havertz? No. But it did happen, and knockout football is ruthless. One loss and you're out. But does a rotated and injury-hit Arsenal team losing to Southampton mean that the club are in crisis mode? Or that the system is fundamentally broken? Or that there is genuine concern over the Premier League title race or the Champions League situation? Not to any attentive viewer, no, and here's why: In the Carabao Cup final, City surprised Arsenal tactically. Mikel and his staff should have come up with solutions at half-time, but they did not. Players also could have helped on the day, sure, but they suffered too. But, like I said at the time, would Arsenal rather be surprised tactically in the Carabao Cup final or in the league game against City? The answer is so obviously in the cup final. Now, when the league game comes around, Arsenal will be prepared to face that likely City set-up. Trust me on that. Plus, despite losing to Southampton, the balance in the team was excellent. We saw that in the first half. Just because individual errors and a weakened performance as the game went on may skew that notion does not mean that Arteta's system is flawed or that any individuals are not up to par or anything ridiculous like that. Remember, none of Raya, Timber, Saliba, Hincapié, Calafiori, Zubimendi, Rice, Eze, Saka, Trossard, and Gyökeres started. That is quite literally Arsenal's XI outside of Gabriel, and he came off injured too! Realistically, the argument being thrown about regarding the defeat to Southampton is that because Arsenal's second string XI lost, the entire season is in jeopardy. I mean… come on! What a lot of nonsense! Remove emotion from the situation. Zoom out. Realise that Arsenal are 9 points clear in the Premier League with 7 games to play. City have a game in hand, sure, but that game in hand is against Chelsea away. Plus, Arsenal have to play first in the Premier League against Bournemouth at home, giving them the opportunity to extend the lead to 12 points with 6 games to go. Arsenal are also in the quarter finals of the Champions League against Sporting Lisbon. The weakest team left in the competition. If you said this was the situation to any Arsenal fan at the start of the season, they would have bitten your hand off for it, and rightly so. Plus, I don't buy into the notion that Arsenal are in bad form as they enter the business end of the season. What a whole load of contextless nonsense that is. City sprung a tactical surprise in the final. Arsenal will be better prepared for the league game. Plus, against Southampton, Arsenal played their second string XI. They are one off occurrences. The only legitimate concern Arsenal have at this point is their injury situation. The likes of Timber, Gabriel, Hincapié, Rice, Saka, and Trossard are key figures who Arsenal need to be fit and firing to see out the season. Plus, knowing the freakish nature of these guys, I don't expect them to miss too much football from here on out. They are almost all athletic freaks and mental giants. Outside of that, I couldn't be more calm and confident about the situation. Plus, on a personal level, last night revealed that my mission on this platform is far from complete. I still have so much work to do to educate the masses. So, so much work. I feel outnumbered in this moment, but I will not waver. I never have. Not since 2017. And I am not about to start now. Signing out, EBL.

English
31
94
645
75K
INEJI retweetledi
Dr Penking™
Dr Penking™@drpenking·
Wow so European art is superior to African art? How come the Europeans stole the Benin Bronzes from Nigeria and are have refused to return them since 1897 because returning them will crash patronage to their museums? These artworks are still in display in British Museum Ethnological, Museum Berlin and other prominent European Museums in the world.
RadioGenoa@RadioGenoa

European and African art.

English
0
3
10
1.5K
INEJI retweetledi
Lukas Not Podolski
Lukas Not Podolski@OtitoNosike·
You can be slow and still pursue your ambition. People tend to think sloths are stupid, useless even, but in their habitat, they are among the least hunted animals, and there is a reason for that: invisibility. Their movements are so slow they do not trigger a predator’s instinct to chase. In real life, that is the ideal Machiavellian man; one who moves so slowly he is not seen, not registered as a threat, biding his time, and when he strikes, it is from a place no one thought to watch.
Niccolò Machiavelli | The Prince ⚔️@NiccoloDaily

“Make mistakes of ambition and not mistakes of sloth.” — Niccolo Machiavelli

English
16
188
1.3K
49.4K
INEJI retweetledi
Bennie🕊️
Bennie🕊️@Bennieeexyz·
When I was in law school I was tangentially friends with a girl who never showed up to class. Skipped lectures, dodged every seminar, had a "family emergency" for every moot court session. The night before 2nd year finals she was over at my place and casually mentioned she'd spent the last week watching every recorded lecture at 2x speed. She placed top 10 out of 300 students. Every Single Exam. And it wasn't just that she remembered the material, she actually UNDERSTOOD it. Like, laterally, practically, the way most of us who dragged ourselves to every 8am class still couldn't. She could apply case law to hypotheticals better than people who had been gunning for law review all year. I always shuddered thinking about what she could do if she actually tried. But she was perfectly content to just… chill. Some people are built different and honestly? It's annoying.
English
212
306
10.4K
720.2K
INEJI retweetledi
Mr PitBull
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07·
Instead of hiding his daughter with Down syndrome, Charles de Gaulle raised her proudly, and she became the heart of his life. When Charles de Gaulle died in 1970, he made a quiet request that surprised many. He did not want a grand state funeral in Paris. He asked to be buried in the small village of Colombey les Deux Églises, beside his daughter Anne. For him, that resting place mattered more than any monument. Anne was born on New Year’s Day in 1928, the youngest of three children. She had Down syndrome, a condition surrounded by fear and misinformation at the time. Doctors and society often blamed parents and urged families to hide children like her from public view. For families of power and status, sending such children away was considered normal. Charles and his wife Yvonne refused. They raised Anne at home with her brother Philippe and sister Élisabeth. There was no secrecy, no shame, no separation. She was simply their daughter. To the world, de Gaulle was distant and unyielding. A leader shaped by war, discipline, and command. But inside his home, Anne revealed a side few ever saw. With her, he laughed freely. He sang songs, told stories, and played games. Friends noticed that the man who rarely showed emotion softened completely in her presence. He called her my joy. Anne asked nothing of him except love, and in that simplicity, he found peace. She was never treated as fragile or inferior. She was respected fully, included always, and loved without condition. That love did not end within the family. After the war, Charles and Yvonne founded the Fondation Anne de Gaulle. They turned a château into a home for young women with intellectual disabilities, many of whom had been abandoned. At a time when support barely existed, they chose action over silence. Anne’s life was short. She died of pneumonia in 1948, just after turning twenty, in her father’s arms. In his grief, de Gaulle whispered that now she was like the others, finally free from the limits the world had placed on her. After her death, he carried her photograph everywhere. He believed her presence protected him, even during an assassination attempt years later. Whether faith or fate, he never doubted her importance in his life. Charles de Gaulle found his deepest calm not in leadership or victory, but in loving a child the world did not understand. His family showed that dignity is not about ability. It is about how fiercely we choose to care.
Mr PitBull tweet media
English
81
1.6K
11.9K
710.5K