I Probably Hate Your Team

282 posts

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I Probably Hate Your Team

I Probably Hate Your Team

@IPHYTNRL

Just a hater with access to a meme generator. All views are my own mostly because nobody else is stupid enough to have them. Views are satire until they’re not

Katılım Eylül 2024
55 Takip Edilen6 Takipçiler
The SuperCoach Whisperer
The SuperCoach Whisperer@SCWhisperer·
It’s incredibly fucking unfair this mob got Cameron Smith and then Harry Grant.
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NRL saw AFL’s Saturday night prime time fizzer and said “hold my beer”… Having said that, nothing like some Dragons schadenfreude to finish the round…
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It would honestly be the most Cowboys thing ever to fore Todd Payten and replace him with Anthony Seibold. You heard it here first.
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@SCWhisperer Am I the only one who thinks it’s hilarious DCE is responsible for the board deciding to finally sack Seibs? Just like, “man, if we lose to THAT guy…”
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So, are we all in agreement the Red Bull Try Predictor makes no goddamned sense, orrrr…
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Nathan
Nathan@SeaEagleSpur·
Starting to think Madge is a best in small doses kind of coach - has won comps, won series & tournaments, but seems to wear thin VERY quickly with everyone around him.
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@WarrenSmithFOX I’d rather talk about two weeks ago with no dummy half after a game-turning line break and losing possession… Y’know, u9s fundamentals and all
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Warren Smith
Warren Smith@WarrenSmithFOX·
Next time the talk turns to Anthony Seibold’s tenure as coach of the Sea Eagles, remember a play like that, second tackle of the game. Planned and executed. That’s coaching. #NRLManlyRoosters
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I Probably Hate Your Team
I Probably Hate Your Team@IPHYTNRL·
I love how Latrell’s settings are either 100% threat or 100% liability, and there’s nothing in between
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I Probably Hate Your Team
I Probably Hate Your Team@IPHYTNRL·
So the Knights suck again? Sweet, all is well with the world once more
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I Probably Hate Your Team
I Probably Hate Your Team@IPHYTNRL·
Kotoni Staggs gunna be Kotoni Deers by the time Madge is done with him at half time
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I Probably Hate Your Team
I Probably Hate Your Team@IPHYTNRL·
Grant Atkins figuring out the way to stop Teddy bitching is to not blow penalties and just let the boys play… Absolute quality strategy
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I Probably Hate Your Team
I Probably Hate Your Team@IPHYTNRL·
I’d love to know what percentage of Michael Ennis’ commentary is just him laughing at inane Andrew Voss jokes
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I Probably Hate Your Team
I Probably Hate Your Team@IPHYTNRL·
@PhilGould15 To that last point, I hope the remaining cockroaches and radioactive spiders really appreciate the spectacle of the 2015 Grand Final on repeat in an abandoned JB Hi Fi somewhere
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Phil Gould
Phil Gould@PhilGould15·
Can you believe this? How smart are our people? How small is our planet, compared to the universe? How amazingly incredible, that we even exist in the first place? When humans are gone, who, or what, will continue to give the universe its meaning?
Massimo@Rainmaker1973

Voyager hit a 90,000°F wall at the solar system’s edge. NASA’s Voyager 1 spacecraft crossed one of the most dramatic frontiers in the cosmos: the heliopause, the tenuous boundary where the Sun’s influence finally gives way to interstellar space. What the probe discovered there was astonishing—a turbulent zone of superheated plasma with temperatures soaring between 30,000 and 90,000 °F (roughly 17,000–50,000 °C). This wasn’t a physical wall or barrier, but a dynamic transition region where the outward-flowing solar wind abruptly slows, compresses, and piles up against the incoming pressure of interstellar material. That compression converts kinetic energy into thermal energy, driving the plasma to extreme heat levels far beyond anything found inside the heliosphere. Remarkably, despite the blistering temperatures, this “wall of fire” would pose no danger to a hypothetical astronaut. The plasma is extraordinarily diffuse—far less dense than the best vacuums achievable in Earth laboratories—so there are simply too few particles to transfer meaningful heat. The region is hot in temperature but cold in practical effect. Voyager’s instruments captured clear signatures of the crossing: a sudden plunge in solar wind particles, a sharp rise in galactic cosmic rays, and faint plasma oscillations that revealed the density and temperature of this exotic boundary layer for the first time. These vibrations—analogous to ripples on an unseen sea—provided direct measurements of conditions in a realm previously known only through theory. The heliopause itself serves as a vital shield. The entire heliosphere—the vast bubble carved by the Sun—deflects most of the galaxy’s high-energy cosmic radiation, helping protect life on Earth from constant bombardment. Beyond this protective envelope lies the harsher, unfiltered radiation environment of the interstellar medium. Today, more than 15 billion miles (24 billion kilometers) from home, Voyager 1 remains the farthest human-made object ever sent into space. Still operational and transmitting precious data, it continues to reveal the secrets of this distant frontier. At the outer limit of our solar system, space is neither empty nor serene. It is a violent, glowing threshold—and humanity has only begun to map its mysteries.

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I Probably Hate Your Team
I Probably Hate Your Team@IPHYTNRL·
Let’s be clear - the Bulldogs should have won that game by 20 or 30. The Raiders discipline is a shambles.
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