Travis Farrar

980 posts

Travis Farrar

Travis Farrar

@TravisFarrar

Not a writer, not a do-er, not a thinker. Just breathing until...

Louisiana Katılım Haziran 2009
41 Takip Edilen31 Takipçiler
Vincent D'Onofrio
Vincent D'Onofrio@vincentdonofrio·
Thanks for watching the 2nd Season of ⁦@Daredevil⁩ Born Again. We love our fans and we aim to deliver a wonderfully badass 3rd Season.
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Travis Farrar
Travis Farrar@TravisFarrar·
@marvel_updat3s A solid 3. Would have been 4 except the ending was utterly moronic. Letting Fisk go when you have him on extortion, weapons smuggling, conspiring to assassinate a governor, dozens of counts of conspiracy to commit murder, and a dozen public murders in the last scene??? Nope.
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Marvel Updates
Marvel Updates@marvel_updat3s·
From 1-10, how would you rate ‘DAREDEVIL: BORN AGAIN’ Season 2?
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Travis Farrar
Travis Farrar@TravisFarrar·
@vengeance_347 @vincentdonofrio @Daredevil No. He's not. Despite them having absolute proof that he hired an assassin to kill the governor, and despite him MURDERING 30 PEOPLE IN PUBLIC WITH DOZENS OF WITNESSES. Dumbest shit ever
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Jeffrey T Jackson
Jeffrey T Jackson@mauishaka62·
@CuriosityonX When science figures out why we see anything at all then I'll be impressed all we can do at this time is figure out how everything works and the marvel of what we dont yet understand
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Curiosity
Curiosity@CuriosityonX·
You are looking at the first photograph of another multi-planet solar system. A real image of a real sun-like star, with real planets orbiting it — taken by a telescope on Earth. We have been alive for 300,000 years as a species. This is the first time we have ever seen another sun's family.
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Mr. Johnson
Mr. Johnson@WestTexasChap·
@CuriosityonX 300,000 years? Prove it. You can’t. Better wording would be, “we may have been around,” “it’s possible we have been around,” if it’s a theory, speak like it’s a theory, if it’s a fact, same.
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Travis Farrar
Travis Farrar@TravisFarrar·
@the_mockingbard @awkwardgoogle Please, please tell me this was intended ironically, because your math and your estimate of the pyramids' age are hilariously incorrect.
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E.L. Haines
E.L. Haines@the_mockingbard·
@awkwardgoogle If he was born in 1627 that makes him 2030 years old, dummy. Older than the pyramids
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Interesting things
Interesting things@awkwardgoogle·
A 392-year-old Greenland Shark that was located in the Arctic Ocean. He’s been wandering the ocean since 1627.
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cinesthetic.
cinesthetic.@TheCinesthetic·
Leonardo DiCaprio says Benicio del Toro felt unprepared when he arrived on One Battle After Another. “He was doing another movie and we waited for him. Shut down production for three months, he was like, ‘I’m not prepared.’ But he came in and nailed it.”
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IGN
IGN@IGN·
Jack Black said he "learned a valuable lesson" after passing on the role of Syndrome in The Incredibles, saying, "it's one of the best movies ever made, and I was like, 'Why was I being so difficult?'" For more: bit.ly/44Zs6Tn
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Spinningchainz
Spinningchainz@spinningchainz·
@IGN He prob learned a valuable lesson when his bandmate talked mad shit about Trump too lol
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Variety
Variety@Variety·
Timothée Chalamet has raised eyebrows in Hollywood with his behavior on the #MartySupreme press tour, but he says it's just in keeping with "the spirit" of the movie. “It’s a movie about the pursuit of a dream. I’m leaving it on the field." variety.com/2025/film/news…
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Travis Farrar
Travis Farrar@TravisFarrar·
@Tribune1Calif @Nemesis_Nexus @fasc1nate Jesus, dude, just stfu. Your follow-up comment is worse than the first one. One word would do. And WTF is "ahem." I get language barriers, but when you're talking about a man's death, you could do a little better
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Princess Cammy 👑
Princess Cammy 👑@Tribune1Calif·
@Nemesis_Nexus @fasc1nate Oh sorry. Okay. He shot himself in the head with a shotgun. Ahem. That makes very much a difference to the degree he is due recognition of honor and I apologize for my ignorance on the subject of Kurt Cobain's suicide. I beg forgiveness.
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Fascinating
Fascinating@fasc1nate·
"The photograph of Kurt Cobain in tears has been extensively published. Tilton watched Cobain smash his guitar through an amplifier and walk offstage. He followed him backstage. The pent-up emotion 'just had to go somewhere,' says Tilton, and Cobain burst into tears. 'What I really love about it is that it is a very real moment, and he allowed it. Other artists would have said, 'Not now, lan, please!' It is very unusual," adds Tilton, "for anyone from a band to show such vulnerability!" Look at more amazing historical photos: bit.ly/44OpIzi
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Travis Farrar
Travis Farrar@TravisFarrar·
@Arvik_2 @_Dan_OBrien_ @konstructivizm No, I MIGHT BE wrong, which is an important distinction. And your are stating things as fact which are only conjecture, and not even necessarily the most likely conjecture.
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Arvik 🇺🇦
Arvik 🇺🇦@Arvik_2·
@TravisFarrar @_Dan_OBrien_ @konstructivizm No, you're wrong. The Great Bombardment period plus the collision with Theia, which led to the formation of the Moon, completely destroyed all organic matter on the planet. Such a quantity of new organic compounds could not have formed naturally over 100-200 million years.
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Black Hole
Black Hole@konstructivizm·
A groundbreaking discovery from NASA's OSIRIS-REx mission has just rewritten the story of life's cosmic origins.Pristine samples scooped directly from the ancient asteroid Bennu—delivered untouched to Earth in 2023—have revealed something astonishing: a treasure trove of bio-essential sugars, including ribose (the backbone of RNA, the molecule that carries genetic instructions) and glucose (the universal fuel that powers nearly every living cell on our planet).For the first time ever, these critical building blocks of life have been confidently detected in material collected straight from space, free from any Earthly contamination that plagues meteorites fallen to our world.Unlike rocks that crash-land and mingle with terrestrial microbes, Bennu's fragments were captured in the vacuum of space and sealed in a ultra-clean capsule—preserving their primordial purity. The verdict is clear: these sugars were born in the cold depths of the early solar system, billions of years ago.This finding completes the full set of major organic ingredients thought necessary for life to emerge: amino acids (previously found in other samples), nucleic acid bases, lipids—and now, the sugars that tie it all together.It powerfully bolsters the idea that asteroids like Bennu acted as cosmic delivery trucks, seeding young planets—including our own—with the raw chemistry needed for life to spark. Perhaps the very molecules that built the first RNA strands and fueled the earliest metabolism rained down from the sky during Earth's violent infancy.With every new analysis of Bennu's dark, carbon-rich grains, we edge closer to answering one of humanity's deepest questions: how did lifeless chemistry become living biology? The answer, it seems, may have been written in the stars—and carried here on silent, ancient rocks drifting through the void.
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Travis Farrar
Travis Farrar@TravisFarrar·
@Arvik_2 @_Dan_OBrien_ @konstructivizm Or they formed later. And your theory has to contend with the heat of atmospheric entry at a time when the Earth's atmosphere was likely thicker and that would have been even hotter
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Arvik 🇺🇦
Arvik 🇺🇦@Arvik_2·
@_Dan_OBrien_ @konstructivizm Organic compounds, such as glucose, could not have survived the Earth's formation due to extremely high temperatures. Therefore, the most likely mechanism is the introduction of organic matter from space by asteroids and comets.
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Black Hole
Black Hole@konstructivizm·
Imagine a star so obscenely large that the phrase “larger than life” feels insulting.Stephenson 2-18 isn’t just big; it’s cosmic hubris made plasma.Our Sun, the unquestioned ruler of our sky, is a mere speck next to it: a glowing marble beside a weather balloon the size of a small country. The Sun’s diameter is 1.39 million kilometers. Stephenson 2-18 laughs at that number. Its diameter is estimated at roughly 3 billion kilometers (2,150 solar radii, give or take the usual red-supergiant mood swings).If you dropped this crimson titan into the center of our solar system, its surface would reach somewhere between the orbits of Saturn and Uranus on a good day. Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn wouldn’t be planets anymore; they’d be crumbs toasted inside a star.Picture it: Earth, the entire orbit of Jupiter (all 5.9 billion kilometers of it), just a shallow layer beneath the star’s roiling, semi-transparent outer atmosphere. You could fit more than 10 billion Suns inside its volume. Ten. Billion.Yet this monster is dying. It’s a red supergiant in the absolute final chapters of its life, burning through the last of its fuel in a desperate, bloated spectacle. One day (astronomically soon, maybe in a few tens of thousands of years), it will detonate as one of the most violent hypernovae the Milky Way has ever seen, briefly outshining entire galaxies before collapsing into a black hole that will weigh dozens of times more than the Sun.Stephenson 2-18 is 7,500 parsecs away in the constellation Scutum, hidden behind thick curtains of dust, so we’ll never see it with the naked eye. But it’s there, right now: a swollen, crimson ember the size of a planetary system, quietly reminding us that in the universe’s ledger of extremes, our Sun doesn’t even register as average.It’s not just a star. It’s a warning label on the cosmos: “Objects in telescope may be more terrifying than they appear.”
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Astronomy Vibes
Astronomy Vibes@AstronomyVibes·
🚨 Something Is Wrong With 3I/ATLAS — And The New Images Prove It New images from Teerasak Thaluang (Rayong, Thailand) show some interesting inconsistencies in the brightness at the center of the coma of 3I/ATLAS — and what they reveal is far from normal. These new frames of 3I/ATLAS — show activity, but not the kind we expect from ordinary comets. This thing is behaving in ways that feel sharp, controlled, and quietly mysterious. At first glance it looks like a comet warming under the Sun. But when you look closer, the details start to feel wrong. The inner core is too compact, almost star-like instead of diffuse. The coma doesn’t spread naturally — it stays tight, confined, almost as if something is holding it in. And then the strangest part: The enhanced images reveal a thin, perfectly straight jet blasting out of the nucleus. Not a wide, messy dust fan like typical comets — but a narrow, focused beam. There’s even a hint of mirror-like symmetry, two faint structures pointing in nearly opposite directions. Such clean geometry is rare and unusually precise for a natural comet. Even more puzzling: Despite these jet-like features, the main dust tail is unexpectedly faint. The brightness drops sharply — almost like an active asteroid, not a generous dust-releasing comet. There’s no broad gas halo, no big fluffy envelope. The object looks active… but in a very restricted, almost controlled way. These things don’t normally appear together. ◆ Not in solar-system comets. ◆ Not at 2 AU. ◆ Not with this type of activity. So what exactly is 3I/ATLAS? ☄️ A comet from another star behaving unlike anything we know? ☄️ An active asteroid that survived a journey between suns? ☄️ Or something shaped by conditions we’ve never seen before? We don’t know yet. But one thing is certain: 3I/ATLAS isn’t just visiting us — it’s challenging our expectations. #3IATLAS #3Iアトラス #interstellarobject #spacemystery
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S Hiriyur
S Hiriyur@SHiriyur19168·
@AstronomyVibes Could this be a small Black hole?!! Absorbing the solar wind coming from Sun - giving an impression of sunward tail or particles getting ejected from event horizon at the poles make it appear like tails on opposite ends. That also explains why it brightened at perihelion.
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