Daniel Hutchinson

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Daniel Hutchinson

Daniel Hutchinson

@dankicks83

Now an actual 40 something.

Manchester, England Katılım Ağustos 2012
198 Takip Edilen232 Takipçiler
Sky Sports Premier League
Sky Sports Premier League@SkySportsPL·
"I don't think that's right..." Gary Neville REACTS to Kai Havertz's challenge on Ugochukwu's calf.
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Match of the Day
Match of the Day@BBCMOTD·
Manchester United’s second goal should not have stood ❌ PGMO has admitted a misjudgement, with referee Michael Salisbury rejecting a VAR recommendation to rule out the goal in the 3-2 win over Nottingham Forest.
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Daniel Hutchinson
Daniel Hutchinson@dankicks83·
@d0llitas That was the one part that got me. She was cancelling walking animations as she went 😭
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َ@d0llitas·
The backwards walking in obsession got me so bad
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Daniel Hutchinson
Daniel Hutchinson@dankicks83·
@calroseee We need another word for “nice” guys. Because I’m not saying that it’s every time…..however…..
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ry@calroseee·
The similarities between these two characters become more apparent on the second watch, particularly the evil “nice” guy.
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Sky Sports News
Sky Sports News@SkySportsNews·
Premier League is proposing to allow clubs to negotiate settlements over alleged breaches of its financial rules rather that seeing their cases automatically refereed to an independent commission, according to Sky News' Mark Kleinman.
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General Outburst
General Outburst@Witterbird_84·
Casemiro short but sweet message
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Daniel Hutchinson
Daniel Hutchinson@dankicks83·
@rebekkarnold It might be because I’m old and crusty but I always prefer buying books. I just find it easier on the eyes, and I can give them away when I’m done with them.
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Rebekka
Rebekka@rebekkarnold·
People that have a kindle, is it genuinely a better experience than having the book in your hands? I keep going back and forth on getting one because there’s just something about having the book in your hand but also I’m hoarding books. 😂
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Angel🦋
Angel🦋@AngelSm1th·
I’ve watched hot fuzz 5 times this week, shaun of the dead 3 times and now it’s time for the worlds end 🕺
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Fesshole🧻
Fesshole🧻@fesshole·
My husband spends most of his time at home playing video games. Probably to avoid communicating with me and our kids. He can play as many video games as he likes when I've sprung a divorce on him and he only sees the kids once a fortnight.
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Kaachan ☄️
Kaachan ☄️@KupoKaachan·
Guys, walk, no, RUN to your nearest cinema and watch ‘Obsession’. It was genuinely one of the best horror films I’ve seen in years. Completely unhinged and disturbing doesn’t even justify it. I’ve not felt this kind of anxiety since I was a kid watching ‘Ringu’ for the first time
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Daniel Hutchinson
Daniel Hutchinson@dankicks83·
@NoahJamesSmith Yup. I love me some Raichu. Fake Out/Electroweb/Lightning Rod is decent into Bridge/Rain, and Zard Y/Aero with the right Partners but I’m not pretending it’s ‘good’. (If anything it just exposes the lack of fake out knowledge in my home of the lower tiers 😭😭😭)
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Noah Smith--NoahGuyVGC
Noah Smith--NoahGuyVGC@NoahJamesSmith·
100% Mons that are less common in the meta are not bad by definition. A lot of them are underplayed or matchup poorly into the meta. Simisage is bad and uncommon. Heliolisk is mostly bad but has a niche against Basculegion and is uncommon. Hydreigon is just underplayed.
Nuno 🪐@PyreonPT

I think a lot of times people confuse being bad with being outclassed. Pokémon like Primarina, Umbreon, Scrafty, are not bad. They are just outclassed by better Pokémon in general. But they can have a niche and be good at it. The bad Pokémon aren't good even at their niche.

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Daniel Hutchinson
Daniel Hutchinson@dankicks83·
@labourlewis I’m sorry Clive but this just looks like yet another ‘career politician’ betting on a promotion. Self serving and nothing else. Imploding mid-term is just harming the country. And I wonder how many people are sick of getting a PM they didn’t vote for.
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Clive Lewis MP
Clive Lewis MP@labourlewis·
I know the news Andy Burnham has a route back to Westminster will divide opinion. So, before anything else, I want to speak plainly – to Labour members and voters, to those who have left us, and to anyone on the centre-left, whether you vote Green, Lib Dem, or are simply looking for a politics that hasn't given up on you. Last week's local election results were, for many of us, existential. Not disappointing. Not a setback. Existential. Look across Europe and beyond at what happens to social democratic parties that refuse to step outside the economic orthodoxy of the last forty years – the one that hollowed out our public services, privatised what was ours, drove inequality to indecent levels, and cleared the ground for the authoritarian right to march into. That is the path we are on. Keir Starmer has refused to see it, and the country cannot afford another general election spent finding out the hard way. So let me be direct. The Prime Minister should set out a timeline for an orderly transition. I have said this before. I say it again now because the stakes have changed. Reform is not a protest – it is a project. And it will not be beaten by a Labour Party that mistakes managerial caution for strategy. As regards Andy, I want to set down here that I do not see him as some kind of messiah. Far from it. As someone who has been around frontline politics for more than twenty years, he has made his fair share of mistakes. But for the last ten years he has been a serious, grounded, and effective Mayor of Greater Manchester. The party and the country need their strongest players on the pitch, and he has a great deal to offer at a moment when the national stage has rarely mattered more. I hope the NEC will listen to the overwhelming view of the Cabinet, the PLP, the membership, and the unions, and let Andy stand. And I hope and believe the people of Makerfield will send him back to Parliament. But that is not a given. We know Reform will throw everything at this by-election. We must do the same and then some. Reform have spent a year being told they are inevitable. Makerfield is where we find out whether that is true. Every advance has a limit. This is where we set it. Millions of people, including my constituents in Norwich South, need this government to succeed. They need housing, working public services, secure jobs, water and energy that serves them rather than extracts from them. That work is not finished. But the honest truth is that stopping Reform and rebuilding the country is bigger than any one party. It will take a progressive politics willing to listen, willing to cooperate where the public interest demands it, and willing to drop the tribal habits that got us here. The country is ahead of us on this. It is time we caught up. Makerfield is one of many places where Labour has lost trust. It is an area Andy knows and has lived in for many years. If selected, he will work hard to win that trust back and make the case for a Labour Party worth voting for again. That case has to be made not only to people who once voted Labour, but to everyone who believes the answer to Reform is a serious, democratic, social alternative – not a paler imitation of the politics that created the problem. This by-election is not about one seat. It is a test of whether Labour understands the moment we are in. No single party is going to stop Reform on its own. The progressive majority in this country is real – but it is scattered across Labour, the Greens, the Lib Dems, nationalists, independents, and millions of people who have stopped voting altogether. Our job is not to demand they all come back to us. It is to earn the right to work with them, on shared ground, for a shared future. To former Labour voters: come and talk to us again. To Green and Lib Dem voters: we are not enemies. To Labour members and MPs: this is the fight. Let's get on with it. bbc.co.uk/news/articles/…
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Paigey
Paigey@pls__xx·
I think I’ve forgot how to date 😂👀
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Sophy Ridge
Sophy Ridge@SophyRidgeSky·
Yesterday morning on Downing Street it felt like things were about to tip over the edge. When we were told by No10 that the agenda for Cabinet was going to focus on international affairs and not leadership - we didn't believe it. But that is exactly what Keir Starmer did. In perhaps the most Keir Starmer move ever, he was saved by process. He told Cabinet that if anyone wanted to raise his leadership they could see him afterwards, one on one. And then refused to meet them. Now this morning Team Starmer are saying the moment of peril has passed. They say Streeting doesn't have the numbers and Burnham doesn't have a seat. But are those two things true? This morning - Wes Streeting - is going to finally get his meeting with the Prime Minister. What happens will be critical. Will he ask the PM to set out a timetable for his exit? Will he resign? Will he launch a leadership bid? But in truth today might NOT be the day that Streeting acts. That's because it's the King's Speech later in the morning - a big set piece event where the government lays out its legislative priorities. Streeting - and others - may not want to derail the etiquette of that event - given the involvement of the King. Which all means that Keir Starmer might have a bit of time in hand... He's saying he's going nowhere - that the rebels don't have the numbers. Lyndon B Johnson says the first rule of politics is learning to count - and we'll find out soon who's done their sums right.
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Daniel Hutchinson
Daniel Hutchinson@dankicks83·
@Artyfakes I still think you should follow up the Rathalos gear with an Astalos set. Especially the Hammer. Because the Hammer is an Axe. 🪓
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Daniel Hutchinson
Daniel Hutchinson@dankicks83·
@KayBurley Labour comms have always been **** since they took office. He was never going to win given that, and the fact you and your peers seem to prefer celebrities in office.
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Kay Burley
Kay Burley@KayBurley·
I have never been a fan of Keir Starmer as Prime Minister. Top politicians need to realise it’s not just the message, but how you sell it that cuts through to the public psyche. His policies may well have been among the best for the country and some undoubtedly were but Sir Keir never seemed able to land them with the public. Voters rarely reward policies they don’t emotionally connect with. Yesterday’s reset speech didn’t help. What exactly was he trying to tell us. Now, in what could be the death throes of his tenancy in No 10 after less than two years at the top, I do find myself feeling for him. He pulled himself up by his bootstraps and reached not one but two of the highest offices in the land. So, as the wannabes circle the Cabinet table this morning, positioning for what may come next, spare a thought for a man who genuinely wanted to make a difference, but never quite mastered the art of making his case. Fair?
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