Sara

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Sara

Sara

@sj2429

Big Backstreet Boy Fan. Love NASCAR Love music and books. I LOVE to coupon!! https://t.co/68tOy4HieQ

Pennsylvania Katılım Ekim 2010
1.9K Takip Edilen1K Takipçiler
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Jeff Gluck
Jeff Gluck@jeff_gluck·
Texas Motor Speedway announces a grandstand SELLOUT for today's race! Holy cow. What a comeback for this place.
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Raven
Raven@Ravenismeee·
Can people “smell rain” before it actually starts raining?? My grandma would say “I smell rain coming”
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Sara
Sara@sj2429·
@wldsteppa You can rent Auntie Anne's trucks out. I've seen them at NASCAR races
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WILDER
WILDER@wldsteppa·
Why is Auntie Anne's only in the mall? Bitch, spread tf out!
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🇺🇸 Family Man (Dave) 🇺🇸
Potential #NASCAR feee agents post 2026 season: Cindric, Gragson, Suarez, Busch, Dillon, Buescher, CBell, Berry, Gilliland, Herbst, Custer, JHN, Stenhouse, Bowman, McDowell. The 2027 driver lineup could look much different than it does now.
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Pascal Najadi (USSF)🇺🇸
Pascal Najadi (USSF)🇺🇸@JfkPascalNajadX·
🚨 HOLY CRAP. A Los Angeles hospice fraudster has now SHUT DOWN their fake business and FLED the building after being exposed by @NickShirleyy It just so happens that one of the workers drove a 2026 Mercedes MAYBACH, worth nearly $300K 🤯 They pretended to be "consultants" for hospice and home health, and when Shirley walked in as seen in his recent video, they PANICKED. Looks like they were basically just a fraud HUB that helped over scammers start stealing taxpayer funds. Amazing work Nick! KEEP EXPOSING, it's obvious Gavin Newsom is shook 🔥
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The Catch Fence ™
The Catch Fence ™@TheCatchFence·
Honestly though, NASCAR should send @CarsonHocevar a gift basket. That victory celebration is going to be all over TV, the news, and social media for the next few days. We need that kind of buzz.
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Jeff Gluck
Jeff Gluck@jeff_gluck·
One of the most memorable NASCAR celebrations ever.
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No Context NASCAR
No Context NASCAR@NoContextNyoom·
Gotta be one of the coolest victory celebrations I’ve ever seen
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Front Row Motorsports
Front Row Motorsports@Team_FRM·
Not sure you all understand how high the vibes are down here, that all 3 guys made it through a crash unscathed for once
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Front Row Motorsports
Front Row Motorsports@Team_FRM·
Zane was pitting at the time of the wreck and is totally back into the game!
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Crazy Vibes
Crazy Vibes@CrazyVibes_1·
He was paid millions to play a miserable man — and couldn't tell where the character ended and he began. When the creators of House M.D. were casting in 2004, they wanted someone quintessentially American. British actors, they believed, couldn’t pull off the accent convincingly. They weren’t even looking overseas. Thousands of miles away in Namibia, Hugh Laurie was filming a movie and heard about the role. He couldn’t fly to Los Angeles. He couldn’t walk into a polished audition room. So he went into his hotel bathroom — the only space with enough light — propped up a camera, grabbed an umbrella as a cane, and recorded two scenes. He sent the tape, apologizing for how rough it looked. Executive producer Bryan Singer watched it and was captivated. He had no idea Laurie was British. That tape changed everything. The pilot drew seven million viewers. Respectable. Not earth-shattering. But over the following seasons, House became a global phenomenon. Laurie became the most-watched leading man on television, according to Guinness World Records. What nobody saw was the weight he carried. For eight seasons, Laurie worked sixteen-hour days. He was in nearly every scene. Los Angeles on set, London with his wife and three children — six thousand miles apart for nine months each year. The isolation crept in slowly. Laurie had battled depression since his youth, seeking help in 1996. The relentless schedule made it worse. He described “very, very black days” on set, a feeling of being exposed and trapped. The irony was impossible to ignore. Here was a man grappling with darkness, praised for playing a character defined by misery. The line between Hugh and House blurred with every episode. He kept his American accent between takes. Rode his Triumph Bonneville at dawn, finding brief freedom in speed and air rushing over him. But he never walked away. Eight seasons, 177 episodes. He stayed because it was the role of a lifetime. When House ended in 2012, Laurie stepped back. Music called. He released blues albums, toured with a band, and returned to acting on his terms — smaller, stranger roles, a Golden Globe-winning turn in The Night Manager. He didn’t disappear. He just stopped running on someone else’s clock. Playing House was like carrying a heavy, beautiful stone. You can’t set it down. But you can’t ignore its weight. Sometimes the greatest performances come from people who have lived the pain they portray. Laurie didn’t act misery. He understood it.
Crazy Vibes tweet media
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