Jennifer
805 posts

Jennifer
@JenToner21
Proverbs 3:5-6 Trust in God with all your heart and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge Him and He shall direct your paths.





“Rock bottom became the solid foundation on which I rebuilt my life.” - J.K. Rowling




Margot Robbie put the work in to play Harley Quinn. For SUICIDE SQUAD she spent months on gymnastics, boxing, and weapons work, and even learned to hold her breath for minutes so she could do most of Harley’s underwater stunts herself.


Elon Musk: “You think that someone like Bill Gates who started a technology company that’s one of the biggest companies in the world, Microsoft —you think he'd be really quite, strong on the sciences, but actually, he's not strong in the sciences, He came to visit me at the Tesla Gigafactory in Austin and was telling me that it's impossible to have a long-range, semi-truck. And I was like, 'Well, but we literally have them, and you can drive them, and Pepsi is literally using them right now’ This was really surprising”







NEW: Artemis II astronaut Christina Koch shares the funny moments she's experienced back on Earth having to get used to living with gravity again: "Every time I've been waking up, or in the first few days, I thought I was floating, I truly thought I was floating." "I put a shirt in the air and it went. *THUD* It actually surprised me."





New look at Anne Hathaway in David Lowery’s MOTHER MARY. 📷



The haunting “4 Children For Sale” photograph from 1948 captured a Chicago mother, Lucille Chalifoux, hiding her face as her four young children sat beneath a sign offering them for sale. Within two years, all of them, including the unborn baby she carried, were placed with different families. The photograph was taken in Chicago Heights, Illinois, by The Vidette-Messenger newspaper. It became one of the most shocking images of postwar America, symbolizing the economic despair many families faced in the years following World War II. Lucille and her husband, Ray Chalifoux, were evicted from their home and claimed they could no longer afford to feed their children. What makes the photo so disturbing is its ordinariness, a family sitting on their porch, the mother turning away in shame, and a simple hand-painted sign turning human lives into a transaction. The image struck a deep chord with the public, but little could be done at the time; there were no child welfare protections strong enough to prevent such desperate actions. In later years, journalists tracked down some of the children, who described growing up in abusive or neglectful foster homes. Despite the tragedy, they also shared resilience and the lives they built after such a devastating start. Added Fact: The image resurfaced decades later as a reminder of how poverty and housing insecurity still push families to extremes. It remains one of the most infamous photographs in American history, not only for its heartbreak, but for its unfiltered portrayal of economic desperation. #ChicagoHistory ☑️




🤣🤣🤣














