Eric Little
20.9K posts

Eric Little
@SoCalEricLittle
Aspiring nice guy. I love Dad jokes. Big LA Dodgers fan Big LA Kings fan smaller LA Lakers LA Rams fan No DMs please. #Dodgernation #Hashtags #GKG
Southern California เข้าร่วม Ağustos 2014
3.7K กำลังติดตาม3.5K ผู้ติดตาม

Plaschke: The Dodgers and their fans are geared up for a three-peat. Why the quest will fall short latimes.com/sports/dodgers…
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@BuiltForLA I was there. I thought we had a chance until the wheels came off in the third period.
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Signing off for the final time this season for Kings hockey.
Will always love this team, these fans, this arena, and this city.
Til next season, Kings fam🖤
And as always… #GoKingsGo
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@hourlytetsuya @owndodgerhaters You beat me to it. This would have been my choice.
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@owndodgerhaters "how could you pay 350 million for a player that has never pitched in an mlb game?"
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@barstoolsports Like a parent who may let their child win at checkers, I will always believe Chuck Norris "let" death beat him.
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@TMZ Like a parent who may let their child win at checkers, I will always believe Chuck Norris "let" death beat him.
#ripchucknorris
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Like a parent who may let their child win at checkers, I will always believe Chuck Norris "let" death beat him.
#ripchucknorris

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Eric Little รีทวีตแล้ว

Sixteen years ago, one man stood alone on a grassy hill at a music festival in Washington State, USA, and started dancing by himself. People glanced over and looked away. Some laughed. His roommate leaned in and warned him people were filming him.
He did not stop.
Then one stranger got up and joined him.
Then another.
Then the hillside tipped. Within minutes, hundreds of people were sprinting from across the field to be part of something that, thirty seconds earlier, had been one man being laughed at in a field.
Someone filming from higher up the hill said quietly: "See what one man can do. One man can change the world."
The clip spread across the internet in 2009. Entrepreneur Derek Sivers played it at a TED conference to explain how movements actually begin. Not with the first person brave enough to start, he argued, but with the first person willing to join them.
Collin Wynter, the man dancing alone, later said he had no idea he had done anything special. He was just tired of watching everyone sit still.
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@gallegos_fam One time I stopped while my wife went in one of those.
When she came out here was my response:
GIF
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@ClownWorld @grok is this video real?
I am cynical any 92 year old could do this.
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@SleeperDodgers HR Leader — Shohei
Cy Young —Yamamoto
Breakout Player —Espinal
Best Reliever —Diaz
Team Record —119-43
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@muskinfluencer @grok is this a real incident and if yes, where did it occur?
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This looks good.
Not like I need any additional motivation to get to the ballpark but I will take it.
#GALLEG🌎sFAM@gallegos_fam
I wouldn't order any of this nonsense at a baseball game
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@ScottWarner18 1st Ballot HOF.
Prob best pitcher of the last 25 years.
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Sometimes I think I've seen it all. Then I see a story like this that reminds me I haven't.
Golf cart fight over love triangle leads to attempted murder arrest fox13now.com/news/national-…
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Eric Little รีทวีตแล้ว

On July 3, 1976, Tina Turner waited until her husband, Ike, fell asleep in their Dallas hotel room. Her face was swollen and bruised from another beating. In her pocket were just 36 cents and a Mobil gas card. Nothing more.
She slipped out of the Statler Hilton and ran. Not toward a car. Not toward help she could call. She ran straight across Interstate 30, weaving through traffic in the dark, nearly hit by a truck, driven by nothing but survival. On the other side stood the Ramada Inn. The manager recognized her instantly, even through the injuries. He gave her a room on the eleventh floor and placed a guard outside her door. For three days, Tina stayed hidden there, too injured to even eat properly, letting her body begin to heal.
Three weeks later, she filed for divorce. When asked what she wanted from sixteen years of marriage, her answer stunned everyone. She wanted nothing except her name. No house. No money. No royalties. Just “Tina Turner.” A name created to control her, now the only thing she could use to rebuild her life.
She walked away with debt, an IRS tax lien, and an industry that believed she was finished. Nearly forty years old, a Black woman in a business obsessed with youth, with no ownership of her past music. The odds were stacked brutally against her.
But Tina refused to accept defeat. She turned to Nichiren Buddhism, chanting daily for strength. She took every job she could find. Game shows. Hotel lounges. County fairs. Corporate events. She even cleaned houses between performances. While the world called her a has-been, she was quietly reconstructing herself piece by piece.
Then came 1984.
At forty-four, she released Private Dancer. It changed everything. The album sold more than twenty million copies. “What’s Love Got to Do with It” reached number one, her first solo chart-topper. She won three Grammy Awards in 1985, performed at Live Aid, and starred in Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome. The world finally recognized her as the Queen of Rock and Roll.
Her second act lasted decades. Record-breaking tours. Twelve Grammy Awards. Over one hundred million records sold. A career rebuilt entirely on her own terms.
And love found her too. Erwin Bach met Tina at an airport in 1986 and never left her side. When her kidneys failed in 2016, he offered her one of his own without hesitation. In 2017, he kept that promise and saved her life.
On May 24, 2023, Tina Turner passed away peacefully in Switzerland at the age of eighty-three, with Erwin beside her. She left behind more than music. She left proof.
It is never too late to reclaim your life. You can begin again at forty. At fifty. At any age. All it takes is the courage to cross the road.
Thirty-six cents. A gas card. And an unbreakable will.
That is how legends are made.

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