Kevin

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Kevin

Kevin

@KevinInChains

This is just where I came in

Lost somewhere around Camden Sumali Ekim 2008
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Jess Harvell
Jess Harvell@cheaptrickrules·
i don't know who laufey is because i am old, but even still in 2026 i'm pretty confident they should be billed above septuagenarian embarrassment greg ginn and whatever pickup band he's currently touring with
Pitchfork@pitchfork

Moby billed below Ethel Cain? Laufey billed above Black Flag? Coachella feels like a desperate pitch for connection between bewildered Gen X fathers and their brainrotted Gen Z sons pitchfork.com/thepitch/coach…

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Variety
Variety@Variety·
Sombr brings out Billy Corgan as a surprise guest at #Coachella to perform a rendition of Smashing Pumpkins’ “1979”
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Kevin@KevinInChains·
@dumpsterwitch36 I do think that’s a legit reason for the last 5 episodes she’s just been like siting there
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Kevin@KevinInChains·
@goddammitsarah I was too scared of all the teen characters in it to get past the 2020 specials.
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Sarah Everett
Sarah Everett@goddammitsarah·
my aversion to euphoria is finally vindicated
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Kevin@KevinInChains·
Nothing had ever made me feel more right about a movie than Anne Hathaway liking “Titane”.
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K A C E Y
K A C E Y@KaceyMusgraves·
Hey Mick if you zoom way into the videos you can also see a really clear angle of Bigfoot riding your mom
Mick West@MickWest

The @KaceyMusgraves UFO sighting video has been identified by @flarkey as being 100% consistent with Starlink horizon flares. Her plane was in the flare zone for the entire flight, and the flares appeared in the right position, moving and fading at the same speed as seen on the video. If she could share the exact time the video was recorded, then we could identify the exact satellites.

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HAWK
HAWK@HawkEmDownChris·
Yes or No: You’ve seen your favorite NHL team win a Stanley Cup in your lifetime.
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Genuinely a better question than most people realize. Apollo 11 left a 2-foot wide panel of mirrors on the lunar surface in 1969. No power source, no wiring, no maintenance. Scientists have been shooting lasers at it from New Mexico ever since. The beam travels 239,000 miles, bounces off the mirrors, and returns in 2.5 seconds. That round trip is how we know the moon is drifting away from Earth at 3.8 centimeters per year. So yes, in a literal sense, they were checking if it would still be there. The seismometers are the part that gets wild. Apollo 12 deliberately crashed its lunar module into the surface at 6,048 km/h. Scientists expected a brief shudder. The moon vibrated for over 55 minutes. On Earth, seismic waves from an equivalent impact die in seconds. Nobody had predicted this. So NASA did it again. Apollo 13 dropped its S-IVB rocket stage from orbit. Hit with the force of 11.5 tons of TNT. The vibrations lasted nearly three and a half hours. The reason is water, or the lack of it. Earth's interior is damp. Moisture in rock acts like a sponge, absorbing seismic energy. The moon is bone dry, cool, and rigid. Shockwaves have nothing to absorb them. They just bounce back and forth through solid stone until the rock itself stops vibrating. Scientists described it as the moon ringing like a bell. The seismometers ran for almost 8 years and detected over 13,000 seismic events. Turns out the moon has four types of quakes: deep ones caused by Earth's gravitational pull, shallow ones from the crust shrinking as the interior cools, thermal ones when sunrise thaws the frozen surface, and impacts from meteorites. In 2023, Caltech reanalyzed old Apollo 17 data and found a fifth type: the lunar lander itself creaking and popping every morning as the sun heated it. Every five to six minutes, for five to seven hours straight. They went up to prove the moon was once part of Earth, measure how fast it's leaving, and figure out what's happening inside a world with no atmosphere, no water, and no tectonic plates. "Checking if it was still there" is honestly closer to the truth than most people's actual answer.
greg@greg16676935420

So did the astronauts just go to the moon to make sure it was still there or what was the purpose of the mission

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Ted Cutezynski
Ted Cutezynski@shrugdeaIer·
Artemis II is a great reminder that we still don’t need Elon for literally anything.
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Kevin
Kevin@KevinInChains·
@JonAlba I know what Shake would do….
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Jon Alba
Jon Alba@JonAlba·
The Cody Rhodes and Randy Orton feud has reached an Adult Swim level of non sequitur. It’s wonderful. Almost as if you asked Master Shake to book a WrestleMania main event. Genuinely do not know what happens next, and I’m not sure anyone does.
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downstage
downstage@downstagebra·
I WANT TO THANK YOU FOR LETTING ME BE MYSELF 🫵 Turnstile apresenta “T.L.C.” no Coachella 📹: Reprodução / YouTube x.com/dwnstgmedia/st…
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NASA
NASA@NASA·
Welcome home Reid, Victor, Christina, and Jeremy! 🫶 The Artemis II astronauts have splashed down at 8:07pm ET (0007 UTC April 11), bringing their historic 10-day mission around the Moon to an end.
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