April 29, 2025

Being a realtor is not a real job.

Title is a little dramatic but I just don’t think they do any actual valuable work. I think my main issue is with how we buy/sell homes. It’s an incredibly complex thing for something that at its core is not complex at all, creating a “need” for realtors who can actually understand all the nonsense that goes into buying a house, besides that I can’t think of a single thing they do that’s actually “work” besides telling you to get trendier kitchen cabinets (because obviously everyone who’s selling their house can afford to do an entire renovation to fit the realtors standards). It’s just silly to me.

April 29, 2025
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April 29, 2025

Fake syrup is superior to real maple syrup.

I like imitation syrup. I do not like real maple syrup as much. Just because it's harder to make and more expensive doesn't mean it's actually any better.

Imitation syrup is also more versatile. It doesn't have the same darkness as maple syrup and never has a burnt flavor.

You can use fake syrup for more things: it goes better in tea and lattes, too.

Edit: it's worth saying, although it might be obvious, that there are huge differences in quality with some imitation syrups. Some people mentioned HFCS, which is not in every brand.

Edit: Log Cabin is the best.

April 29, 2025
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April 29, 2025

Maybe some kids should get "left behind"..

“No Child Left Behind”, or “Every Student Succeeds Act” as it is now called, seems to still allow for very low thresholds and standards for kids to move forward to the level of education when they are, to put it bluntly, not at that level of progression.

Seeing these young adults struggle with basic math and spelling that should have started in early elementary curriculums yet somehow they made it through another five or six grades of schooling and “graduated” in some cases is doing the said child no favors.

It's not even about crazy sentence structure or formulaic math, but rather the girl at the drive-thru that reads off the total of $4.75, I give her $20.75 which causes her to have a mini-stroke and somehow I get back $17 back at the first window, which she then comes to the second window and says she made a mistake only to give me $2 more. Then there are the folks that send out the emails or texts with five simple words misspelled and using the incorrect variant of words like their, there, and they're.

April 29, 2025
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April 29, 2025

Everyday Cars Should Not Be Designed To Exceed 100 MPH.

I mean seriously, think about it, if the highest speed limit in most places is 75-85 MPH then why do we even need the capability? I understand that the engine is designed to be capable of going to higher speeds because then it puts less strain on the engine at lower speeds and improves engine health but there should be a safety design where, despite the ability, cruise control just kinda kicks in at 85-90 with the exception to first responders, emergency, and race track vehicles.

Edit: Wow this blew up. For clarity and elaboration, I know that governors to mandate a cars speed exist, but I am advocating for this effect to be not optional but mandatory for every road vehicle, ideally manufactured in such a way where removal or tampering results in failure of the engine. Any race vehicle without one should be limited to the tracks only.

People seem to be interpreting this as me trying to prevent people from speeding? No where in my post did I say that. With a cap of 100 miles an hour people can still speed in pretty much every existing zone. That’s not what I’m saying at all. I am trying to make the point that the capability of going upwards of 120 mph on any public stretch of road in the world is absolutely not worth its weight in fun or freedom to any probable risk, nor can I name one emergency where it’s validated either.

I honestly don’t give a shit about “Waaaah what about the autobahn or this one really remote road in Texas/Australia?” I’ve come to the conclusion that the autobahn to car junkies is the equivalent palm-fantasy of going to Amsterdam to potheads. Germans have been considering implementing a speed limit there for ages because of the danger, too, so I’m sure the 3 roads in the world with no speed limit or a high speed limit will be perfectly adaptable to changing that.

April 29, 2025
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April 29, 2025

Most people shouldnt have dogs

I dont know why this is unpopular but it is. Too many people get dogs without thinking of the scope of responsibility.

You should not have a dog if you can't afford major medical bills. You should not have a dog if you need to keep it locked up 10 to 16 hours a day.

I swear people think they are some anime characters or something. "I'm going to get my loyal companion who is perfectly trained and its all perfect".

The reality is extra bills and extra responsibility that people are not prepared for. The dogs get neglected and you end up with a bigger problem.

people complain how hard it is to get a dog from the shelter but I honestly think it should be harder.

April 29, 2025
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April 29, 2025

Being late is disgustingly normalized among friends

Less so for work and such, more so among friends. It seems like most friend groups always have a handful of people who just show up 15-30 minutes late to hang out.

I find it incredibly disrespectful, mainly when they are CONSISTENTLY late. I think it’s more normalized among friends because it’s not professional in any way.

Whenever I speak up and try to call them out for being consistently late and inconsiderate, it’s casually brushed away.

I can’t fathom the idea of being late to anything, and am always apologetic on the rare occasion I am.

Edit: Kids and busses are a different story, i dont have any friends who have to deal with either, I would understand if this was a reason.

April 29, 2025
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TV > Genres > Sci-fi
April 29, 2025

Fallout - Official Trailer

April 29, 2025
1 0
April 29, 2025

‘Fallout’: Macaulay Culkin Joins Season 2 Of Prime Video Series

‘Fallout’: Macaulay Culkin Joins Season 2 Of Prime Video Series

Macaulay Culkin has joined the Season 2 cast of Fallout, Prime Video's breakout series from Kilter Films, in a recurring role
April 29, 2025
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TV
April 29, 2025

‘The Acolyte’ Canceled: No Season 2 For Disney+’s ‘Star Wars’ Series

‘The Acolyte’ Canceled: No Season 2 For Disney+’s ‘Star Wars’ Series

The story of The Acolyte will not continue, with LucasFilm opting not to proceed with Season 2 of the Star Wars offshoot starring Amandla Stenberg.
April 29, 2025
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April 29, 2025

"Weird Al" Yankovic Wants to Host 'SNL', Says He's Never Been Asked

Weird Al Yankovic Recalls Andy Samberg Calling Him for Approval Before Doing an Impression of Him on SNL (Exclusive)

Andy Samberg wanted Weird Al's blessing before tackling his iconic character on Saturday Night Live.
April 29, 2025
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April 29, 2025

Frankie Muniz says TV dad Bryan Cranston 'still reaches out & checks in on me'

Frankie Muniz says TV dad Bryan Cranston 'still reaches out to me every couple weeks, checks in on me'

Frankie Muniz and Bryan Cranston still share a strong bond years after "Malcolm in the Middle" went off the air, with Muniz recently sharing that Cranston 'checks in' on him 'every couple weeks.'
April 29, 2025
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April 23, 2025

Oblivion Gates

The Oblivion Gates look so beautiful in the remaster! #elderscrolls #oblivion

April 23, 2025
1 0
April 23, 2025

No going back

Make sure you're happy with your character build. No going back now. #elderscrolls #oblivion

April 23, 2025
1 0
April 23, 2025

And it begins again

Excited to start this baby again. #elderscrolls #oblivion

+1
April 23, 2025
1 0
April 23, 2025

Joe Rogan Experience #2308 - Jordan Peterson

April 23, 2025
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April 23, 2025

Does anybody else feel frustrated with predatory ads on podcasts?

If I get one more ad for Better Help or Quince I'm going to scream. Both of them are green washing, non-transparent and predatory. Not only that, but it seems like every single podcast these days is sponsored by them! How is it that podcasts can only be sponsored by a handful of companies?

April 23, 2025
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April 23, 2025

New Yorker recommends best podcasts of 2024

Top 5:

5. “Backfired: Attention Deficit”

This year, the reliably topnotch podcaster Leon Neyfakh (“Slow Burn,” “Fiasco”) collaborated on the new show “Backfired” with an equally strong co-host, Arielle Pardes, releasing two first-rate series—both, essentially, about drugs. Neyfakh, whose previous work has contextualized political and cultural phenomena (Iran-Contra, Watergate, Michael Jackson), applies that approach to the history of American attention spans and the uppers that deal with them. Here and in “Backfired: The Vaping Wars,” we learn about the makers of the drugs as well as their users, and the complex interplay—of mental health, anxiety, calm, focus, and, essentially, the human condition—that can make understanding and treating our problems so difficult. Neyfakh delves into more personal territory than he has in the past—turns out he’s a big vaper, and a longtime dabbler in the stimulant arts—which enhances the series’ perspective and power.

4. “Not All Propaganda Is Art”

Benjamen Walker, whose venerable podcast “The Theory of Everything” embodies the spirit of its fiercely independent, creator-driven network, Radiotopia, released a magnum opus this year—a group biography, as he calls it, of the great mid-century writers Richard Wright, Kenneth Tynan, and Dwight Macdonald, with a generous dose of James Baldwin for good measure. All of them were supported at times by the Congress for Cultural Freedom, a transatlantic postwar organization secretly funded by the C.I.A., dedicated to promoting democracy and disparaging Communism—in short, spreading propaganda—through its support of highbrow art and intellectual journals. That, in itself, is amazing. But so is getting to know these writers and their work, seeming at once lifetimes away from our world and shockingly prescient, as we contemplate big questions about art, money, racism, the postwar cultural landscape, Orwell, communism, McCarthyism, and much more, with a frisson of conspiracy theory shivering beneath it all. What did the writers know, and when did they know it? And what does it all mean? Walker delves into this whirl of ideas and intrigue with zeal; he spent four years researching, and tracking down wonderfully obscure archival audio and writing, and it sounds at every moment like he’s thrilled to blow your mind. He just might if you can keep up with his. A companion series, “Propaganda Notes & Sources,” feverishly details his research.

3. “Chameleon: The Michigan Plot”

Drawing on hundreds of hours of secretly recorded F.B.I. audio, “Chameleon: The Michigan Plot,” hosted by the investigative reporters Ken Bensinger and Jessica Garrison, delves into the world of right-wing anti-government anxiety, paranoia, and misinformation; it also delivers a novel’s worth of vivid characters, so tragicomic they feel like satire. It centers on the right-wing Michigan militia accused of planning to kidnap Governor Gretchen Whitmer in 2020, a ragtag collective of true believers unwittingly plotting alongside government informants who helped train and organize them. Bensinger and Garrison tell the story with patience and care, blending narration, interviews, and absolutely bonkers F.B.I. audio, which is scary and funny, with the quality of high-grade eavesdropping. The results poignantly reveal the intersection of the personal (loneliness, isolation, male bonding), the political, and the hyped-up misinformation landscape (TikTok news, Facebook militias) that we might now call the manosphere. From the opening scene, when we hear audio of an informant driving his giddy supposed friends to meet their sting-operation doom, “The Michigan Plot,” by bringing us into the group, captures the strange bittersweet irony of how the desire for community, and even for connection, can sometimes lead to the destruction of both.

2. “The Belgrano Diary”

“The Belgrano Diary,” a London Review of Books series hosted by the appealingly Scottish-accented writer Andrew O’Hagan, sustains an irresistible mood as it relays a horrific story—that of Britain’s 1982 sinking of the General Belgrano, the second-largest ship in Argentina’s Navy, in the early days of the Falklands War, and the political opportunism that surrounded the attack. (Borges described the war, O’Hagan says, as “two bald men fighting over a comb.”) The operation, which killed three hundred and twenty-three men, sparked patriotic fervor (“gotcha,” Rupert Murdoch’s tabloid The Sun declared) and made Margaret Thatcher a hero overnight. But the diary of Narendra Sethia, a British supply officer on the attacking submarine, sharply contradicted the government’s account and justifications; when its contents were made public, Parliament rang with war-crimes accusations. O’Hagan reinvestigates the story, tracking down seemingly every important surviving character in it, including Sethia, now living with rescue dogs on a secluded hilltop in the Caribbean. The series is full of riveting audio: O’Hagan’s thoughtful and intrepid interviews, maddening archival clips (“Rejoice!” Thatcher says), diary excerpts, and tasteful, evocative sound design (waves lapping, pen scratching across paper, hypnotic original music by Joel Cox). A masterly sequence of the attack, in which a traumatized Sethia compares the sound of the ship breaking up to the shattering of an eighteenth-century ballroom chandelier (“tinkling, tinkling, tinkling, tinkling”), is emblematic of the series’ unforgettable blend of elegance and savagery.

1. “Noble”

I don’t know what it says about me, or about this year, that my favorite podcast was about hundreds of dead bodies found in the woods, but “Noble,” unlike its subject matter, was a wonderful surprise. Hosted and reported by the Atlanta-based journalist Shaun Raviv, it’s a gripping, thoughtful, perfectly balanced meditation on death and our relationship to its practicalities, via the stunning story of the 2002 discovery of three hundred and thirty-nine bodies scattered across the grounds of a rural Georgia crematorium. The series begins with a description of the cremation process (“It takes twenty-eight gallons of fuel, and a spark, to burn a human body”), continues to a former gas man recalling an unsettling sight on a delivery (“Just the foot?” “Just the foot”), and proceeds to a well-written and thoroughly reported saga about a community trying to make sense of the incomprehensible. Campside Media, founded in 2019, has made some of the most sophisticated podcasts to come out in recent years, and like those—“Suspect” and “The Michigan Plot”—“Noble” tells a riveting, troubling story ethically and with respect for the people at its heart. As it contemplates the side of death we really don’t want to know about (“We treat dead bodies like they’re precious, sacred even, but we’re also revolted by them—the way they smell, the way they look,” Raviv says), “Noble” illuminates much about the essence of human connection

The Best Podcasts of 2024

Despite industry turmoil, old and new shows continue to innovate, whether investigating Elon Musk, high-school mysteries, or our relationship to death itself.
April 23, 2025
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April 23, 2025

What are the top 5 podcasts you loved listening to this year?

Hey everyone! As someone who’s diving deeper into podcasts, I’ve been curious about what’s catching people’s attention this year.

Whether it’s comedy, true crime or Reddit stories, I’d love to know the podcasts you couldn’t stop listening to!

Drop your top 5 below (or even just one if it’s your favorite), and let’s build an ultimate 2024 podcast list!

April 23, 2025
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April 23, 2025

Investigative journalism but NOT about murder or abuse

I saw a post recently with lots of suggestions of investigative journalism podcasts but so many were true crime. Would love any non-violent suggestions! Thank you!

April 23, 2025
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April 23, 2025

Love to see it

April 23, 2025
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April 23, 2025

My Galactus cosplay is finally finished ! Hope you like it ! Made by me with EVA

April 23, 2025
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April 23, 2025

Is this a real comic panel?

April 23, 2025
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Marvel > MCU
April 23, 2025

A moment in the MCU where your jaw dropped?

April 23, 2025
1 0
Marvel > MCU
April 23, 2025

The return of comic book accurate costumes makes me so happy

April 23, 2025
1 0
Marvel > MCU
April 23, 2025

Our comic accurate short king

April 23, 2025
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April 23, 2025

Why does anyone even lives in New York at this point?

April 23, 2025
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Marvel > MCU
April 23, 2025

Why is Hulk so underpowered in the MCU?

April 23, 2025
1 0
April 23, 2025

My son’s Halloween costume.

April 23, 2025
1 0
April 23, 2025

28 YEARS LATER – Official Trailer

April 23, 2025
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April 23, 2025

Official Poster for James Gunn’s ‘Superman’

April 23, 2025
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