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It’s Friday. And that can only mean one thing: time to hunt... chaos.
The Ghostbusters have ditched the proton packs for shots and rolled-up joints, and tonight’s mission isn’t to save the world — it’s to burn it just a little.
Booze, weed, laughter, and that “we’ll deal with Monday later” vibe.
There’s no plot. No logic. Just a whole lot of trouble waiting to happen — and a solid reason to celebrate the weekend.
ExtraBall by david
And here we go again, wasting more paper.
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There was a time, back in the '90s, when going to the movies felt like a weekend ritual. Every Friday brought new and varied releases. There was always something that grabbed your attention—maybe a wild comedy, an action flick full of explosions, or a story that hit you right in the feels. Not every movie was a masterpiece, but most of them did the job: they entertained you, made you laugh, pulled you in. And the best part? You walked out of the theater feeling like it was worth it, like you hadn't been ripped off. (Back then, 4 euros got you a ticket, popcorn, and a drink.)
Nowadays, though, it’s hard to find something that actually makes you want to pay for the big screen experience. Weeks can go by without a single release that doesn’t feel recycled, predictable, or just plain boring. I don’t know if it’s me getting pickier, the industry running out of ideas and cash, or a mix of both. But in this case, it really does feel like the “good old days” weren’t just nostalgia—things really were better back then.
DC just dropped a nearly five-minute clip on YouTube featuring David Corenswet as Superman, along with his dog, Krypto. The video shows a wounded Superman in a frozen, icy setting.
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You know that photo you take at 4 in the morning? Drink in hand, a crooked smile, your friends yelling without even knowing why.
That picture you look at the next day thinking, "At what point did we lose control?"
Now imagine that — but with celebrities. Toasting, dancing, letting loose, and completely out of control, just like it should be.
Because the best stories never start with "I went home early," but with "You won’t believe what happened last night."
Tonight’s not about keeping it classy. It’s about raising your glass, laughing till it hurts, and letting Friday be Friday.
If not today, when?
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david
Remember the speeder bikes from Star Wars? Those flying bikes that raced through the forests of Endor at breakneck speed? Well, a guy named Tomasz Patan has been working on something very similar: a real-world speeder bike, and he’s calling it Volonaut.
In a video he shared on Instagram, you can see a compact flying bike that looks straight out of the galaxy far, far away. It’s a bit shorter and chunkier than the ones from the movies, but it still nails that futuristic vibe that makes you want to jump on and take off.
What’s really cool is that Patan has been building this thing in "stealth mode," and now he's finally ready to show it off. There aren’t many technical details yet, but just seeing a real speeder bike in action is enough to get anyone pumped.
For those of us who grew up dreaming about riding one of these, this is one giant leap closer to making that fantasy real. We might not be able to buy one just yet, but hey, at least we can watch them fly and keep dreaming.
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Can you picture Rocky pulling out his phone right after knocking out Ivan Drago to snap a sweaty victory selfie? Or Freddy Krueger striking a pose with his burnt-up face while someone sleeps peacefully behind him? How about Mr. Miyagi sneaking a quick photo just as Daniel LaRusso goes for the legendary crane kick?
Yeah… classic movie moments, legendary scenes—and a phone that was never really there.
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There’s something oddly beautiful about seeing movie heroes and villains getting along like old friends. Like they paused the explosions for a sec just to snap a photo, share a drink, or take a selfie with zero hard feelings.
Bruce Willis and the bad guy from Die Hard, hugging and toasting like the Nakatomi Plaza was just your average office party. Arnold filming a selfie video with Predator, like “you tried to rip my head off, but man, what a blast we had.” And Sarah Connor, full “I survived the apocalypse” vibe, casually posing with the T-800 as they share an ice cream like two besties at a county fair.
It’s like the script takes a break, the action freezes, and for a moment, it’s just two people having a laugh.
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We don’t have flying cars. We don’t have hoverboards like in Back to the Future. No colonies on Mars, no robots making us coffee in the morning, no self-drying clothes, no food in pill form, no cure for the common cold, no suits that make us invisible, no Star Wars-style holograms, no teleportation, no virtual vacations like in Total Recall, no time machines, no personal jets to get us to work, no chips that teach us kung fu in 10 seconds or implants that translate languages instantly…
But hey — we do have this.
ExtraBall
Cutting the line without anyone saying a word? Totally doable... if you know how to play your cards right.
Her name’s Gia Derza, and you can check out plenty of her scenes right here
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