SWAPPING THE RING FOR A BUS
We’ve seen it before: the “spectacle” of fights constantly trying to reinvent itself in this era of media and social overexposure. In the past, it was enough to do something different or innovative to stand out. But now, in a world flooded with endless content, one change isn’t enough; you need two or three more twists to truly grab anyone’s attention.
Creativity seems to have no limits:
fights suspended meters above the ground, battles
in pools, phone booths, and now, as in the video we’re looking at, fights inside public buses. It all boils down to the same goal: competing for those precious seconds of attention in a world where the extraordinary has become the norm.
The real question isn’t just how far they’ll go to grab your interest, but whether you, as a viewer, are still impressed—or if this endless quest for extremes has already lost its punch. Perhaps the real challenge isn’t in reinventing the stage but in finding a way to truly connect with an audience increasingly numb to the spectacle.
Meanwhile, far away: Pikachu, I choose you!
A drunk guy walks into a store and…
The day of their wedding.
THE SAME OLD HYPOCRISYI’m so fed up with this double standard. When a white cop uses force to detain a Black man, everyone rushes to scream racism and police brutality. But if it’s the other way around—if the detainee is white and the cop is Black—the narrative changes: “He must’ve done something.”
This isn’t about justice or equality; it’s about interests. Political, social, whatever—but everything is carefully calculated to polarize people, to divide us into camps, as if reality could only be seen in black and white. The worst part isn’t that they do it, but that it works. People take the bait over and over, like sheep incapable of thinking beyond the headlines they’re fed.
Now, don’t get me wrong: I’m not saying there isn’t racism or that cops never abuse their power, because there is, and plenty of it. But this narrative of “one side always being victims and the other always guilty” just doesn’t hold up. Reality is far more complex, but they simplify it to manipulate us however they want. Selling hate and division is easy, and some people benefit greatly from it—whether to gain power, stay in power, or distract from bigger issues.
What pisses me off the most is that instead of opening their eyes, many people choose to stay in their bubble, parroting whatever they read or see on TV without questioning anything. There’s no critical thinking, no questions—just hashtags and hopping on the outrage bandwagon because “that’s what you’re supposed to do.” Meanwhile, the ones pulling the strings are rubbing their hands together, watching us fight among ourselves while they keep doing whatever the hell they want.
So yeah, I’m tired of the hypocrisy—of using pain, fear, race, and real injustices to manipulate us, and of so many people not realizing they’re being played. This isn’t about Black or white; it’s about power and control, and until we figure that out, we’ll keep dancing to their tune.
A man refuses to leave a stadium during a Georgia-Florida game, and the police go all out to restrain him, even using handcuffs as brass knuckles.
# Watch videos
The slow-mo of the day.