Table of Contents Table of Contents Chevron icon It indicates an expandable section or menu, or sometimes previous / next navigation options. Things to know before you go Where to stay Things to do and see Where you should go to eat and drink Final tips before your trip Things to know before you go Where to stay Things to do and see Where you should go to eat and drink Final tips before your trip Redeem now As a lifelong Minnesotan, I compiled a list of the best things to do, see, and eat in Minneapolis.
Calif. Senior Care Facility Faces Charges in Connection with COVID Deaths Skip to content ncG1vNJzZmiolaS9rbGNnKamZ5Ontq6xjpyYpaGWYsCmusioqWabkaeybrLAnKCloaSueqetwp6qZpuYlr%2BosdJmmqimnpqwtbXOp2RqbF2YvLe1w2ZocmWUmq61tNJo
TelevisionTerrestrial television may sometimes seem old-fashioned – but this only enhances its ability to tease and surprise its audience. This week, Channel 4 brought back satire with a bang
Few people will have been happier yesterday with headlines such as “Channel 4 fans fume as Gregg Wallace ‘ends career’ after eating ‘human meat’” than Gregg Wallace. Taking advantage of his overbearingly cheery persona, the presenter has pulled off one of the best hoaxes in media history with his bogus documentary The British Miracle Meat.
Mike Tyson‘s ring walks used to send shivers down one’s spine. But, apart from the thrill the fans felt during his ring walks, the former heavyweight champion was famous for maintaining that scary persona outside of the ring. And, according to Tyson himself, he wanted people to be scared of him. As that’s the persona his father figure and trainer Cus D’amato wanted him to have. Looking back at his public appearances, it is safe to say that he perfected the art of striking fear into his opponents.
Around the beginning of lockdown this spring, alone in my apartment, I developed a little nightly routine. It involved heavy pours from a jug of Carlo Rossi and repeated spins of The Caretaker's An Empty Bliss Beyond This World, the 2011 breakthrough from a cult favorite English musician otherwise known as Leyland James Kirby. Arranged from edits of Jazz Age ballroom tunes found on forgotten 78s in dollar bins worldwide, the record is as dreamy as it is unsettling; to listen is to be stuck within the locked groove of someone else's distant memories.