YubNub Social YubNub Social
    #covid #music #bible #america #trombone #atw #militarymusic #armymusic #god #armyband #atw2026 #tyranny #jesuschrist #jazz #quartet
    Advanced Search
  • Login
  • Register

  • Day mode
  • © 2026 YubNub Social
    About • Directory • Contact Us • Developers • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • shareasale • FB Webview Detected • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

    Select Language

  • English
Night mode toggle
Featured Content
Community
New Posts (Home) ChatBox Popular Posts Reels Game Zone Top PodCasts
Explore
Explore
© 2026 YubNub Social
  • English
About • Directory • Contact Us • Developers • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • shareasale • FB Webview Detected • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App
Advertisement
Stop Seeing These Ads

Discover posts

Posts

Users

Pages

Blog

Market

Events

Games

Forum

The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

Piglets Experience Snow For The First Time & Can’t Stop Squealing About It!
Favicon 
www.inspiremore.com

Piglets Experience Snow For The First Time & Can’t Stop Squealing About It!

Any living being discovering their first snowfall has a magical experience. Seeing an animal running in a sea of glistening white snow is a glorious sight. Kittens try to catch the snowflakes as they fall. Their little paws reaching for the delicate crystals is too cute. Pandas are a little less graceful, but they enjoy snow too. But pigs discovering a barnyard full of snow is hilarious. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Piggins and Banks (@pigginsandbanks) Most of these little piglets have never seen snow before. They were hesitant to leave the barn at first. But as they each ventured further from the safety of their pen, they discovered the wonders of snow. It isn’t difficult to walk in, so after the first few hesitant steps, they lept full speed ahead. The little pigs scampered through the snow, squealing with joy. After realizing that they could eat the snow, many little pigs stopped to grab a bite. These little animals from Piggins and Banks Pig and Animal Sanctuary are living their best life during their first snowfall. Image from Instagram. Located in Cross Junction, Virginia, the farm doesn’t get a lot of snow. They typically have a few snowfalls yearly, with only a few inches remaining. This year, the snowfall came early and dropped a significant amount for the northern Virginia town. So when the piglets romped and played, they had a blast. The big pigs might not have been experiencing their first snowfall, but they spent time in the falling snow enjoying a meal. Image from Instagram. The refuge provides a home for unwanted and surrendered pigs and other animals needing help. The farm is on the Riddle Family’s 34-acre parcel. They promote education and empathy toward neglected animals. Please share these adorable pigs enjoying the snow. You can find the source of this story’s featured image here. The post Piglets Experience Snow For The First Time & Can’t Stop Squealing About It! appeared first on InspireMore.
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
1 y

‘Tired Of The Venom’: Fetterman Defends Mar-A-Lago Visit To Anti-Trump ‘View’ Co-Host
Favicon 
dailycaller.com

‘Tired Of The Venom’: Fetterman Defends Mar-A-Lago Visit To Anti-Trump ‘View’ Co-Host

'What was your goal'
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
1 y

Trump’s ICE Bags Two Suspected Terrorists In First Week Of Sprawling Deportation Op
Favicon 
dailycaller.com

Trump’s ICE Bags Two Suspected Terrorists In First Week Of Sprawling Deportation Op

'Make America Safe Again'
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
1 y

REPORT: Battle Over Thermostat Turns Deadly Between Miami-Dade Landlord, Tenant
Favicon 
dailycaller.com

REPORT: Battle Over Thermostat Turns Deadly Between Miami-Dade Landlord, Tenant

'I was able to recognize that something wrong was happening in my backyard'
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
1 y

Kamala Harris’ Husband Has Found His Next Gig
Favicon 
dailycaller.com

Kamala Harris’ Husband Has Found His Next Gig

'I couldn’t be more thrilled'
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
1 y

AI Detectors: Safeguarding Originality in the Digital Age
Favicon 
dailycaller.com

AI Detectors: Safeguarding Originality in the Digital Age

Artificial intelligence (AI) has transformed how people create and consume content. From students using AI tools to write essays to businesses leveraging machine learning for marketing campaigns, the potential of AI seems limitless. Yet, there’s growing concern as the line between human and machine-generated content becomes harder to discern. Questions abound surrounding issues such as […]
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
1 y

Selena Gomez Blubbers Over Deportations From Her Hollywood Mansion
Favicon 
dailycaller.com

Selena Gomez Blubbers Over Deportations From Her Hollywood Mansion

'All my people are getting attacked'
Like
Comment
Share
The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

Officer Crowdfunds $40K for Pizza Driver Who Only Got $2 Tip in Snowstorm Delivery
Favicon 
www.goodnewsnetwork.org

Officer Crowdfunds $40K for Pizza Driver Who Only Got $2 Tip in Snowstorm Delivery

When a pizza delivery driver walked away from the door of an affluent house with nothing but a $2 tip, he didn’t realize it would change his life. $2 dollars doesn’t sound like much, but it earned the attention of a local police officer, who, astounded and distraught with the lack of generosity shown to […] The post Officer Crowdfunds $40K for Pizza Driver Who Only Got $2 Tip in Snowstorm Delivery appeared first on Good News Network.
Like
Comment
Share
SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
1 y

Severance Welcomes Us Back to Lumon Industries With a Perfect One-Two Punch of Episodes
Favicon 
reactormag.com

Severance Welcomes Us Back to Lumon Industries With a Perfect One-Two Punch of Episodes

Movies & TV Severance Severance Welcomes Us Back to Lumon Industries With a Perfect One-Two Punch of Episodes If you’re not watching yet, they welcome your contrition. By Molly Templeton | Published on January 27, 2025 Image: Apple TV+ Comment 0 Share New Share Image: Apple TV+ It’s not that I’m a little late to start reviewing the second season of Apple TV+’s outstanding Severance; it’s that, like the innies on Lumon’s severed floor, I’m starting at my appointed staggered time. And what a time it is. While I am generally a huge proponent of weekly episodes of television, in this particular instance I couldn’t have been happier to watch the first and second episodes of this season at once. The first resets the status quo, as was basically inevitable when a corporation as big (206 countries!) and alarming as Lumon is in charge. The second undermines half of what we learn in the first, answers just a few questions, and raises countless more. Here there be spoilers! “Hello, Ms. Cobel,” the first episode, is nigh claustrophobic, seen only from the perspective of the innies, who feel as if they were on the outside, seeing their outies’ lives, only seconds before. (How much time has really passed is definitely up for debate.) Season one built to this moment of transference with precise pacing, from the introduction of furious and determined-to-escape new teammate Helly (Britt Lower) to each little step that led to Dylan (Zach Cherry) discovering the “overtime contingency” when Mr. Milchick (Tramell Tillman) woke innie Dylan up in a closet that belonged to his outie. That bell (app) could not be un-rung. Outside, inside, innies, outies: Just trying to describe any of this makes it sound even more upsetting and strange than it is. I spent all of the first season thinking not just about fucked-up notions of work-life balance, of how many companies would just love to have employees with no outer lives, of how warped a culture has to be to want to wall off parts of people—but, of course, about capitalism, about complicity and ignorance, about what work is for and what it becomes, and about people’s sense of self-worth and how that gets tied up in work.  “What do you do?” is so often just a less overt way for asking “What’s your job?” and we ask it to make small talk because it’s what most people expect. Severance is a terrible idea, one in which some part of a person ceases to be a person and some other part becomes well and truly defined by their existence at work in a way that is no longer metaphor. But what if someone asked what you do and you literally couldn’t tell them? Would it be freeing? Would it be nightmarish?  I am in no way advocating for severance, to be clear. But I’ve been thinking about my own and my country’s relationship to work for a long time. (Thank you, Miya Tokumitsu, for Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness.) And that informs how I watch this show, in part. I also watch it as a captivating and heartbreaking drama about people who really don’t know themselves. The three innies stepping into their outies’ lives at the end of season one—Helly, Mark (Adam Scott) and Irv (John Turturro)—each experienced a crushing moment of disconnect or, unexpectedly, possible reconnection. Helly awoke in the shoes of Helena Eagan, presumably heir to Lumon itself, a wealthy and well-connected woman who took a severed job in order to make it more palatable to the masses and/or the investors and/or the government. Mark discovered his supposedly dead wife was somehow Ms. Casey (Dichen Lachman), the just-fired wellness counselor at Lumon. And Irv found that the outie of Burt (Christopher Walken), the innie object of his considerable affection, was married, or at least partnered, and clearly quite happy. All I wanted, at the start of season two, was to find out what follows these revelations. So of course Severance creator Dan Erickson (who wrote the episode) gives us everything else.  Image: Apple TV+ Mark returns to work to find a new team (that includes Alia Shawkat and Bob Balaban, who I hope return) and a new management structure, with Milchick replacing Cobel (Patricia Arquette), and a new hire, the alarmingly young Miss Huang (Sarah Bock), in the Milchick role, wearing his customary short-sleeved white shirts (though his were button-downs, and hers is a polo). Do we have questions about child labor laws in the fictional town of Keir, PE? We sure do. The wellness office is gone. The supply closet is different. Everything is normal and weird and terrible and Milchick tells him it has been five months and they’re all famous on the outside, which is one of many clues that the man is possibly more full of shit than ever. (This is, sort of, complimentary. I am fascinated with Milchick.) He claims everyone else refused to come back. Mark pitches a fit, and gets his team back. Why? How? Does this not seem too easy? My notes about this episode say mostly “Nothing feels real,” because nothing feels real. It’s innie-time all the time; it’s endless white corridors and a sense of disorientation, even as they get reoriented to the new and supposedly improved Lumon. The break room film is not an improvement. (The weird tidbits it drops about Lumon are intriguing, though.) The claim of no surveillance makes surveillance seem even more inevitable. Also, Helly is lying, and Irv is beyond distraught.  I’m actually not sure Helly is lying. She’s so sure of herself, so guileless, that I immediately wondered if Lumon had developed severanception. Severance inside of severance. Can she not know? Has her Helena-self somehow ensured that Helly has no more ammunition to use from the inside? Would she lie to stay in Mark’s good graces? Is this actually Helena, pretending to be an innie? She does seem off in ways that are hard to pinpoint. As for Irv, he simply breaks my heart. He appears in the elevator still banging on a door—he has shifted from Burt’s door to the office, with no pause to breathe. The scene in which he tries to walk out, knowing that is the end of him as a person, is crushing; Turturro is masterful and reserved and lost, and it was wise to give Dylan this moment of real connection and affection, as he is so often the joker and the poker-at-things. And we still don’t know what happened between Burt and Irv’s outies when the overtime contingency ended. The first episode felt, on its own, like a story about how hope can drive a person to return to a terrible, untenable situation. But there’s also the simple fact that Irv’s heartbreak highlights: Innies come back to Lumon—their outies allow them, or force them, to come back—or they don’t exist. They are at the mercy of themselves. Image: Apple TV+ It’s not until episode two that Mark’s own heartbreak comes in. It is oddly easy to forget, when you spend a lot of screen time with innie Mark, that outie Mark is so deeply, deeply fucked up. These two episodes side by side show the range Adam Scott brings to this role; while innie Mark is curious and determined, outie Mark doesn’t even want to talk about what his innie self may or may not have learned. And everyone is so delicate with him that they are willing to play along, at least for a while. “Goodbye, Mrs. Selvig” is all outie time, and we spend more time with the other outies than ever before: Dylan trying to get a job at a door company (listen, the “door prize” joke was good) and being rejected for being severed; Irv making weird phone calls while Burt looks on from his dark car. I am still anxious to know about Irv’s trunk, his map, his list of severed employees.  And there’s cool, cold, level-headed Helena, who tells Milchick to let Keir’s hand guide him as regards the team’s employment, so he fires them, only to bring them back when Mark makes his demands. Mark is inexplicably important to Cold Harbor, their current project, which has to do with Ms. Casey-maybe-aka-Gemma, Mark’s not-so-dead wife. (This entire situation brings new horrors to the whole idea of the numbers eliciting emotions.) The Lumon employees we’ve met have generally been disarmingly cool and scary-calm except when they’re not; I’m sort of waiting for Helena to snap the way we’ve seen Ms. Cobel snap. Or Selvig. (Sometimes you don’t have to be severed to be two different people, wink nudge.) Image: Apple TV+ Episode two shows us more of this world, from Helena’s behavior and power to Dylan’s glumness, but it also brings the main story back to Mark, who was the only outie we saw in the first season until the finale. This is a gift in part because it gives us more Devon (Jen Tullock), who I adore despite her questionable taste in men. The show needs her, and Mark needs her, because she is moderately in touch with her feelings and can’t ignore the baffling possibility of Gemma being alive. Mark is not much capable of hope, at this point, but Devon is, and Devon pushes him, and then he winds up yelling at Ms. Cobel in the street (which bothers none of their nonexistent neighbors) and her freakout, paradoxically, maybe, maybe, lights a tiny spark of hope for himself. (Also, yes, she’s driving a white Rabbit, he has to follow the white rabbit, which could be a nod to a lot of things; I choose to believe it means things are going to make even less sense from here.) Maybe. Everything is maybe! These two episodes go so solidly hand in hand that when the second one ended, I immediately wondered if someone on YouTube had edited them into one two-hour chronological story. As a pair, they are evil and delicious. Season-opening episodes of ongoing shows are often hard to really chew on because there is so much resetting, so many moving parts being pushed around to get the characters to wherever they need to be for the next stage. Here, that place is right back where they started, but armed with new info. Much like us, the audience. What we have, and what they have, is more connective tissue, more lines to draw between the innies and the outies. I’m not a madcap theorizer so much as someone who gets hung up on little emotional beats: Mark walking out of the diner, Irv trying to walk out of his own existence, Helena watching her innie kiss Mark over and over again. And also Mr. Milchick’s motorcycle. Is he the most mystifying person at Lumon? Nah. It’s not a contest. But I want to know more about him this season, and I want more of the horrifying reality created by Keir Eagan: This is clearly a religion as much as a corporation (the handbook is like five bibles!) and it has its own frickin’ town. With birthing cabins and punk shows in alleys. And a woman who both seems to be in charge and seems to be at the mercy of the company PR person and a dicey-seeming security-looking guy.  Image: Apple TV+ The entirety of Helena/Helly is a work of art, from the character-building to the way Britt Lower adjusts her posture, her walk, her face; when she’s Helena, it’s like there are more planes there (credit to the makeup team on that, too). There are so many power struggles going on with(in) her at every moment: Her innie tried to kill her, but her crisis control team insists she still has to go back to the severed floor in order to get Mark to do whatever it is she needs to do. She’s clearly in control of some things, but gives Milchick the choice to fire or not fire the team. She watches that video of herself over and over again, and she makes another video, a bullshit public statement that is so typical as to be extra horrifying. Of course a corporation (that’s maybe also a cult) would do this instead of doing anything real. Of course they’re telling the public one thing and the innies another. Of course their reforms are all just hot air, just like they so often are when corporations claim to make them out here in outie-land. It is, how should I say … timely. Bites From the Snack Machine Did you know it was Keanu Reeves voicing the Lumon building in that demented break room video? I did not. I was too engrossed to notice. I’m obsessed with the color coding in this show, the outfits, the way Milchick now wears blue instead of white (his office has more blue, too), the way Helena’s dress contains the colors her innie wears (except that time she wore the yellow dress), the two-tone candle Ms. Cobel took from Mark’s basement and put in Ms. Casey’s wellness room last season, the colors the Macrodata Refinement office lighting can make when they want it to,, the purple in the previous conference room. I don’t know what they mean, but I can’t stop noticing them. What! Does Irv! Know! About the Elevator! To the Testing Floor!!! So very curious that the name Mark made up for his sister was Persephone; you know, the mythological character whose descent to the underworld coincides with winter, which seems to be the only season in this town.  I will wonder about the senator’s wife and her severed birth experience forever.  Ms. Cobel saying “I welcome your contrition” to Helena was kind of terrifying. New title sequence is weird and unsettling AF. But not as weird and unsettling as the words “Fetid moppet” said with blistering scorn. What did Helena do to earn that? It wasn’t just the gala. Did anything that the other MDR team said make sense? Brooms??!? BUT ARE THE BABY GOATS OKAY?[end-mark] The post <i>Severance</i> Welcomes Us Back to Lumon Industries With a Perfect One-Two Punch of Episodes appeared first on Reactor.
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
1 y

New Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth Shows Changes Already in Motion
Favicon 
www.dailysignal.com

New Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth Shows Changes Already in Motion

THE CENTER SQUARE—Pete Hegseth, the newly-confirmed U.S. secretary of defense, says changes to the military are already in motion.  Hegseth told reporters outside the Pentagon Monday that President Donald Trump will soon authorize the reinstatement of military members who were discharged for refusing to take the COVID-19 vaccine, with backpay. He also hinted that military bases renamed under the Biden administration will revert to their original names. This includes Fort Moore and Fort Liberty, originally known as Fort Benning and Fort Bragg, the names of Confederate officers. “Our job is lethality and readiness and warfighting, and we are going to hold people accountable,” Hegseth told reporters on the Pentagon’s steps. The Senate voted 51-50 late Friday to confirm Hegseth, with Vice President JD Vance casting the tie-breaking vote. Former Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., along with Sens. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, and Susan Collins, R-Maine, voted no. “Effective management of nearly 3 million military and civilian personnel, an annual budget of nearly $1 trillion, and alliances and partnerships around the world is a daily test with staggering consequences for the security of the American people and our global interests,” McConnell said Friday night. “Mr. Hegseth has failed, as yet, to demonstrate that he will pass this test.” The veteran and former Fox News host has faced allegations of abusing alcohol, mismanaging nonprofit funds, and sexual assault, which he denies. All Democratic senators voted against Hegseth. The Senate Armed Services Committee recommended his nomination with a 14-13 vote. Ranking member on Senate Foreign Relations committee Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., said Thursday that Hegseth’s “11th-hour conversion” on the roles of women in the military and the importance of NATO “raises questions about what he really believes.” “Any inconsistency in our commitment to support our allies and partners, to support democracy around the world, to support the international world order—that is going to be seen and exploited by our adversaries,” she said. As defense secretary, Hegseth has promised he will root out social justice initiatives and partisan politics in the military, focusing instead on merit-based recruiting, effective deterrence, and overall lethality. “Thank you for your confidence Mr. President. Thank you for the tie-breaker Mr. Vice President. Thank you Senators for 50 votes,” Hegseth posted on X following the vote. “This is for the troops. For the warriors. For our country. America First. Every day. We will never back down.” Originally published by The Center Square The post New Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth Shows Changes Already in Motion appeared first on The Daily Signal.
Like
Comment
Share
Showing 59746 out of 118863
  • 59742
  • 59743
  • 59744
  • 59745
  • 59746
  • 59747
  • 59748
  • 59749
  • 59750
  • 59751
  • 59752
  • 59753
  • 59754
  • 59755
  • 59756
  • 59757
  • 59758
  • 59759
  • 59760
  • 59761
Advertisement
Stop Seeing These Ads

Edit Offer

Add tier








Select an image
Delete your tier
Are you sure you want to delete this tier?

Reviews

In order to sell your content and posts, start by creating a few packages. Monetization

Pay By Wallet

Payment Alert

You are about to purchase the items, do you want to proceed?

Request a Refund