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7 w

Handler Ryan Easley, Linked To ‘Tiger King,’ Killed In Brutal Big Cat Attack
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Handler Ryan Easley, Linked To ‘Tiger King,’ Killed In Brutal Big Cat Attack

'The animals under his care were not just animals to him'
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7 w

New Father Receives Letter Written By Hero Flight Attendant Mom 24 Years After 9/11
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New Father Receives Letter Written By Hero Flight Attendant Mom 24 Years After 9/11

'I know you need to see those words from your mom.'
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7 w

CNN’s Harry Enten Shocked Someone ‘As Liberal’ As AOC Polling So High Among 2028 Dems
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CNN’s Harry Enten Shocked Someone ‘As Liberal’ As AOC Polling So High Among 2028 Dems

'A tectonic shift'
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7 w

Editor Daily Rundown: Charlie Kirk’s Memorial Service Fills Football Stadium
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Editor Daily Rundown: Charlie Kirk’s Memorial Service Fills Football Stadium

CHARLIE KIRK'S MEMORIAL SERVICE FILLS NFL STADIUM WITH WORSHIP ... AN ENTIRE NFL STADIUM FILLED TO SAY GOODBYE, SO THOUSANDS MORE WENT TO A NEARBY NHL ARENA ... Charlie Kirk’s Memorial Service Is So Big, They’re Using A Former NHL Arena For Overflow Footage taken by the Daily Caller News Foundation showed a full stadium at Sunday’s memorial service for Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, necessitating the use of an arena for overflow.
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7 w

Majority Of Americans Think UN Isn’t Doing A Good Job Just Ahead Of Meeting, Poll Says
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Majority Of Americans Think UN Isn’t Doing A Good Job Just Ahead Of Meeting, Poll Says

'poor job'
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7 w

Tom Holland Rushed To Hospital When Movie Stunt Goes Wrong
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Tom Holland Rushed To Hospital When Movie Stunt Goes Wrong

'Cracked his head'
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7 w

Jonathan Turley Says Alleged Would-Be Trump Assassin Has Just 1 Hail Mary Left In His Playbook
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Jonathan Turley Says Alleged Would-Be Trump Assassin Has Just 1 Hail Mary Left In His Playbook

'Cross-examination is going to be painful'
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7 w

Commanders’ Dan Quinn Left Bloodied After Getting Smashed By His Own QB Marcus Mariota
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Commanders’ Dan Quinn Left Bloodied After Getting Smashed By His Own QB Marcus Mariota

Dan Quinn got popped by his own quarterback
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
7 w

Zeb Returns, Jeremy Allen White Bulks Up as a Hutt, and Sigourney Weaver Saves Snacks in The Mandalorian and Grogu Trailer
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Zeb Returns, Jeremy Allen White Bulks Up as a Hutt, and Sigourney Weaver Saves Snacks in The Mandalorian and Grogu Trailer

News The Mandalorian and Grogu Zeb Returns, Jeremy Allen White Bulks Up as a Hutt, and Sigourney Weaver Saves Snacks in The Mandalorian and Grogu Trailer Good shot, baby. By Molly Templeton | Published on September 22, 2025 Screenshot: Lucasfilm Comment 0 Share New Share Screenshot: Lucasfilm It’s always nice to see old friends, even if it’s not super clear what sort of adventure they’re on these days. The first trailer for Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu is here, and it’s … I’m going to go with “lightly perplexing.” Charming, sure, and Ludwig Göransson’s theme is immediately evocative. But there’s almost no dialogue, which always feels a bit concerning, and there’s a definite sense that the sometimes heavy adventures of these two are being lightened up for theater audiences. According to The Hollywood Reporter, “The trailer was supposed to be released last week but was pushed repeatedly (possibly due to Disney’s ongoing Jimmy Kimmel mess dominating the headlines).” Here’s Disney’s summary of what happens in the film, via StarWars.com: The evil Empire has fallen, and Imperial warlords remain scattered throughout the galaxy. As the fledgling New Republic works to protect everything the Rebellion fought for, they have enlisted the help of legendary Mandalorian bounty hunter Din Djarin (Pedro Pascal) and his young apprentice Grogu (as himself).This clan of two is ready for the fight! A brand-new Razor Crest has landed in our first look at the highly-anticipated next chapter in the Mandalorian’s story, alongside glimpses of Din Djarin and Grogu on their next adventure! “As himself.” Okay, can’t argue with that. I do quite appreciate that the writers of this movie seem to have realized that having a two-seater ship on which no one could ever sleep or use a space toilet was not super practical for this clan of two. Well done, folks. This trailer is packed with little teases: Rebels’ Zeb Orrelios appears (though the filmmakers still fear his true purpleness); there’s a brief glimpse of Jeremy Allen White’s jacked Hutt character that also supplies a new eating-popcorn gif for your meme needs; Sigourney Weaver stops Grogu from stealing her snacks, which may make her a villain in some hearts; and one of the few good parts of The Rise of Skywalker, Babu Frik, returns for more funtimes. Just about everybody turns up on the poster, which really leans into the whole space Western vibe. (Zeb is still not purple enough.) The inclusion of Zeb could, maybe, possibly indicate more crossover action; it’s not yet known when the second season of Ahsoka will be released, but one certainly suspects that they’re eventually going to reunite the surviving gang from the Ghost. These stories take place in the same post-Return of the Jedi timeline, so may or may not overlap in The Mandalorian and Grogu. Dave Filoni is expected to eventually make a film tying all the stories from this era together, so it is entirely fair to presume some connections. Jon Favreau directs The Mandalorian and Grogu; IMDb credits Favreau and Filoni as writers, though StarWars.com finds this information unnecessary. It was filmed for IMAX—a big leap from our TV screens—and is in theaters May 22, 2026.[end-mark] The post Zeb Returns, Jeremy Allen White Bulks Up as a Hutt, and Sigourney Weaver Saves Snacks in <i>The Mandalorian and Grogu</i> Trailer appeared first on Reactor.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
7 w

Creatures of the Abyss: An Exercise in Science-Fictional Thinking
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Creatures of the Abyss: An Exercise in Science-Fictional Thinking

Column SFF Bestiary Creatures of the Abyss: An Exercise in Science-Fictional Thinking There are alien worlds to discover right on our own planet… By Judith Tarr | Published on September 22, 2025 Photo by David Clode [via Unsplash] Comment 0 Share New Share Photo by David Clode [via Unsplash] Humans have a habit of making everything about them. Animals are compared to humans, seen in relation to them, evaluated according to how well or how badly they stack up to human capabilities. Are they useful in some way? Can we eat them, ride them, turn their bodies into clothing or weapons, vehicles or houses? Environments, same thing. Can we live there? Is it comfortable for us? If not, how do we alter it to fit? When we imagine living in it, we impose human standards on it. Even when we’re trying to stay objective, when we’re describing a creature or a place that’s not perfectly human-friendly, we still talk about it in human terms. It’s about making it relatable. A whale is as big as a bus or as long as X fraction of a football field. The depths of the ocean are horribly dark and cold and the pressure is crushing. It’s totally alien and inhospitable. Science fiction can challenge us to change the way we think. Question our assumptions. Reorient ourselves to a different world. Embrace the alien, and try to understand it on its own terms. When we think alien, we tend to think extraterrestrial. Something not from this planet. And yet parts of this world are, by human standards, downright weird. More than two-thirds of its surface is covered in water, some of it literally miles deep. We’ve only just begun to realize how much is down there. The deepest part of any ocean is the Mariana Trench in the Pacific, which goes down as far as 36,000 feet (11,000 meters). There’s no sunlight below 1200 feet (365 meters), and no light at all past 3300 feet (1000 meters), except what organisms may generate through bioluminescence. The water pressure increases tremendously. Plants can’t grow down there. It’s all animals, all the way down, clear to the bottom. Life has evolved for these conditions. Organisms feed on each other, or on the rain of organic matter from above, everything from microorganisms to the bodies of deceased whales that sink down and down to nourish an amazing variety of creatures. There’s a kind of worm called the zombie worm or bone worm that lives on the fat inside the bones. Talk about the human perspective: there’s nightmare fodder there, creepier than secret government installations or prehistoric mega-sharks or alien invaders lurking in the depths. I happened across a meme from the site formerly known as Twitter, from 2023, by someone named Victoria: At a certain ocean depth every creature is either:MURDERFANG: a 3-foot-long fish with bioluminescent teeth that looks like it’s from ALIENSea Friend: a 1-inch-long jellyfish that propels itself around with cute little farts. it’s always smiling, it’s god’s favorite little guy To which a poster named gravityeyelids replied, #also murderfang is completely safe but touching sea friend for 0.01 s[econd] can kill 500 people which may be a bit of an exaggeration (or maybe not), but there are some really scary things down there, and the ones that look the scariest aren’t necessarily the most dangerous. Like the anglerfish down around 6500 feet (2000 meters) with her little head lantern and her enormous snaggly teeth and the tiny little polyp that’s what’s left of her husband after he literally joined with her to make baby anglerfish. She’s deadly to other fish, but she’s not death to all that lives. Down below the realm of the anglerfish, the deadly gives way to the weirdly cute. The deepest of all the deep-sea octopuses, the dumbo octopus, lives around 10,000 to 13,000 feet (2000 to 3000 meters) and has been found as far down as 23,000 feet (7000 meters). This species of octopus has a different mouth structure than its relatives; it swallows its prey whole rather than biting or grinding it. Its body has an internal structure of cartilage that supports it at the crushing pressure of the depths; unlike shallow-water octopuses, it can’t squeeze through minuscule openings. A pair of earlike fins propel it through the water (hence the reference to the Disney elephant with the flying ears). The dumbo octopus shares its range with a downright adorable fish, the snailfish. These are the deepest of all deep-sea fish that we’ve come across so far. They’ve been found all the way down to 26,000 feet (8000 meters). They’re a soft, tadpole-like fish, with a smooth or bumpy skin, and a big head with a sucker on the underside, for attaching to the sea bottom or a suitable surface. They aren’t very big, a foot long (30 centimeters) at the most. And there are a lot of them, over a hundred different species, with more being discovered as scientists explore the deepest of the deep sea. From the human point of view, these creatures live in a hell of darkness, cold, and brutal pressure. But when we’re lucky enough to get video, they look perfectly cheerful, swimming along and living their lives in a world as alien to us as the storms of Jupiter. It’s home to them. They’re adapted to it. They belong there. Someday we may encounter life on other planets, and find even more amazing and wonderful variations. But until we get there, there are whole worlds to discover on our own planet, new forms of life, new species, new versions of those we’ve met before. Some of them live in environments that we would never have imagined, in conditions that we once considered inhospitable to life—the bottom of the ocean, the areas around hydrothermal vents. It’s illuminating, and humbling, to realize how little we really know of what’s down there, and how much there still is to learn.[end-mark] The post Creatures of the Abyss: An Exercise in Science-Fictional Thinking appeared first on Reactor.
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