k-state alum by choice. nebraska/gonzaga fan by birth. sports junkie. data guy. movie enjoyer (filmtwt). big fan of public transportation. bi đŸłïžâ€đŸŒˆ

Joined June 2013
1,073 Photos and videos
Jordan retweeted
Disclosure Day hive we are up
Spielberg’s DISCLOSURE DAY crossed the $100M mark worldwide yesterday, 4 days after its domestic opening. It’s now the fastest original film to hit the century milestone this decade, outperforming SINNERS and HOPPERS.
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I mean, this confirms that the agent also knew. Who the fuck would sign their kid up with this dude now? His career should be over.
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NEW: Brendan Sorsby's agent, Ron Slavin, claims Cincinnati knew about the gambling addiction and took no action: “If anybody should be questioned or catching heat, it should be Cincinnati. Because they knew for two years and never said anything or didn’t do anything about it. That’s the part of the story that gets lost.” (via @1053thefan) on3.com/news/brendan-sorsby-

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Jordan retweeted
An old friend is showing out for Kansas City’s first World Cup match ever. Still a work in progress, but check the illumination in the skies tonight.
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we do this
What do Americans do with all these big stadiums?
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Jordan retweeted
Hot Take: They should run Inde Navarrette in whatever category makes her an Academy Award Nominated actress.
We've spent years arguing that horror performances deserve to be taken seriously. So why are people already trying to move INDE NAVARRETTE into the supporting category for OBSESSION? The film belongs to her. If there's an Oscar campaign, it should be for Best Actress. Ranting: [dreadcentral.com/news/577142
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Admitting to not having watched a movie that is “baffling” you at the box office is pretty funny
It's genuinely baffling why THIS one is such a historical box office winner. No shade to the film - I hear its solid, even from people who usually dislike contemporary horror - but idk why it's lit the world on fire to this degree. Just weird!
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Jordan retweeted
I'm not claiming Disclosure Day to be a masterpiece, but some of the criticism is excessive and reveals a basic lack of media literacy. Someone is recalling a traumatic childhood event where they were visited by strange creatures and it's set in a fairy tale cottage where the CGI looks weird? What do you think that might mean? Does it mean the studio couldn't afford good CGI, or was it trying to tell you something about the way we process traumatic childhood events which we don't understand? Use your brain a little. A lot of the criticism is from people simply refusing to engage with the film on its level and being outraged that they don't understand what it's trying to say. In some ways, you have to have a pretty high level of esoteric alien knowledge to really get all the meanings.
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Jordan retweeted
There will be no private DMs. People want transparency and accountability so we’re going do this right here in public. You can start by apologizing to all impacted and then reimburse them all of their expenses with extra flight credit/money for the trouble caused.
Replying to @landondonovan
Hi Landon. We're sorry to hear this and want to take a look. When you can, please send us a DM with your confirmation number. x.com/messages/compose?recip

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If you’re complaining about this, that means you tip less than 20% and shouldn’t be eating out anyway đŸ€·â€â™‚ïž
Been hearing about a hidden “World Cup fee” on many restaurant and bar tabs around KC. Must ask for itemized receipts. True or false?
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Also lmfao at calling a gratuity a “fee.” These are the people that want no tax on tips and support minimum tipped wages under $4/hour btw. They should be pumped about this.
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We are ruled by the dumbest people imaginable.
24 Jun 2025
A government agency spending $300 million in taxpayer dollars to produce sterilized flies sounds like a dream scenario for a DOGE team looking to cut waste, fraud, and abuse. newsmax.com/platinum/screwwo

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Jordan retweeted
I was just arrested for trying to make The Office today
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With Sorsby leaving, now Tech can’t even get the good will back. They forever tainted themselves for a guy that was there for five days in the offseason 😭
The University of Michigan has canceled a scheduled volleyball match against Texas Tech and UM plans to hold further discussions with its athletic staff on prohibiting contests against the Red Raiders, similar to Nebraska and Georgia, sources tell @YahooSports.
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Sources: Texas Tech transfer quarterback Brendan Sorsby plans to enter the NFL Supplemental Draft. Amid the legal wrangling over his NCAA eligibility after admitting he bet on sports, he intends to head to the NFL.
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Ken Paxton has never been accused of being smart.
The Big 12 has gone to federal court to ask permission to have a conviction. There was a time when a conference could simply disapprove of a player who bet on his own team's games. Now it needs a declaratory judgment first. The Texas AG's threatening letter to the Big 12 was an unforced error of the first order. Strip it out and there's no lawsuit— because there's no justiciable controversy. A conference privately mulling a sanctions vote isn't a "case"; it's a meeting. The AG's 200M per se antitrust threat is what manufactured the ripeness, handed the Big 12 its MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc hook, and let Sidley walk into federal court in Dallas with a complaint instead of a press release. Paxton's office didn't just pick a fight— it wrote the other side's standing argument for them, then signed it. Now TTU and the AG get to defend a theory the Oklahoma AG already called "facially absurd," in a real courtroom, against a national firm on its home turf. The letter was meant to intimidate. It functioned as service of process. The complaint itself is well made, and its strongest section is also its most dangerous. Paragraphs 32 through 36 are devastating on TTU's hypocrisy: TTU voted for the Baylor sanctions in 2017 and now insists the conference has no power to sanction anyone. That is good lawyering, and it should sting. But it cuts both ways. Baylor was sanctioned after findings, through process, for institutional conduct. The Big 12 wants to sanction TTU preemptively, for fielding a player a Texas court has enjoined the NCAA from declaring ineligible. The state court injunction is the elephant in the room, and paragraph 62 works very hard not to look at it— "this isn't about the injunction." But it is. The District Court of Lubbock County enjoined the NCAA from barring Brendan Sorsby from practicing or playing for Texas Tech, on a 5K bond, through a trial not set until February 2027. The practical effect is that Sorsby plays the entire 2026 season. The Big 12 now asks a federal court to declare that it may bar Texas Tech from competing for letting him. Strip away the labels, and the conference is asking one sovereign's courts to restore the very exclusion another sovereign's court just lifted—relabeled, from "NCAA eligibility" to "conference governance," but identical in result. That's a real trap, and it is structural. Federal and state courts keep a wary distance from one another's orders; neither likes to be handed the other's ruling to undo. A federal court will rarely enjoin a state proceeding, and it is nearly as reluctant to grant relief that achieves the same end through the back. The Big 12 was shrewd to choose a declaratory judgment over an injunction— a softer vehicle that does not, on its face, touch the state order. But that shrewdness cuts both ways: declaratory relief is discretionary, and a federal judge may simply decline to issue a declaration whose only real function is to neutralize a state court's ruling. The conference says it is exercising independent governance authority. A skeptical judge may see a conference trying to do through the side door what a state court has barred the NCAA from doing through the front— and may decline to hold the door. The Big 12 should win this, and it should win because the law is not actually close: a private association enforcing its own bylaws against a member who bet on his own games is ordinary self-governance. The Texas AG has managed the rare feat of threatening a lawsuit so weak that he walked his adversary into court, drew a public rebuke from a fellow attorney general within 24 hours, and turned a meeting the Big 12 might never have held into a federal complaint with his own letter stapled to the back as an Exhibit. Crazy times. Thanks to @TomMarsLaw for making the complaint available.
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First time I think I can honestly say he’s making the right decision. This is some interesting political infighting.
The Big 12 should not be intimidated by the Texas AG’s Office. The Kansas Attorney General’s Office stands ready to assist the Big 12.
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Jordan retweeted
Best casting Oscar was invented for roles like this
Her name is Courtney Grace and she absolutely sold everything this scene required #DisclosureDay
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Jordan retweeted
How CRAZY are #Obsession's legs? Take a look at how 5th wknd #boxoffice compares to 1st wknd for these major fright flicks! -88% | Weapons -86% | Blair Witch Project (wide wknds) -68% | Sinners -29% | The Ring -14% | The Sixth Sense -4% | Scream 11% | Obsession THIS RUN IS ONE OF A KIND!
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Jordan retweeted
Jun 14
We're obsessed.
Four Favorites with Obsession star Inde Navarrette 🐈đŸ„Ș Obsession is now in theaters and on its way to the Two Million Watched Club on Letterboxd.
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Jordan retweeted
This implies that a movie needs to explain and spoonfeed everything to the audience to be good, instead of requiring you to think about what you're seeing. Hint: the device can't be explained, because the people who are using it don't actually understand its purpose...
Spoiler Alert: Disclosure Day isn't really about aliens or anything like that. It's about magical glow sticks that are never explained or exposited, but comprise the overwhelming bulk of the plot. They also do whatever Spielberg and Koepp need them to do whenever the plot runs aground.
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