If Players Get Benched for Mistakes, Why Don’t Referees?
It’s become a tired ritual in the WNBA: a questionable whistle blows, the game flips, and when players or coaches…
Strong opinions, loosely held together by satire. Hot takes, cold facts, and just enough logic to start a fight in the comments.
It’s become a tired ritual in the WNBA: a questionable whistle blows, the game flips, and when players or coaches…
Americans report more excitement for imagined cage matches than policy talk, confirming debates function less as discourse and more as televised endurance tests.
It began as a concept in therapy. Now it’s a blunt instrument used in friend breakups, TikToks, and brunch menus. Somewhere along the way, we stopped negotiating and started declaring.
Let’s face it: while WNBA athletes fly, crash, and dazzle us nightly, the real “highlight” often comes courtesy of the folks in stripes, aka, the referees. And not always for the right reasons.
You want openness? Schedule it. I’m happy to share my feelings, but only if they align with Q3 goals and are formatted in bullet points.
Being intelligent is not the same as being knowledgeable. Many intelligent people do dumb things. We don’t need more noise. We need more pauses.
Some call it chaos. I call it agile self-concepting. If you’re not willing to pivot your identity, how serious are you about growth?
I feel things. I just prefer to release them in eight episodes, one week at a time, with a two-year break between seasons.
Apparently, expressing a thought now qualifies as heroism, as long as you smile afterward and include a disclaimer in parentheses.