The attempt was successful enough that
WWK has landed a second season now at Paramount+. Unfortunately, Cherry has streamlined this time around, to a single timeline in 1949. Frumpy Alma (Allison Tolman), the veterinarian’s wife, longs to be a member of the glamorous Elysian Park Garden Club, headed by Rita Castillo (
’s Lana Parrilla, doing the Evil Queen again).
There are welcome throwbacks to season one: Rita lives in that same opulent house, with its unmistakable master staircase. The melodious voice of Jack Davenport, who played Lucy Liu’s husband last season, narrates. But even though the visual appeal of this
One of the largest problems with Grimes’ proposition is that she begins with a gross mischaracterization of what communism is, labeling it as a political ideal with the end goal that no one ever has to work. Even in the most basic definitions of communism, never does it say that people “won’t work.” It actually says that people will be adequately compensated for their work and skills. She caps off the video by saying that “enforced farming is really not a vibe.” We get it Grimes, in a community-focused future, you do not see yourself actually working and helping those around you especially if that means touching dirt. You plan on living on Mars while your man Musk presses all the buttons,
Photo: Bryan Bedder (Getty Images)
Among the many signs that life as we know it was thrown into chaos by the pandemic, the cancellation of last year’s Gathering Of The Juggalos was one of the most disconcerting of all. Now, our hearts filled with so much joy that they’re as close to bursting as a well-shaken 20 oz. Faygo bottle, we’re happy to report that the Insane Clown Posse’s 2020 promise to return “stronger, bigger, and better than ever!” in 2021 has come true.
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The Gathering is back.
All the lonely Juggalos, painting their faces and dying their stringy dreadlocks in Kool-Aid by themselves at home this past year, will now be able to rejoin their fellow ninjas this August in Thornville, Ohio. A recent ICP Instagram post has proclaimed the return of the Dark Carnival alongside a hockey jersey-looking graphic with this year’s motto: ”Luv rises from the ash like the butterfly.”
The internet is awash with people using a spritz or two of brake cleaner or starter fluid to
bang set a bead on a tire. As you can see above, there’s a right way and a wrong way.
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Getting a tire to mount right on a rim can be a challenge. Hell, I spent a week trying to mount my first tubeless mountain bike tires a few months back and found a lot of the same tips and tricks being used there as you find in the four-wheeled off road and stance car scenes.
The central problem is you want a tire to press right on up to the inside lip of the rim and kind of lock in place. Tires have a kind of raised edge right at the inside lip, and rims have a raised edge, too, on the inside of their outer edge. As you inflate the tire, its bead pushes out to the edge of the rim and forms its airtight seal. This is called “setting the bead,” and usually it’s a pretty easy job both on a bike or a car tire. Pumping up the tire with air is usually enough to set the bead on anything