John Wall’s speed, with or without the ball, registered as a whole other thing, something uncanny and exhilarating and miraculous. (…) John Wall was fast more or less the way Steph Curry is good at shooting three-pointers. (…)
…The sound of the team’s in-arena announcer’s drawn-out JOHHHHHNNNNN WALLLLLLL is the backing track to some of the most fun I ever had watching professional sports in person. Basketball as a whole, too, benefited from having in it a guy who, for a time anyway, could break games more or less the way the Road Runner broke Wile E. Coyote’s traps, by sprinting straight through them at the speed of sound.
Thank you John Wall, Washington Wizards and DC legend! His peak years with the Wiz were arguably the last time that the team was relevant, which is very sad to point out. We’re gonna need a jersey retirement ceremony and everything. Someone tell owner Ted Leonsis to get on it!
π βοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈ: Finished the Fahrenheit-182 by Mark Hoppus of blink-182 during my run today
As a pop-punk kid, I had been meaning to get a copy of the physical book, but the audiobook version narrated by Mark was a great format!
Itβs hard not to compare it with Deryck Whibleyβs memoir (of Sum 41) since these two books came out less than a year of each other, and I preferred reading Whibleyβs book in comparison.
Even if I knew of some of the stories and anecdotes through the years, it gave a great and compelling view into Markβs story and the creation of this band that means so much to me, to this day!
Very excited to start this show later this weekβ¦ reviews have been very positive so far! π½π«
Alien: Earth establishes some of its most compelling ideas about what happens to people when their lives are defined by their relationships to technology.