Tag: breaking
BREAKING Fourth UFO spotted over US hours after taking down ‘airborne object’
Breaking Bad’s Aaron Paul Ate Blue Meth Rock Candy On Set To Stay Awake
Appearing on the Hot Ones podcast recently, Bryan Cranston shared a behind-the-scenes story from Breaking Bad involving his co-star Aaron Paul eating the fake blue meth on set to help stay awake on long days. Cranston, who played Walt on the show, confirmed that the show’s iconic blue meth was actually cotton candy-flavored rock candy.
On one particularly long day of shooting–Cranston said it could have been as long as 17 hours–Cranston and Paul were filming a scene in the meth lab bunker. Cranston said he saw Paul reach into the “product,” grab a handful, and begin to pop the candy into his mouth.
“I go, ‘You can’t eat the product!'” Cranston said. Paul told Cranston he was so tired that he wanted to consume some sugar to help stay awake. Paul pressured Cranston into trying the rock candy again and again, but Cranston didn’t give in until Paul yelled, “Yo! Have one!” And to put an end to the matter, Cranston agreed to sample the product. “I tasted one, and was like, ‘That’s pretty good!'” he said.
BREAKING: Massive magnitude 7.8 earthquake hits Turkey with aftershocks felt in multiple countries
‘I’m here to kill the Queen’: Man admits treason after breaking into grounds of Windsor Castle with crossbow
I got sent home from work for breaking the dress code – the bright side is I got the day off
A SPUNKY woman has shared her experience of being dress coded at work for the simplest reason.
She explained how thought it was a random reason to be dress coded, but the bright side was that she got the day.
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TikTok creator Violet (@vambire_biitch) invited viewers into her home to tell them about how she was recently dress coded at work.
In two videos, she detailed the entire experience and her reaction to it.
In the first video, she showed viewers the casual outfit she wore to work that was inappropriate.
Violet wore a black short sleeve T-shirt and sporty Adidas brand sweatpants with stripes down the side.
She had no makeup on and her hair was in a messy low bun.
The subtitle over her read: “I just got sent home because I broke dress code.”
The brunette turns her body from left and right to give viewers a look at her from different angles.
As a way to further emphasize how she felt, she wrote in the video’s caption: “Literally HOW.”
The second video delved into further detail about how the situation happened.
Her uniform policy stated that the bottoms should be plain black.
“She wasn’t upset about the sweats. She was upset about the Adidas brand on it,” Violet said in the video.
Though, she added that people wore brand-name clothing to work frequently.
From the dual videos, it’s unclear what her job is other than that she works in retail, but apparently, it warranted a completely different choice of clothing than what Violet wore.
Many viewers had different opinions about how she should handle it.
“Definitely start studying the employee handbook. every time I’ve gotten ‘in trouble,’ my first response is, ‘can you show me this in the handbook’,” a TikTok user commented.
“Ridiculous… if they’re going to enforce that, they should be consistent,” another wrote.
“Put tape over the logo,” a fan offered.
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4 ways Deadpool brings his fourth-wall breaking antics to Marvel’s Midnight Suns
Windows 11 warning: system restore is breaking some PCs
4 reasons why the stock market is breaking higher despite the UK economy
Jon Smith highlights several points including a potential peak of inflation as to why the stock market is performing so well.
The post 4 reasons why the stock market is breaking higher despite the UK economy appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.
Twitter admits it’s breaking third-party apps, cites ‘long-standing API rules’
Several days after Twitter abruptly cut a number of third-party apps off from its API, the company has quietly acknowledged the move. “Twitter is enforcing its long-standing API rules,” the company said in a tweet from its developer account. “That may result in some apps not working.”
However, the company offered no explanation which “long-standing API rules” developers of apps like Twitterrific and Tweetbot were violating. It also doesn’t address why some smaller third-party Twitter apps are still up and running. Twitter no longer has a communications team.
Twitter is enforcing its long-standing API rules. That may result in some apps not working.
— Twitter Dev (@TwitterDev) January 17, 2023
The company’s two-sentence acknowledgement that it had cut off access to several longtime developers follows a report in The Information that the moves was an “intentional” one. Some have speculated that Twitter made the decision because third-party clients don’t show ads and may be perceived as siphoning off already declining ad revenue from the company. Twitter, under Elon Musk, likely has less enthusiasm for supporting its developers. As Twitterrific’s team pointed out, many of the company’s employees overseeing the developer platform were cut in mass layoffs last year.
For now, Twitter developers say they are in the dark about why Twitter has cut them off. “We haven’t heard anything from Twitter,” Twitterrific creator Craig Hockenberry told Engadget. “We have been respectful of their API rules, as published, for the past 16 years. We have no knowledge that these rules have changed recently or what those changes might be.”
Tweetbot maker Tapbots responded similarly. “Tweetbot has been around for over 10 years, we’ve always complied with the Twitter API rules,” the developer said. “If there’s some existing rule that we need to comply with, we’d be happy to do so, if possible. But we do need to know what it is…”
Tweetbot has been around for over 10 years, we’ve always complied with the Twitter API rules.
If there’s some existing rule that we need to comply with, we’d be happy to do so, if possible. But we do need to know what it is…@TwitterDev, you know how to reach us. https://t.co/RujogIjRvx
— Tapbots (@tapbots) January 17, 2023
Update 1/17 4:24 PM ET: Added comments from Craig Hockenberry and Tapbots.