Tag: many
New Video: Stormzy – ‘Mel Made Me Do It’ [Starring Jose Mourinho, Dave, Usain Bolt, & MANY More]
The British Rap royal lives up to his billing with the epic video for his return single ‘Mel Made Me Do It.’
Unleashed without warning, the hard-hitting anthem has been paired with a seismic star-studded visual.
Directed by KLVDR, the 10-minute spectacle sees the chart-topper wax candid about his reign while retaining the relatability that quickly rendered him a household name.
The post New Video: Stormzy – ‘Mel Made Me Do It’ [Starring Jose Mourinho, Dave, Usain Bolt, & MANY More] appeared first on ..::That Grape Juice.net::.. – Thirsty?.
Why Does Shovel Knight Make So Many Cameos? “We Think It’s Funny”
Shovel Knight, the character, made his debut in 2014 in a video game appropriately called Shovel Knight. The game was praised upon release and is remembered as a well-executed platformer inspired by NES classics. Since then, the game has received multiple DLC additions and Shovel Knight has appeared in spin-offs like Shovel Knight Pocket Dungeon and most recently, the roguelike platformer, Shovel Knight Dig. More impressive, however, is Shovel Knight’s penchant for appearing in games that don’t have his name in the title. Shovel Knight has either appeared as himself, or been referenced, in at least 33 non-Shovel Knight games. He even received his own Amiibo and a line of kid’s meal toys with Arby’s.
Ahead of the release of Shovel Knight Dig, we spoke with Yacht Club’s Celia Schilling, who handles licensing and marketing for Shovel Knight, and asked a simple question: Why is Shovel Knight in so many things that aren’t Shovel Knight? “Oh, I don’t know. There’s a lot of them,” Schilling says. “We think it’s funny. It’s just that we’ve always imagined Shovel Knight as like an all-encompassing universe. To see Shovel Knight in different things, or like Arby’s kids meal toys–it just makes sense for our brand. And it’s hilarious.”
Shovel Knight Dig is much more than a cameo for the knight with a unique weapon. Dig is a roguelike that gives Shovel Knight a host of new abilities and upgrades, but unlike games like Shovel Knight Pocket Dungeon (a puzzle game), Dig feels like it could almost be a sequel. It’s not called Shovel Knight 2, though, for a very specific reason. “It can’t be a sequel because it’s a prequel,” Schilling says. “It follows Shovel Knight’s point of view in his story, so it’s technically a prequel to Shovel of Hope. It takes you back to the good old days of him and Shield Knight just adventuring and beating up baddies and collecting treasure.”
Rare price drop on the Nintendo Joy-Con, and many more Nintendo Switch deals
The GTA VI leak is the latest of many in gaming history
Save 20% on the Surface Laptop 4, and many more Microsoft Surface deals
PlayStation’s Jim Ryan Calls Xbox’s Call of Duty Promise ‘Inadequate on Many Levels’
The RTX 4080 might be subject to as many memory switcheroos as its forebearer
People only just realized that the dishwasher top rack adjusts so you can fit everything in – it’s left many mind-blown
A LITTLE-known feature of dishwashers has left many people shocked after they learned the top racks are adjustable.
A TikTok video featuring the simple adjustment shows how you can maximize the appliance’s usefulness while saving time and space.
A TikToker has revealed a secret that could save dishwasher owners time, space, and money[/caption]
“I was today years old when I found out,” the highly-viewed video by @bankingtiktok begins, with a text overlay on a full dish rack.
“That the top level of dishwashers could go down,” the video continues.
The TikToker proceeds to lower the top dish rack via side levers so that the contents do not hit the roof of the appliance once the drawer is pushed in.
The video then pans over to show the TikToker’s stunned face.
READ MORE HACKS
For those who have been stuck with items that are caught in what seems to be the natural capacity of the machine, this discovery is revolutionary.
One user said: “mind literally blown,” while using three mind-explosion emojis to portray as much.
Another user said: “witchcraft I say.”
The skeptic of the bunch was quick to chime in with “depends on the model.”
Most read in Fabulous
This little-known hack comes amidst another shocking revelation about dishwashers.
According to a hot take from appliance repair pro Renae on TikTok, folks are regularly using Tide pods all wrong.
The appliance professional shares a hot take on her TikTok that changed the game for both Tide pod fans and dishwasher users.
Her recent video about dishwasher detergent pods has racked up over a million views.
“If you’re going to use pods in your dishwasher, do they go into the dispenser or not?” she asks.
“And the answer is: They do not.”
She goes on to explain that those with a dishwasher that has a spot specifically labeled ‘for pods’ are safe to use them in the soap dispenser.
For the rest of us, that could be a costly mistake.
The sticky substance that is used for cleaning from the gel pod, she explains, can get caught in the machine’s inner workings, causing it to fall into disrepair.
“I have had to replace dispensers on dishwashers because people put pods in them too often and it gunked them up and they would no longer open,” she said in the video.
Her recommendation is to put them in the bottom of the dishwasher.
Avoid any “exposed heating elements” she cautioned.
She also presented a secret hack for the safest soap dispensing: “You can do what I do and put (Tide pods) in the silverware caddy.”
Commenters shared their shock after learning they’ve been washing their dishes wrong for years.
Read More on The US Sun
“You’re kidding!?! Man I learned something new,” wrote one.
“Started using them in the silverware caddy BECAUSE of you & it works BETTER,” wrote another.
Many Developed Countries View Online Misinformation as ‘Major Threat’
The findings add to research that Pew released this year focusing on the United States. That survey showed misinformation virtually tied with cyberhacking as the top concern for Americans, with about seven in 10 people saying each is a major threat. In a sharp contrast with the other countries surveyed, the United States rated climate change the lowest threat among the available options. After several bruising years of misinformation about elections and the coronavirus pandemic, 70 percent of Americans now believe that false information spread online is a major threat. Another 26 percent believe it is a minor threat, and just 2 percent say it is not a threat.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.