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‘SNL’ Weekend Update Made An Especially Savage Joke About Trump’s Forthcoming Social Media Service

This past week, president-turned-failed blogger Donald J. Trump made a big announcement: His long-threatened social media site was going to become a reality. It’s called Truth Social (of course it is) and a beta launch is expected by next month, with it going into full effect sometime in the first quarter of 2022 — i.e., over a year after he was booted from much of social media. The announcement inevitably received a fair amount of online yuks, and sure enough, a particularly savage one appeared on SNL.

During Weekend Update, Michael Che weighed in on the latest far right social media service. “Donald Trump announced the launch of his own social media network that he’s calling Truth Social,” Che said, “but most people know it by its original name: The National Sex Offender Registry.”

Among those who may one day be on that national registry is, of course, Trump himself, who has been credibly accused by over two dozen women of sexual misconduct, including rape.

Che and Jost had zingers for other members of the Trump cabal. “This week, former White House — I wanna say, garbage man? — Steve Bannon was held in contempt in Congress,” Jost said. “But this is what Bannon wants. Just plays into his persecuted messiah complex. Bannon is similar to Jesus in that he looks like he’s been dead for three days.”

For balance, there were a couple digs at current president Joe Biden’s plummeting approval ratings, which, mind you, are currently about as low as Trump’s were for much of his presidency. When host Jason Sudeikis swung by to reprise his old SNL character, the Devil, he circled back to Truth Social, saying it was one of his current projects. Maybe he’s the one who arranged its shady financing and/or stole code from another site.

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Young Thug Earns His Second Solo No. 1 Album Thanks To ‘Punk’

Two years after he first announced it, Young Thug shared his sophomore album, Punk, earlier this month, boasting appearances from Travis Scott, J. Cole, Future, Mac Miller, Juice WRLD, Post Malone, ASAP Rocky, Gunna, and more. Sonically, it was much different than his debut album So Much Fun, which arrived in the summer of 2019. The album was received well by its listeners, so much so that it hit No. 1 on the album charts in its first week.

Punk debuted atop the Billboard 200 chart dated October 30 thanks to the 90,000 album units it sold in its first week. Of this number, streaming equivalents album units comprised 77,000 of the total sales while 12,000 accounted for pure album sales. It’s Thug’s second solo album to reach the top spot after So Much Fun did so in 2019. It’s also his third overall album to go No. 1, after his Slime Language 2 compilation album, released by his Young Stoner Life label, topped the chart earlier this year.

Elsewhere, Drake’s former No. 1 album, Certified Lover Boy, checks in at No. 2, and Mac Miller’s 2014 mixtape, Faces, appears at No. 3 after the late rapper’s estate re-released it onto streaming platforms.

You can revisit our review of Punk here.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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The Bucs Negotiated With A Fan After Mike Evans Gave Them The Ball From Tom Brady’s 600th Career Touchdown Pass

Tom Brady made NFL history on Sunday afternoon against the Chicago Bears. Brady dropped back as the clock wound down at the end of the first quarter and threw a strike to one of his favorite targets in Tampa Bay, Mike Evans, to give the Buccaneers a 21-0 lead. It was an easy pitch-and-catch for Brady that doubled as the 600th passing touchdown of his lengthy NFL career, making him the first signal caller in league history to hit that milestone.

It’s one hell of an accomplishment by Brady — the now-retired Drew Brees is in second place with 571, while the active player with the second-most touchdown throws, Aaron Rodgers, has 427. A problem did pop up in the aftermath, though, as Evans gave the ball to a fan.

As a result, the Buccaneers had to send someone with the team to go over to the dude who got the ball and talk to them about giving it back.

Whatever this dude asks for, I hope the Bucs give it to him. The best thing about this came by way of Evans, who was informed that he gave away an historic football and was mortified.

The range of emotions, from thinking this was funny to sheer terror, is absolutely fantastic. Fortunately for him, the fan seemed to be pretty cool, because if they weren’t, who knows what Evans would have needed to do to help Brady out.

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‘What Up With That’ Returned With A Dancing Jason Sudeikis And Cousin Greg From ‘Succession’ On ‘SNL’

“What Up With That” is, by now, a Saturday Night Live classic. The sketch is pitched as a BET talk show with an enigmatic host, played by Kenan Thompson, who simply cannot get through an interview without reverting to the show’s theme song.

Part of the subtle joy of the show, however, is the accompanying hype men that come with those musical interludes. And so perhaps it was no surprise that the return of Jason Sudeikis to Studio 8H would come with a reprisal of that sketch on Saturday. The latest “What Up With That” featured Sudeikis dancing, while Fred Armisen returned to “play” saxophone in the background as well.

The guests for the show included Dune star Oscar Issac, Emily Ratajkowski, and even Cousin Greg from Succession: Nicholas Braun. He got the coveted role as the butt of the sketch’s infamous Lindsey Buckingham joke, which still hits all these years later. The whole thing works, somehow, mostly because of Thompson selling the concept so hard. And everyone involved is a good sport here, including a pirate-costumed Issac who never quite gets to make his promotional appearance count for much.

The sketch also got some high praise from another Ted Lasso star.

You can watch the longest sketch of Saturday’s episode above.

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Anti-Vaxx Protesters In Support Of Kyrie Irving Tried Storming Barclays Center Before The Nets’ Home Opener

The Brooklyn Nets began the home portion of their 2021-22 schedule on Sunday afternoon by playing host to the Charlotte Hornets at Barclays Center. The game, of course, is being played without Kyrie Irving, as the All-Star guard is sitting at home due to his decision to not comply with New York City’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate. While he could practice at the team’s facility and participate in most road games, the Nets made the decision that having Irving stay with the team in a part-time capacity wouldn’t be worth it.

Prior to the tip, a demonstration occurred outside of the arena that offered up support for Irving’s decision to actively make the Nets a worse basketball team. A number of individuals gathered at Barclays with anti-vaccine mandate and pro-Irving signs, with chants of “no vaccine mandate/stand with Kyrie” and “whose body/my body/whose choice/my choice” chants breaking out.

At one point, some of the people leapt over barricades in an attempt to force their way into the arena, although their attempts to get in were not successful. As a result, Barclays Center was temporarily locked down.

As of this writing, the Nets were not prevented from having the game go on as scheduled, and neither the team nor Irving has made any sort of statement regarding the demonstration.

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People Simply Cannot Believe Jason Momoa’s Character In ‘Dune’ Is Actually Named Duncan Idaho

This weekend, after a year’s delay — to say nothing of being in development hell for over a decade — the latest big screen adaptation of Frank Herbert’s seminal sci-fi novel Dune finally hit theaters. And despite also being available on HBO Max, it went over gangbusters, topping the theatrical box office at home and elsewhere. It’s great news for Herbert’s famously tough-to-film classic. But people online still took umbrage with one aspect: Is there really a character named “Duncan Idaho”?

There is! Duncan Idaho is the “swordmaster” for the goodly House Atreides, and he’s played by Jason Momoa, in what is arguably the film’s most likable performance. Should the other novels in the series be filmed, he’ll be back. Though the story spans thousands and thousands of years, people keep cloning him, over and over and over again. Every character, beloved or hissable, dies at some point over the novels, but Duncan Idaho was so beloved that Herbert kept bringing him back for more.

Still, he is named “Duncan Idaho.”

And so many on social media had the same idea: What a kooky name, let’s make jokes.

Others wished Momoa’s Duncan Idaho had a bit more Aquaman in his DNA.

Mind you, Duncan Idaho isn’t the only bizarre name in Dune. Thufir Hawat (Stephen McKinley Henderson), Glossu Rabban (Dave Bautista), and Wellington Yueh (Chang Chen) are nothing to sneeze at either.

Others, though, found it easy to get over a silly name like Duncan Idaho thanks to the arguably career best work from Jason Momoa.

You can watch the new Dune in theaters and on HBO Max (though it really should be seen on the biggest screen with the loudest sound imaginable). HBO Max is where one can also stream David Lynch’s notorious (but also, to some, enjoyable) 1984 stab, in which Duncan Idaho is played by the excellent character actor Richard Jordan.

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Drake Celebrated His 35th Birthday With A Narcos-Themed Party Featuring YG, Future, Jack Harlow, And More

Just a month removed from the release of his sixth album Certified Lover Boy, Drake recently had another reason to celebrate, that being his 35th birthday. The rapper officially celebrates a new year of life today, but he got the festivities going a day early with a party in Los Angeles on Saturday night.

The event took place in the city’s Goya Studios and the theme of the night was Narcos as it found some guests like YG, Future, and the rapper’s dad Dennis Graham following it while others like Offset, French Montana, and Jack Harlow kept it casual for the night.

The birthday event comes after Certified Lover Boy spent a fourth non-consecutive week at No. 1 on the album charts. It’s one of eight albums in 2021 to spend multiple weeks atop the charts and it comes after the project spent three straight weeks at No. 1. Including Drake’s album, only four projects have spent a total of three weeks atop the chart year: Taylor Swift’s Evermore, Billie Eilish’s Happier Than Ever and Morgan Wallen’s Dangerous: The Double Album.

Drake also made a surprise appearance during J. Cole’s The Off-Season Tour and called the Dreamville artist “one of the greatest rappers” in a brief speech during the show.

You can check out a video from the night above.

Jack Harlow is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Patrick Mahomes Left The Chiefs’ Loss To The Titans In The Fourth Quarter After Taking A Knee To The Helmet

The Kansas City Chiefs spent Sunday afternoon getting demolished by the Tennessee Titans. By the time the game came to the end, the Chiefs fell to 3-4 on the year thanks to a 27-3 drubbing at the hands of their division rivals, one which served as a reminder that the two-time defending AFC Champions have some major issues that need to be resolved.

But beyond any of those, the single-biggest issue facing the team right now involves the health of star quarterback Patrick Mahomes. During the game’s fourth quarter, Mahomes, while trying to kickstart an offense that had struggled all day, took a knee to his face mask that caused his head to go back and left the former league MVP in a daze.

It was a scary looking injury, and one that caused Mahomes’ day to come to a premature end on the team’s penultimate drive of the afternoon. If there is a silver lining, it is that Mahomes reportedly passed concussion protocol.

Mahomes had issues all afternoon against the Titans’ defense, going 20-for-35 for 206 yards with no touchdowns and an interception, his league-high ninth of the season. If he is to miss any period of time, Kansas City has games each of the next four weeks before the team has its bye.

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What does anxiety feel like? These 12 haunting photos sum it up.

This article originally appeared on 11.21.16

Photographer Katie Joy Crawford had been battling anxiety for 10 years when she decided to face it straight on by turning the camera lens on herself.

In 2015, Upworthy shared Crawford’s self-portraits and our readers responded with tons of empathy. One person said, “What a wonderful way to express what words cannot.” Another reader added, “I think she hit the nail right on the head. It’s like a constant battle with yourself. I often feel my emotions battling each other.”

So we wanted to go back and talk to the photographer directly about this soul-baring project.


It was Crawford’s senior year in college. She decided to make herself the central subject of her thesis. She became determined to realistically capture the crippling effects of her anxiety with her “My Anxious Heart” photo series.

“I just firmly believe that the stigma with mental illness needs to be eliminated,” Crawford says.

She hopes the series will help others who may be struggling with anxiety. She wants people to know they’re not alone.

These haunting photos are also meant to encourage those suffering with anxiety to reach out to others who perhaps don’t understand what anxiety feels like. The more we can understand each other, the more we can help each other out.

Here again are Crawford’s 12 poignant self-portraits and captions that show what anxiety feels like for her:

1. “They keep telling me to breathe. I can feel my chest moving up and down. Up and down. Up and down. But why does it feel like I’m suffocating? I hold my hand under my nose, making sure there is air. I still can’t breathe.”

All images by Katie Joy Crawford, featured with permission.

2. “My head is filling with helium. Focus is fading. Such a small decision to make. Such an easy question to answer. My mind isn’t letting me. It’s like a thousand circuits are all crossing at once.”

3. “It’s strange — in the pit of your stomach. It’s like when you’re swimming and you want to put your feet down but the water is deeper than you thought. You can’t touch the bottom and your heart skips a beat.”

4. “You were created for me and by me. You were created for my seclusion. You were created by venomous defense. You are made of fear and lies. Fear of unrequited promises and losing trust so seldom given. You’ve been forming my entire life. Stronger and stronger.”

5. “A glass of water isn’t heavy. It’s almost mindless when you have to pick one up. But what if you couldn’t empty it or set it down? What if you had to support its weight for days … months … years? The weight doesn’t change, but the burden does. At a certain point, you can’t remember how light it used to seem. Sometimes it takes everything in you to pretend it isn’t there. And sometimes, you just have to let it fall.”

6. “A captive of my own mind. The instigator of my own thoughts. The more I think, the worse it gets. The less I think, the worse it gets. Breathe. Just breathe. Drift. It’ll ease soon.”

7. “I’m afraid to live and i’m afraid to die. What a way to exist.”

8.I was scared of sleeping. I felt the most raw panic in complete darkness. Actually, complete darkness wasn’t scary. It was that little bit of light that would cast a shadow — a terrifying shadow.”

9. “No matter how much I resist, it’ll always be right here desperate to hold me, cover me, break down with me. Each day I fight it, “You’re not good for me and you never will be.” But there it is waiting for me when I wake up and eager to hold me as I sleep. It takes my breath away. It leaves me speechless.”

10. “Depression is when you can’t feel at all. Anxiety is when you feel too much. Having both is a constant war within your own mind. Having both means never winning.”

11. “Cuts so deep it’s like they’re never going to heal. Pain so real, it’s almost unbearable. I’ve become this … this cut, this wound. All I know is this same pain; sharp breath, empty eyes, shaky hands. If it’s so painful, why let it continue? Unless … maybe it’s all that you know.”

12. “Numb feeling. How oxymoronic. How fitting. Can you actually feel numb? Or is it the inability to feel? Am I so used to being numb that i’ve equated it to an actual feeling?”

“I’ve had a lot of people say that my photographs are too beautiful for what anxiety actually is. That’s OK to feel that way, I think they are too! I didn’t set out to make it look like the monster I felt,” Crawford says. “I wanted clean and simple explanations. I wanted them to almost look numbing, because that’s where I was.”

Crawford goes to therapy once a week. And she’s not ashamed of that. She’s also not ashamed to admit that she sits in her car each time, deciding whether she’ll attend her appointment or not.

She ultimately does go in and feels better every time. “It’s like this thing you’ve been battling alone is finally being defeated in some way,” Crawford says.

The process of creating these deeply literal photographs helped Crawford identify her fear and figure out what led to her anxiety attacks. Although she didn’t realize it at the time, she was developing new coping skills even while shooting these self-portraits.

It’s important to understand that everyone is struggling with something. We’re never alone, no matter how lonely we feel.

“Get help. Always get help,” Crawford says. “There are so many resources out there. There is no reason to be ashamed that you need help. If mental illness was treated like physical illness, there would be no more stigma.”

By putting her struggles with anxiety out there for the world to see, Crawford is able to help others. She says that feeling alone has changed the way she lives her life.

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Ever wonder how kids with autism see the world? That’s all it may take to understand them.

This article originally appeared on 02.19.16

At one of the worst points, she was banging her head on the floor and the walls of her bedroom, raging and crying.

And I was doing the same because I just didn’t know what else to do anymore.

Something had triggered a full-on, pupil-dilated tantrum for my then-3-year-old, Emma, complete with hair-pulling and biting — both herself and me.


That’s Emma around age 3. That sweet kid having a meltdown? HEARTBREAKING, let me tell you. All photos by Tana Totsch-Kimsey, used with permission.

Feeling just as helpless as I had the last dozen times this happened, I ticked down a mental checklist: Weird food? Wrong clothes? Too hot? Loud sounds? Missing toy? She fitfully stripped down to nothing, finally signaling to me that yes, it was the jammies. She curled up next to me (me, still sobbing) and promptly fell asleep, quiet and stark naked with brilliantly red-purple bruises blooming on her arms.

This is autism. Or one form of it anyway. It has many, many ways of showing itself.

It can be both good and bad. I’ll get to the good.

Fully known as autism spectrum disorder, it’s a neurodevelopmental quirk that results in various shades of social and behavioral issues. One of the most common challenges across the spectrum is communicating with others; people with autism struggle with the give-and-take flow of conversation, understanding how to interact with others, and processing their own or other people’s feelings. They may even seem lost in their own world or unable to express their thoughts or emotions either verbally or nonverbally.

“Lost in their own world” often looks like this. We took over 100 pictures on family picture day, and this was the only useable one.

I have a non-autistic child, too. She’s five years older than Emma, and I remember my biggest frustration as a brand-new parent was that I just wished she could tell me what she needed. And it wasn’t long before she did: “Mama” quickly became “I have this?” and “Don’t like that” and “I can do it myself” and — now — “Oh-em-gee, Mom, get out of my room, please, GOD, ugh!” She’s 10; it’s fun. She cracks jokes, she rails against gender biases, and she’s lined up for honors classes.

But when Emma came along next with an incessant buzz of energy — ripping pages from books presumably for the feel of it, climbing and jumping off tall things presumably for the thrill of it, eating rocks and grass (and just about anything really) presumably for the taste of it — and all of it without being able to tell me anything at all about what she needed … it took me a long while to understand that autism is not me being terrible at parenting.

What I learned is that Emma calls for a different kind of parenting altogether.

A typical day at home for us includes peanut butter smearing, cabinet scaling, mud eating, and paper ripping. It’s a little exhausting sometimes.

Progress actually happened when I let go of what was “wrong” with Emma and started figuring out what to do about it.

Emma was nearly 4 years old by the time she was given an official autism diagnosis. But when the panel of specialists finally handed over their “findings” of autism spectrum disorder after a particularly awful six-hour doctor appointment, I distinctly felt at that point (and still do) that I could not have cared less what they wanted to call it.

The moment of the diagnosis wasn’t a big deal to me because it didn’t really change anything. By then, Emma was already in speech and occupational therapy and going to preschool, and all of that was helping some. But the autism label did eventually lead us to a kind of therapy we hadn’t heard about before.

It’s called applied behavior analysis — ABA for short — and that has brought a lot of change.

Some doctors explain ABA as a reward system for when a child does something right, but it’s much more than that.

Behavioral scholars and autism experts date ABA treatments back to at least 1968, when a group of university researchers wrote in an introduction for the Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis that ABA interventions could benefit individuals and society.

The treatment is highly individualized, with analysts measuring specific behaviors for each patient, crafting trials to change variables in controlled environments for each patient, and evaluating outcomes for each patient. It’s used for both children and adults who have intellectual or developmental issues, and it can help them gain skills in language, socialization, and attention as well as in more educational areas, like reading and math.

And this kid is gonna need more skills than taking selfies … although she’s quite amazing at them, IMO.

ABA is complex stuff. But put super simply, it’s empathy on an ultimate level.

It involves patiently observing and trying to understand what a person — often one who can’t fully communicate (or even necessarily process the things going on in the world) — feels and thinks.

ABA is putting yourself in that person’s place, realizing what is motivating them, and then tinkering with those behaviors using positive encouragement and reinforcement. These are “rewards” of a kind, but not necessarily tangible ones; Emma’s greatest motivators are hugs and kisses, high-fives, and tickles.

And wagon rides. And a mom deciding that chewing on a piece of grass to satisfy a sensory need is not so terrible in the big picture.

Even though ABA isn’t a new treatment, it’s gaining attention recently because of how life-changing the empathetic perspective can be. Agencies like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institute of Mental Health (and several autism-research organizations) recognize ABA as an effective treatment for autism. Plus, access to ABA experts is expanding: Clinics with extensive ABA support and research existed mainly in larger cities for many years, but now services are being offered in places all over the country.

For me, an intensified effort to understand Emma through ABA, and to help her understand her world, changed everything.

She’s almost 6 years old now, and these days, she charms just about everyone she meets. She’s still mischievous and daring, but she also runs into a room and gives out hugs to everyone there. (Even strangers! It’s actually really awkward sometimes.)

Seems like a small thing, but she sings about how Old MacDonald has a cow that moos. (You should hear “Do You Wanna Build a Snowman” … adorbs!)

She can pick out her own jammies and a book to be read and a toy to keep her hands busy and the perfect spot to cuddle while she winds herself down to sleep. She giggles and beeps noses and plays chase with the dog and likes to announce, “Happy Tuesday!” She’s even learning to read and write, which blows my mind when I think of those long nights spent banging heads on floors.

Emma still has autistic-meltdown fits, of course, but I get it now.

Even I have moments where I just can’t even. It’s really not that hard for any parent or person to relate to that. What’s great, though, is that I’ve noticed how people outside the ABA therapy world — teachers and family and even total strangers — use the therapy, sometimes without even realizing it.

They change how they do things to adapt to what it must seem like from Emma’s perspective, and that’s how they end up really connecting with her. I find myself, too, exercising those empathy muscles with people other than Emma, and it makes me wonder sometimes:

What if we all did?