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Tech Athletics earns seven awards in 2024-25 CSC Creative & Digital Design contest

Assistant A.D. for Creative Video Services Jun Lee earned a pair of Top 5 finishes at the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Creative & Digital Design Contest. Courtesy of Louisiana Tech Athletic Communications Louisiana Tech Athletics was recognized for its outstanding creative and digital content, earning a total of seven awards in the 2024-25 College Sports […]

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Assistant A.D. for Creative Video Services Jun Lee earned a pair of Top 5 finishes at the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Creative & Digital Design Contest.

Courtesy of Louisiana Tech Athletic Communications

Louisiana Tech Athletics was recognized for its outstanding creative and digital content, earning a total of seven awards in the 2024-25 College Sports Communicators (CSC) Creative & Digital Design Contest.

The annual contest, which continues to grow in size and prestige, drew a record-breaking 2,160 entries this year, including 930 from the University Division.  Louisiana Tech was among more than 250 institutions and conference offices participating, with over 650 individuals recognized across the contest.

LA Tech’s content creators were honored across multiple categories, showcasing the department’s depth and versatility in creative production:

  • Jun Lee, Assistant A.D. for Creative Video Services, earned two top five finishes in the Short Form Videos/Reels category:
    • 3rd Place – Football Game Week Hype Video
    • 4th Place – Blue Helmet Reveal Video
  • Kevin Albarez, Associate Director for Strategic Communications, received recognition in the Game Notes category:
    • 17th Place – Women’s Basketball Game Notes vs. Illinois State (WNIT Great 8)
  • Courtney Pugh, graphic designer, led the way with four awards across various categories:
    • 2nd Place – Football Gameday Program (Programs category)
    • 3rd Place – Football Signing Day Graphic (Signing Day Package category)
    • 10th Place – Milton Williams Super Bowl Champion Graphic (Major Awards & Championships category)
    • 16th Place – Lane Burroughs 300 Wins Graphic (Individual Awards, Milestones & Records category)

“The Creative & Digital Design contest continues to showcase the immeasurable talent of the CSC membership in the creative space as we recognize the best in our industry through a wide variety of contest categories as judged by their peers,” said CSC committee chair Patrick Murphy of the Colorado School of Mines.

The contest, now in its second year under an expanded format, has seen a dramatic rise in participation—jumping over 125 percent from 957 entries in 2023-24. Nine contest categories experienced year-over-year growth, with significant expansion in the Portfolio Contests, which drew 173 submissions and saw the addition of two new categories.




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Look at the most terrifying World Championship

Big news friends, I’m MOVING TOMORROW! It’s SO EXCITING!!!!! And also I DID NOT GET ANY SLEEP BEFORE WRITING THIS!!!!! and have DECIDED TO PERMANENTLY STAY IN MY NEXT HOUSE TO AVOID THIS HELLISH EXPERIENCE EVER AGAIN!!!! I did, however, make sure to carve out time to watch unusual sporting events in the middle of […]

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Big news friends, I’m MOVING TOMORROW! It’s SO EXCITING!!!!! And also I DID NOT GET ANY SLEEP BEFORE WRITING THIS!!!!! and have DECIDED TO PERMANENTLY STAY IN MY NEXT HOUSE TO AVOID THIS HELLISH EXPERIENCE EVER AGAIN!!!!

I did, however, make sure to carve out time to watch unusual sporting events in the middle of the move.

Do you rank sports based on how likely you would die if you participated? Or perhaps on how much merely watching a sporting event makes your body shudder in horror? Let me introduce you to the most NOPE event in all of international sports: The high diving competition at the World Aquatics Championships. They pre-populate the pool with emergency rescue divers, just in case. (See the little guys all the way down there in the pool?)

And it just so happens that this year’s high diving world championship also featured an absolute thriller of a duel, a surprise American gold medal, and another W for a niche sports GOAT.

  • The championship was held at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore, where they include just about every water-related event. They have Katie Ledecky racing against Summer McIntosh, just like in the Olympics, as well as diving and water polo. But it’s also got a bunch of fringe events, like multiple forms of open-water swimming, solo artistic swimming, and the high dive.

  • They need to build a separate high diving venue because the platform is NINETY FEET IN THE AIR. And the pool needs to be extra deep so the divers do not die when they hit the bottom.

  • All the dives are feet first, because it’s too dangerous to expose your head to impact at those high speeds.

  • And the scuba team is there in case impact with the water knocks a diver unconscious.

  • In the men’s 27m competition, Team USA’s James Lichtenstein won his first World Championship on the final dive of the competition … although it would be almost as accurate to say Spain’s Carlos Gimeno lost it. The two attempted the exact same dives throughout the competition and Gimeno led the whole way, but a sliiiiight over-rotation on the final dive gave Lichtenstein a 3.6-point win and the first American championship since 2017. Here’s Gimeno after the scores popped up:

England repeated as Women’s Euros champions, the greatest thing to happen to England in nearly two weeks since the Oasis reunion tour started. The Lionesses beat Spain on penalty kicks in the final, and for the second-straight game and the second-straight Euros, the winner came off Chloe Kelly’s foot. (Her signature run-up with the little crow-hop … iconic.)

And I’m going to be honest, I’m so mad about it. I’m just so mad about it. The English won back-to-back-to-back knockout stage matches in which they looked clearly worse than their opposition, stealing this tournament like it’s a priceless artifact they’re going to put in the British Museum and refuse to return to its original country because the 17th Earl of Chestwick-Hampstershire “found” it on an expedition in 1847.

  • England led for exactly one minute during its three knockout round matches. You’ve probably taken about three minutes to read this far into the newsletter, which is about three times as long as England held a lead in the knockout stages.

  • England trailed for 174 minutes in the knockout stages, almost an hour per match. That’s the length of “The Godfather.” (Don’t worry, this newsletter is not 174 minutes long.)

  • England finished the tournament fourth in XG/90, behind Spain, France and Sweden … two of which they beat on penalty kicks.

  • So OK, maybe you’re thinking they were great on penalty kicks. BUT THEY WEREN’T! They only hit six of 12 penalty attempts between the two shootouts. And I can’t even give goalkeeper Hannah Hampton all the credit—while Hampton made some saves between the two shootouts, England’s opponents also missed the net entirely on four of their 11 attempts—two over the crossbar, and two wide.

  • Long story short … USWNT is going to win the 2027 World Cup.

OK, I fear I have been too mean to England. To make it up to the lads and lasses, I am going to talk about The Darts: 18-year old Luke Littler won the World Matchplay championship in stunning fashion, coming back from huge deficits in the semifinals and the finals.

  • The YouTube title for this video says “THE SECOND-GREATEST LEG OF ALL TIME?” which seems awfully specific. So I had to search “greatest darts leg of all time” and sure enough the channel posted that video two years ago. Even more electric.

    Respect to The Darts for maintaining discipline in YouTube titles, something I cannot attest to. (My NCAA March Madness picks were not, in fact, The Most Accurate.)

  • In the final, Littler again lost the first five legs. But of course, the finals at the World Matchplay are best-of-35—you know, best-of-35, that other classic format we all know and love—and Littler rallied back to win 18-13.

  • At 18 years old, Luke the Nuke has now won the Triple Crown of Darts—the World Championship, the World Matchplay, and the Premier League. And The Darts is a sport where middle-aged men can shine. His opponent in Sunday’s final, James Wade, is 42. The World Matchplay winner in 2021, Peter Wright, was 51 at the time.

  • 2-time Olympic gold medal-winning fencer Lee Kiefer won her first-ever gold at the World Championships, rallying back from an 11-4 deficit in the quarterfinals, surviving, advancing, and totally dominating the semis and the gold medal match.

  • Kerry dominated the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship to win their 39th title, the most of any county. That means this shirt I bought at the SuperValu in Dingle celebrating Kerry’s 37 All-Ireland championships is now two championships out of date.

(I would take a picture of me wearing the shirt, but, like I said, I’m moving tomorrow, and I have no clue where it is. Probably 3/4ths of the way down a box also containing towels and winter clothes.)

  • Canada’s Summer McIntosh won the 400m freestyle at the World Aquatics Championships in her first head-to-head battle against Katie Ledecky of the meet … but that was broadly expected. (McIntosh set a world record and won gold last year in Paris; Ledecky won bronze.) The real showdown is the 800m later this week.

  • Tadej Pogačar coasted to his fourth Tour de France title, putting him just one away from tying the all-time record, because NOBODY HAS EVER WON MORE THAN FIVE. REMEMBER THAT GUY WHO WON MORE THAN FIVE? NO, YOU DON’T. Pogačar also won the Mountains Classification but didn’t get to wear the polka dot jersey because he was already wearing the yellow jersey.

  • The green jersey for the Points Classification went to Jonathan Milan of Lidl-Trek, which I am mentioning because that’s the team our new editor Louis Bien works for during his day job. (Ed. Note: <3)

  • Nick Kurtz went 6-for-6 with four home runs in one of the greatest individual games in baseball history.

    The #4 pick in the 2024 draft, Kurtz is just the 20th player in MLB history to hit four dingers in a game, and the first rookie.

  • Former Alabama softball star Montana Fouts powered the Talons to the first AUSL title with a shutout win in Tuscaloosa. The Talons won the game 1-0 on a sixth-inning home run and this unreal solo double play in the seventh:

  • Bubba Wallace won NASCAR’s Brickyard 400, which gets a big “hell yeah” from me.

  • Team USA won the most medals at the World University Games—which, you know, makes sense, because we do the most college sports. (Japan and China did have more gold medals, though.)

  • You can catch world championship swimming and diving every day this week. The diving gets started really early, while the swimming kicks off at 7 a.m. Eastern. That’s gonna be on Peacock.

  • But make sure you lock in for the main event: Ledecky vs. McIntosh in the 800m free on Saturday morning.

  • Also on this week: The Tour de France Femmes. Unlike the men’s race, which takes nearly a month, this one takes 10 days. They’ll get into the mountains this weekend. That’s also on Peacock!

  • The USA Track and Field Championships will start Thursday in Eugene, Ore. I am not going to look it up but I feel like that should also be on Peacock.

  • The NFL Hall of Fame Game is Thursday night, and as much as I love football I genuinely feel it should not exist in the month of July.



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Wabash earns USTFCCCA honors | Journal Review

For the Journal Review The Wabash College track and field program and student-athletes Haiden Diemer-McKinney and Quinn Sholar have been honored for their academic and athletic excellence by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association following the 2024-25 season. The Little Giants were named a USTFCCCA All-Academic Team, one of 115 NCAA […]

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For the Journal Review

The Wabash College track and field program and student-athletes Haiden Diemer-McKinney and Quinn Sholar have been honored for their academic and athletic excellence by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association following the 2024-25 season.

The Little Giants were named a USTFCCCA All-Academic Team, one of 115 NCAA Division III men’s programs to receive the honor. Wabash posted a cumulative team grade point average of 3.36, surpassing the 3.10 threshold for recognition.

Diemer-McKinney, an economics major, and Sholar, an art major — both rising seniors — were among 512 individuals named USTFCCCA All-Academic Athletes. To earn the distinction, student-athletes must hold a cumulative GPA of 3.30 or higher and rank among the top 50 nationally in an individual event or be part of a top-35 relay.

Diemer-McKinney earned All-North Coast Athletic Conference honors in both cross country and track and field. He placed 15th at the 2024 NCAC Cross Country Championships to secure third-team all-conference recognition. During the indoor season, he finished second in the 800-meter run and ran the leadoff leg on the Little Giants’ runner-up distance medley relay and 4×400-meter relay teams to collect three All-NCAC performances. He added a fifth all-conference honor in the outdoor season with another second-place finish in the 800 meters at the 2025 NCAC Outdoor Championships.

Sholar captured the NCAC title in the weight throw at the 2025 indoor championships and placed third in the shot put to earn additional all-conference recognition. In the spring, he secured second-place finishes in both the shot put and discus at the NCAC Outdoor Championships, earning two more All-NCAC honors. Sholar qualified for the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor National Championships in the discus and finished 20th in the event.

“I am very proud of our team and the individuals for earning Academic All-American honors from the USTFCCCA,” said Clyde Morgan, Director of Track and Field and Cross Country at Wabash. “This is always one of our program’s goals, so to see them achieve academic greatness is phenomenal, especially at a prestigious place like Wabash College. Congratulations to all of our young men and coaches, as well as the rest of the Wabash community, who have poured into our team not just as scholar-athletes, but as young men.”

The honors cap a successful 2024-25 campaign for Wabash, which included an NCAC Outdoor Championship team title and multiple NCAA Championship qualifiers and All-American performances across cross country and indoor and outdoor track and field.






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Sullivan Helps U.S. Win Men’s Four at World Rowing U23 Championships

Story Links PHILADELPHIA – Recent University of Pennsylvania graduate Sam Sullivan added to his international rowing credentials over the weekend, winning a gold medal with the United States Men’s Four at the World Rowing U23 Championships. The event ran last week in Poznan, Poland. ?? That feeling when you become […]

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PHILADELPHIA – Recent University of Pennsylvania graduate Sam Sullivan added to his international rowing credentials over the weekend, winning a gold medal with the United States Men’s Four at the World Rowing U23 Championships. The event ran last week in Poznan, Poland.

The United States dominated Saturday’s Men’s Four A Final, showing confidence in their crew from start to finish. The U.S. took the lead early with Great Britain inches away through the first half of the race, but the Americans could not be shaken. Their third 500 meters was rowed with power and confidence, each stroke pushing their bow further and further into the lead.  The U.S. countered a great sprint from Spain as they crossed the finish line in a time of 5:49.96. In addition to Sullivan, the boat featured Ryan Martin (Washington), Wilson Morton (California), and Lyle Donovan (Washington).
 
“It was a really good race. We talked about just being our own crew and going out there and staying internal, and that’s what we did,” Sullivan told USRowing after the race. “I think we just did a good job of being ourselves and sticking to what we know. No better group to do it with.”

“I had so much trust in these guys to execute their race,” said the men’s four coach, Sergio Espinoza, to USRowing. “They did everything we asked of them, and it paid off. I’m just so proud of them and all of our coaches. Huge thank you to Josy Verdonkschot, Casey Galvanek, Jesse Foglia, and Brett Gorman for all their work and support; it has made a major impact.”
 
Saturday’s gold adds to Sullivan’s silver medal from last year’s U23 Championships, where he stroked the U.S. Men’s Eight. Last September, Sullivan was named the USRowing U23 National Team Male Athlete of the Year.
 

#FightOnPenn

 
 





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Siebel Newsom visits San Anselmo library

Jennifer Siebel Newsom and author JaNay Brown-Wood read to about 50 children Monday at the San Anselmo Public Library. “It was awesome. Our Monday morning story time was always popular,” said Linda Kenton, the library director. “They were a great team up there.” The library recently received a $1,000 grant from the state library to […]

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Jennifer Siebel Newsom and author JaNay Brown-Wood read to about 50 children Monday at the San Anselmo Public Library.

“It was awesome. Our Monday morning story time was always popular,” said Linda Kenton, the library director. “They were a great team up there.”

The library recently received a $1,000 grant from the state library to install a story walk. The book featured in the installation, “Here are the Seeds” by Brown-Wood, centers on two children who learn to garden.

The book has been selected for inclusion in Siebel Newsom’s children’s book club, which launched in June. About 900 libraries receive the book club selections, said Abby Lunardini, a spokesperson for Siebel Newsom.

Siebel Newsom, who was raised in Marin, lives in Kentfield with Gov. Gavin Newsom and their children.

“Growing up, this library was such an escape for me,” Siebel Newsom said in a prepared statement. “I just loved walking up the steps, eager to uncover the mystery of a new book to read.”

“This place and the incredible public servants who work here — our librarians and library staff — supported me, spurred my curiosity and creativity and instilled a lifetime love of books and storytelling,” she said.

The grant is meant to encourage families to use the library year-round, and promote early childhood literacy and educational programming, Lunardini said.

“San Anselmo has been doing amazing things on that forefront,” Lunardini said. “Today was an example of that.”

1 of 4

Author JaNay Brown-Wood reads one of her books during an appearance with Jennifer Siebel Newsom and Brown-Wood’s 8-year-old daughter Vivian during a story time outside the library in San Anselmo on Monday, July 28, 2025. (Alan Dep/Marin Independent Journal)

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OVC Tennis Teams and Athletes Earn ITA Academic Honors

• Complete ITA Academic Releases Ohio Valley Conference women’s tennis teams and student-athletes have been honored for academic success by the Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA). Four programs were named an ITA All-Academic Team by having a team GPA of 3.2 or above.  The teams were Bryant, Southeast Missouri, SIUE and Western Illinois. Additionally, 31 student-athletes were […]

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OVC Tennis Teams and Athletes Earn ITA Academic Honors

Complete ITA Academic Releases

Ohio Valley Conference women’s tennis teams and student-athletes have been honored for academic success by the Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA).

Four programs were named an ITA All-Academic Team by having a team GPA of 3.2 or above.  The teams were Bryant, Southeast Missouri, SIUE and Western Illinois.

Additionally, 31 student-athletes were deemed ITA Scholar-Athletes for having at least a 3.5 GPA during the 2024-25 academic year.

OVC Tennis Players Named ITA Scholar-Athletes
Natalia Vera, Bryant
Caitlyn Munson, Bryant
Bella Tan, Bryant
Gia Fenton-Noriega, Bryant
Athmika Sreenivas, Bryant
Nicole Isman, Bryant
Lucia Pino, Bryant
Aurora Pedwell, Bryant
Amy Maalouf, Bryant
Hannah O’Brien, Bryant
Kristina Kozakova, Southeast Missouri
Yontha Tadoum, Southeast Missouri
Mia Mayerova, Southeast Missouri
Claudia Casas Gasol, Southeast Missouri
Lera Valeeva, Southeast Missouri
Maja Bajorek, Southeast Missouri
Chloe Koons, SIUE
Cydney Rogers, SIUE
Stefaniya Anikina, SIUE
Noelle Compton, SIUE
Amelia Gorman, SIUE
Payton Tomichek, SIUE
Denver Johnson, Western Illinois
Nour Gueblaoui, Western Illinois
Lara Rosetto Diniz de Souza, Western Illinois
Anna-Evelina Trush, Western Illinois
Aubrey Brumbaugh, Western Illinois
Paige Grice, Western Illinois
Mana Fawcett, Western Illinois
Richardlynne Francois, Western Illinois
Chloe Routier, Western Illinois
 

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SAY WHAT?: Popcorn vs. potato chips – things get salty in skirmish over snacks

Welcome to Say What?!, a newsroom feature wherein important issues are debated and petty scores get settled. In today’s edition, Surrey Now-Leader reporter (and Say What?! instigator) Tom Zytaruk faces off against Peace Arch News reporter Tricia Leslie in an important battle for snackers everywhere. Today’s topic: What’s better, popcorn or potato chips? Tom says: Why popcorn is prime Mmm, […]

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Welcome to Say What?!, a newsroom feature wherein important issues are debated and petty scores get settled.

In today’s edition, Surrey Now-Leader reporter (and Say What?! instigator) Tom Zytaruk faces off against Peace Arch News reporter Tricia Leslie in an important battle for snackers everywhere.

Today’s topic: What’s better, popcorn or potato chips?

Tom says: Why popcorn is prime

Mmm, caramel popcorn – what a treat. 

Or simply unadulterated. Or lightly buttered, maybe with a dash of salt?

Just as excellent.

Caramel potato chips, on the other hand, are inconceivable. Might as well eat spider goulash. In fact, I apologize outright for introducing the concept, a faux pas on par with expelling gas in a crowded elevator.

Firstly, let’s consider the history of popcorn – a go-to snack for thousands of years, probably before even potatoes, let alone potato chips, were invented.

Have you ever heard of cave popcorn? It’s a thing. Might be even older than in the beginning, when darkness was over the surface of the deep and God’s spirit hovered over the waters.

Cave chips? What’s that, flint? Can’t eat flint, no.

Secondly, there is utility in popcorn. It made for an inexpensive meal during the Great Depression – and sure, while it can get stuck in your teeth, at least you have a snack for later.

You see, popcorn is food. Fibrous, and nutritious. Potato chips are junk.

Popcorn can be a suitable snack for people with diabetes. But chips?

If there were a Latin term for potato chips, it would probably be carbohydratilicum commotio cordis. Steeped in heart-busting trans-fats, over-processed, greasy, can’t microwave them, troublesome.

Ever heard of acrylamide? Google it, if you dare. Dr. Eric Berg, author of The Healthy Keto Plan, says it’s “The #1 Most Dangerous Ingredient in the World.” Guess where you’ll find it?

Don’t fear the kernel. Popcorn generally has a lower level of this compared to the lowly potato chip.

Thirdly, eating popcorn is iconic.

When you’re on the edge of your seat in a movie theatre – stuffing your face – that’s popcorn you’d be putting down your neck, as opposed to potato chips getting stuck in your neck.

That’s what the theatres are selling; Hollywood knows what you want. (And people, I’m told, are willing to pay a premium for it). 

Finally, when you order popcorn, that’s what you get. With chips, you can’t be too sure. French fries? Crisps?

What the heck? It’s too risky.

So pop the popcorn, and skip the chips. Because, essentially, chips plus dips equals mighty, giant hips.

Tricia says: Why chips are champ

There’s something so tasty about a salty, crunchy snack, and chips are a favourite choice for many munchers.

Chips come in so many flavours, and as someone who adores having plenty of options, it’s great to have such a variety, from plain to salt and vinegar, tikka masala to all-dressed, dill pickle, honey dijon, avocado lime or even sweet ghost pepper.

There’s also a wide range of yummy chip dips, and chips made from whole grains, such as Sun Chips, or tortilla chips, which are fantastic by themselves or elevated with cheese and toppings into a delicious plate of nachos.

Chips — unlike popcorn — don’t get stuck in your teeth, remaining impervious to dental floss and brushing.

Popcorn is also pretty pricey, especially at the movies, where they charge extra to add a substance called “butter topping” (but is actually, butter-flavoured oil with less water content than butter to prevent sogginess). Yikes. 

Some chips offer stackable fun, like Pringles.

Ever try to stack popcorn? 

It would be a slippery, salty hot mess. 

Literally. 

The earliest known recipe for chips is from 1817, in an English cookbook that included a recipe for “potatoes fried in slices or shavings.”

Another popular tale says they were invented in 1853 by a restaurant chef, when a finicky customer kept sending back his French-fried potatoes, so the cook sliced the potatoes ridiculously fine and fried them — and the customer loved them. 

Present-day Michelin-star chefs know the value of potato chips, with many creating their own delicious versions of the snack, or incorporating chips into Michelin-starred dishes including omelettes, cannoli, and wagyu beef carpaccio.

Wagyu beef car-popcorn-o?

No thanks. 

With Trump’s ongoing tariff war, many Canadians have been purchasing products only made in Canada, dubbed the “Elbows Up” movement. 

Old Dutch is one brand of Canadian chips that offers several flavours to Canadian-minded consumers, as well as Hardbite, owned by fourth-generation farmers Peter Schouten and Braden Douglas of Surrey-based Naturally Homegrown Foods Ltd. — chips made from potatoes grown locally by the Heppell family. 

Orville Redenbacher?

American. 

Chip is also the name of our adorable (unofficial) office kitten, and he’s the coolest.

In short, chips are the cat’s pyjamas. 

Popcorn?

Something people throw at movie screens when watching A Minecraft Movie. 

Got an opinion about this battle? Got an idea for a future battle? Contact the newsroom.



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