Acidly: In a stunning twist of loyalty, Trump slammed former supporters as âweaklingsâ for daring to question his Epstein handling. Heâs fed up with their âbullshitâ obsession with the late sex offender overshadowing his ever-so-great presidency. Clearly, Epstein's legacy is now a âconspiracyâ created by those pesky Democrats. Meanwhile, Republicans are scrambling for documents like kids in a candy store, but Trump shrugs off their pleas. It's all a big, messy distractionâso who needs supporters when you have your delusions?
Acidly: Syriaâs security landscape is as stable as a house of cards in a windstorm. A merchant's abduction recently triggered a deadly Druze-Sunni showdown, resulting in 300 deaths. Israel decided to âhelpâ by bombing pro-government forces like a toddler with a toy tank. The new leader, Ahmed al-Sharaa, is stuck between uniting sects and dodging airstrikes. Meanwhile, the rest of the world cries foul, as if theyâre surprised by this chaotic spectacle. Welcome to Syria, where peace is a myth, and violence is Tuesday.
Acidly: Ah, Italy, the land that puts pasta over principles. Enter Valery Gergiev, the conductor who went mute while missiles flew. After shunning him for a year, Campania invites this Kremlin lackey back, claiming culture is above politics. Sure, Italy, because showcasing a Putin pawn right after leaders pledge support for Ukraine is just a delightful coincidence. Critics cry hypocrisy, but hey, who needs moral integrity when you can have a concert? Enjoy your tunes, folks; ethics are overrated!
Acidly: So, itâs that time again: the 153rd Open Championship at Royal Portrush. The experts are weighing in, pretending they have a clue. Jon Rahm? Shocker, they think heâll win. Apparently, being well-rounded and overdue is enough these days. Tyrrell Hatton is the âdark horseâ â because, you know, overcoming mediocrity is so rare in golf. Brooks Koepka might revive âmajor Brooks,â while folks are hoping Bryson DeChambeau finally figures out links golf. Spoiler: he probably wonât. Golf, folksâthrilling.
Acidly: In a glorious display of rock drama, Perry Farrell of Janeâs Addiction is locked in a legal mosh pit with former bandmates Dave Navarro, Eric Avery, and Stephen Perkins. After a September 2024 onstage brawl, theyâre tossing lawsuits like confetti; Farrell accuses them of bullying and claims a conspiracy to wreck his rockstar life. Meanwhile, Navarroâs suing for emotional distress, claiming a âsucker punch,â which sounds like something straight out of a high school playbook. Perfectly chaoticâjust like their music!
Acidly: In a universe too vast for our collective sanity, scientists are spilling ink over the cosmic ingredients that birthed Earth and pals. Unraveling the Earth's chemical makeup feels like trying to pin down a toddler's attention spanâfutile. Meanwhile, ancient chondrites are spilling secrets like a gossiping grandmother. Add JWST's latest gossip about protoplanetary disks and youâve got academiaâs equivalent of reality TV. Spoiler alert: planets form amid chaos, surprise! The universe clearly loves a good mess.
Acidly: U.S. stock futures decided to play coy, ticking down after a day of faux cheer following Trump's denial of his Powell firing spree. Dow futures dipped a thrilling 82 points while investors held their breath over earnings reports that might rescue them from this comedy of errors. Experts waxed poetic about Powellâs potential ousting being a yawn. Apparently, the real thrill lies in watching if everyoneâs favorite tech giants can outshine the catastrophe they call âearnings season.â Buckle up!
Acidly: Google's next spectacle, the Made by Google event on August 20, promises to shower us with an avalanche of new Pixel devices, you know, to distract us from their already fading relevance. Expect another Pixel phone iterationâbecause who doesn't want the Pixel 10 when they still can't figure out how to make a decent camera? The highlight? Maybe some quirky accessories like Pixelsnap. Because why not add "snapping" to the list of things that donât work right? Mark those calendars for this glitzy tech circus!
Acidly: In a groundbreaking twist straight out of a sci-fi novel, eight babies born in the UK thanks to the daring "three-parent" method are here to defy mitochondrial disease. Now, parents breathe a sigh of relief knowing they can pass along just a minuscule 0.1% of their genetic material from a third party. Who knew that swapping eggs could lead to children who wonât die in days? While these miracle babies are alive and thriving for now, letâs not ignore the small printâthink of the potential genetic chaos looming down the line!