Mike Tyson, the former two-time heavyweight champion hosts one of the most famous podcasts called HotBoxin’. He invites prominent guests from all walks of life and sits with them in his studio to share each other’s experiences. Most of the time, the discussion he had with his guests turned out to be interesting as in an hour of long talk, many new storylines surfaced which made the show more interesting. Tyson takes pride in hosting the podcast and behaves nicely as a gentleman and expects his guests to put forth good social behavior.
Editor's note: This post was originally published on July 26, 2015. The topic — the meaning of the greeting "namaste" — was in the news this week. According to a report in the Atlanta Journal Constitution, a Georgia elementary school introduced yoga classes to de-stress students, but some parents thought that certain elements of the practice reflected a "non-Christian belief system." The school sent an email about changes in the way yoga will be taught.
Last week, leading academic Colin MacCabe wrote an open letter to the Education Secretary arguing that the A-level system is undermining our children's futures. It prompted an enormous postbag, and the following riposte from the minister himself, Charles Clarke. Published: 29 Aug 2004 ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7tbTEoKyaqpSerq96wqikaKiipLOquMRomqGZoqGytK%2FLmqmknQ%3D%3D
Warner Bros. is reteaming with “Suicide Squad” director David Ayer on a contemporary remake of the classic war pic “The Dirty Dozen.” Ayer will write and direct a retelling of the World War II film.
As many of you know by now, we don't particularly enjoy all of Vine's hijinx. We don't like the smack camming. We don't like gallon smashing. We don't like doing it for the Vine. We do like this Vine.
We would go so far as to say we love that one particular Vine.
But there's a new Vine meme sweeping the Internet: Whaling. Everyone is whaling. White girls are whaling. Black people are whaling.