A Barry scene landed hard, read as deliberate, with NoHo Hank singled out. The moment stuck as a sharp late-night note.
Macy’s diamond-necklace page set a glossy mood, with talk of future shops and Pauline choosing freely. “Candy Necklace” and Saltburn’s “insane” subtext closed the night.
macOS Sonoma update notes shared the morning with James Blunt’s “1973,” looping nostalgia over clean, practical fixes. Late-night religion flowchart landed on secular humanism, framed through Devil’s Advocate.
Grimaldi’s coal-fired oven clip set a craft-and-scale tone, then a therapist reaction video reframed limits, intent, and perspective. Truth got framed as something felt in the bones, not argued into belief.
VICE shorts prompted a hard line on charity transparency, then a New York Times photo set the pace: slow, molasses-like. Italian food clips and celebrity restaurant lore fueled big hospitality plans with a tightly...
Swiss countryside footage and a shooting-range scene framed training as disciplined and protective of civilians. A late-night cooking clip landed on salty caramel.
Djibouti read as strategic, while counterterror work felt unfairly shouldered by the U.S. An Oval Office tour and Johnny Cash cues folded into a late-night leadership riff.
A VICE News report on Iran’s uprising played late, centering on a woman speaking with steady seriousness. The footage landed as terrifying, leaving a heavy sigh.
Decision Points left warm respect for George W. Bush, with JFK still ranked as the cooler favorite. Iraq’s present-day threat felt diminished.
A private detective card for William J. Burns sat on a wooden table. “CIA DIRECTOR” was scribbled on top like a dry, conspiratorial joke.
General Dynamics’ 2022 annual report cover felt slick and aerospace-forward. A later Wikipedia skim on the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act polls ended on Dave Goldberg.
A Raytheon annual report snapshot highlighted 2022 scale and priorities, signed by Gregory J. Hayes. A late note reacted to claims of pre-invasion ties involving Russia.
Command & Conquer: Generals—Zero Hour felt like speed over strategy, while a French person stayed on the mind. Later came a simple American wish-list.
Dior’s annual report opened with Bernard Arnault’s chairman message on resilience and growth amid a tough climate. Later, Shemara Wikramanayake’s CEO letter framed disciplined risk culture, strong capital, and steady...
A PDF annual report listed operational and regulatory risks, signed by Denise Coates CBE and dated December 19, 2022. The entry closed with: “By order of the Peaky Blinders!”
A Taylor Swift magazine stand flashed everywhere, including a TIME Person of the Year cover. The night ended on a looped mantra: “Magic, Madness, Heaven, Sin.”
Temasek’s site pitched “disciplined institution,” prompting a pointed note about finding the annual report. Later, the CIA memorial wall and Young Money’s “Trophies” framed a dark, trophy-themed reflection.
A New York Times piece on OpenAI’s board crisis paired with Hokyoung Kim’s moody illustrations, which felt instantly lovable. Later, Taylor Swift lines about the old scarf and “All Too Well” closed the night.
A Rihanna video sparked a goofy thought about filming Human Centipede 4 in Sri Lanka, calling it “art” and name-dropping cast links. Pauline jokes followed, then a Jeff Zucker Wikipedia read landed as “kinda lame.”
Holiday photos kicked off memories of Parthiv and later Mikey, tied to pool days, pet birds, and Halo glitches. A SpaceX launch and Point Break masks spiraled into late-night riffs, then doubt about work.
A NASA night map of Korea and Earth became a quick “communism effects” riff. Later, the $10 NYT subscription turned into joking outreach and a playful revenue-share thought.
Halo music essays and film-editing talk fed a marketing-and-identity riff. Later, prison ramen economics sparked government fantasies and a “strong personality” note.
Subscribed to New York Times, completed survey, and traced a Trump headline to Playboy. Vox’s Xi clip revived Great Wall nostalgia.
Temple-day calm flipped into big-budget faith plans and a vow to fund every religion without letting them steer policy. Later, Trump photos and pop hooks blurred into power-lust, parody lyrics, and late-night mythmaking.
A Guardian report on “forever chemicals” in tap water sparked reflections on filters and dumping. A late-night list mapped what AngryPages should deliver—humor, leadership, playlists, and chaos.
A meditation on Siddhartha’s ban on harmful trades weighed against state survival, then the night pivoted to Halo nostalgia and Cat Fawkes humor.
Charlie Munger praised Lee Kuan Yew’s nation-building and argued India is held back by corruption and democratic gridlock. A Kissinger tribute reinforced Lee’s meticulous, small-country focus.
A US wars-list video sparked notes on Sri Lanka’s war and harsh realpolitik. A win-loss tally followed, with blunt labels.
A half-serious double date turned into bar jokes about a White Russian cocktail and future ad plans. Later, a Nazi-history video landed hard, calling real life scarier than horror.
Cat videos, a coin-hoard headline, and yacht daydreams flowed into camera talk—Arri vs Red—and memories of coffee and home scents.
Halo CE memories peaked at 343 Guilty Spark terror. Co-op with Milan followed, easing fear and softening the bullying streak.
Noted Franz Ferdinand’s Ceylon hunting photos beside a killed elephant. Remembered his assassination by Gavrilo Princip as the spark that set off World War I.
Noted a JFK map photo as a snapshot of modern U.S. foreign policy. Recalled UK comfort foods—cup noodles, tomato soup, toast—while reflecting on the UK versus Singapore.
Watched a Halo 2 video on YouTube. Wrote about hailing from China’s Lee and Han dynasties.
Lana Del Rey’s “A&W” played over a Jimmy Carter photo spiral, fixated on image, hair, and fame. By night, it turned into a goofy “Jimmy, Jimmy” chant.
A Singapore defense video sparked a quick name-correction, then the entry shrugged and moved on. Japanese shrimp nuggets looked tempting, and late-night Pokémon theory ended with a “who cares” dismissal.
Oppenheimer scenes and “USA! USA!” energy framed winning as the first move, with consequences parked for later. A local business headline cut in, then the night ended in cat-nutrition reading and a strong recommendation.
Dr. Zaius and Planet of the Apes cues sparked thoughts on old films, lawgivers, and Hammurabi. Animal Farm memories, school punishments, and a Peaky Blinders joke landed as regret and dark humor.
A childhood trade-off left regret about giving away Pokémon Yellow and keeping Blue for Blastoise. Later, a Blinken/Biden/Xi clip triggered a sad beat and a French “big dictator” joke.
Gandolfini’s “Life is short” ad sparked a Sopranos-style riff about playing a fake gangster and character. Later, Pokemon grind regrets and Halo CE commentary fed a tired push to stay cryptic and get back to work.
Bolognese clips sparked a craving for spaghetti and linguine after having the dish the day before. Later, Halo Infinite’s High Ground map resurfaced old Bungie-era excitement.
A Sweden promo clip sparked admiration for the country’s vibe and presentation. Later, Steve Irwin clips and a skin-map video triggered uneasy thoughts about risk and origins.
Conan’s Death Stranding cameo set an “Angry Way” tone and a nod to Japanese games. Later, Obama, UK protests, and Malaya-riot history merged into a hardline take on disorder.
A Western-style still sparked a note that movies are just 24-frames-per-second photography. The thought lingered on how countless takes get distilled into a tight 90 minutes.
Halo 3 behind-the-scenes footage replayed, echoing GameCube and phone asks. Canada jet clip and Eamon track ended on a stark Israel stance.
Ivanka’s courthouse walk highlighted the security guard and camera swarm. Belgian fries followed, then Five Nights at Freddy’s turned “pizza talk” into a dark joke.
Green-suited Santa lore sparked a plan to buy Coca-Cola stock before Christmas. Later, early cat fandom returned through Mew, Mewtwo, and Simba.
Halo 3 memories peaked with a rocket-launcher wipe and “battle rifle buddies.” Later, Japanese prison routines, Nordic-law copying, and a dark French skit drifted in.
Malt videos sparked love for Horlicks, Maltesers, and French breakfasts. Beer, Snickers, Swedish meatballs, currywurst, and Belgian fries rounded out the day’s cravings.
A British-accent clip made “water” feel oddly important and specific. Halo Infinite speedrun reactions brought back Halo 3 love, framed through respect for Any% skill.
A Wozniak interview cueed thoughts on Steve Jobs and what Apple became. Ratatouille clips turned into a search for a Lee Kuan Yew-type leader.
Currywurst clips sparked a long riff on pork sausages, oils, and favorite Singapore bak kwa brands. Singapore walking pace, foot strain, and a Lee Kuan Yew sighting anchored the memories.
Old food memories spiraled from onion rings to buffet hoarding, then into mutton rogan josh and caramel pudding cravings. Pokémon glitches and a Shiny Mew capped the day, with a final note about NTU and a Singapore museum...
An American beer video set off thoughts about unfair China-bashing and staying cordial with Xi. Jimmy Carter stood out after reading his interview in a subscribed magazine.
A Kojima video recalled an old MGSV rescue mission. Stardew Valley and Harvest Moon nostalgia fed a bigger push to treat work and systems as games.
A New York Times candy quiz sparked a quick price check on a $0.25 intro offer. The math landed at $6.50 for six months.
A Munchies clip spotlighted Mo as a warm, standout presence in Harlem street food. Yelp photos and the cart vibe reinforced real respect.
A military vehicle with a Trophy defense system and an Israeli flag set the scene. Drake’s “Trophies” played, landing on staying alive and taking care of people.
Mont Saint-Michel looked dreamy, with inauguration jokes layered over the view. Later came a note on alcohol’s drying effect and praise for low-alcohol Nivea aftershave balm.
A jungle singalong sparked thoughts on Thilanga and Shanika, then came a vow to stick to personal music loops. Trump numbers and pop clips slid into a tired, sad finish.