Nancy Reagan’s 1986 “Just Say No” clip played, framed as effective anti-drug messaging. Clint Eastwood and DEA ads followed, reinforcing 1980s deterrence.
A childhood cardboard cockpit was built with marker-drawn switches and a cutout “screen.” Later, UW’s 100th memorial at Cinnamon Lakeside ended with a 25 LKR commemorative cover.
A Washington Post clip showed South Korea’s president singing “American Pie” at a formal event. Later, Jonathan Hirshon’s “Soon I’m Gonna Be A Mason” played.
A KOJIMA PRODUCTIONS YouTube studio clip showed Hideo Kojima announcing a new action-espionage game. The post ended on “Stay tuned.”
James Hoffmann’s “Deep Fried Coffee” video sparked admiration in a bright kitchen demo. The experiment framing made coffee feel playful and precise.
A Christ Pantocrator icon paired with “Jesus Paid It All” set a devotional tone. Later, American Psycho and Tom Cruise interviews reset the night into pop-culture focus.
A James Hoffmann AeroPress breakdown made coffee extraction feel like clean, readable science. The entry leaned into sharing data openly, but kept it human.
James Hoffmann’s 2007 barista run felt disappointing after Heather Perry placed ahead. The uni room smelled like coffee and a white tobacco-cognac diffuser.
Watched Spaghetti all’assassina videos and got fixated on trying the burnt, red-sauced pasta. Noted a preference for firm, al dente spaghetti, not soft.
A suited man lounged on an office sofa, sunglasses on, taking a call. “Girls & Boys” underscored a cheeky “peekaboo” vibe.
Jonathan’s diary riffed on Baldur’s Gate 3 and craving Peking duck. A Dick Cheney photo framed a rushed duck-hunt fantasy.
A CNBC Make It video on Olipop’s growth played as colorful cans stacked on screen. Paired it with “You Can Do Magic,” leaning into an ambitious morning.
A BBC piece on British chocolate sparked Easter candy nostalgia, then a Bloomberg clip pushed for scarier warning labels on junk food. The day landed on Food Wishes spaghetti, Sri Lankan sausage pride, and a late-night...
Tom Odell’s “Another Love” piano looped, mixing daffodil lines with a blunt trust joke about leading Sri Lankans. Later came Spaghetti all’Assassina, “go pelican” hype, and oldies.
Weezer’s “Island in the Sun” played over Dr. No beach shots and that easy tropical fantasy. The night pivoted into flag-patriot praise for Trump and a quick nod to a Thilanga sighting in old event photos.
A New York Times Nikki Haley piece highlighted her campaign presence and personal image. Later, a Hans Wijesuriya search framed him as a standout helper in recovering a lost phone.
A BBC inert missile story triggered a “yikes” spiral, then late-night food science videos and brisket cravings took over. Papparich memories followed, with beef satay frustration and coffee-smell nostalgia.
Yakutian waffles and Milka Bubbly cravings turned into a Madonna “Ray of Light” loop, then cosmic-ray browsing. Patrick Mendis and Saroj Perera surfaced in a Sri Lanka vision with bold record-book goals.
A French soup video kicked off cravings and a Friday-the-13th Jacques de Molay note. Haiti news and Belafonte songs drifted into Sri Lanka-as-paradise pride.
Propaganda-technique icons sparked a note about using one. Homemade jujubes recalled Sri Lankan sweet shops, then AntBuster nostalgia peaked near Level 80.