RossTaylorsBox
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Middle square is Shady posting with no caps.
And CW ruined itMiddle square is Shady posting with no caps.
if there was a CW bingo card (now rtb or spikey to make this and get 7+ likes, as they should, because if they do it it'll be funny and incisive tbh) you would have at least, like, four bingo's from the last page and a half, ffs come on guys this is cookie cutter from all of you
Let us say that we catapult Jim off at 99.94% of the speed of light for five years, according to his watch. Then, we tell Jim to turn around and come back. It takes another five years to get back to the Earth, so for him the journey would take ten years. But for us, with our watches ticking faster than Jim's, 29 years would have passed
This reminds me of the movie Interstellar...in the water world..."every tick on that planet is a day on Earth"Was watching a Brian Cox video about time dilatation on Utoob and this came up
Yeah true but what caught my attention, as you must have guessed, is the bolded part. I can't think of it as anything other than a homage to the iconic number. He is British so must be familiar with itThis reminds me of the movie Interstellar...in the water world..."every tick on that planet is a day on Earth"
That is the coolest part of the movie. And the giant wave that they think is a mountain, and they figure out that the guy they went their to find would have only died like minutes ago. Gives me goosebumpsThis reminds me of the movie Interstellar...in the water world..."every tick on that planet is a day on Earth"
The message I got from that scene was truly the "love transcends time and space"That is the coolest part of the movie. And the giant wave that they think is a mountain, and they figure out that the guy they went their to find would have only died like minutes ago. Gives me goosebumps
That movie felt like it ran on for days to me too.This reminds me of the movie Interstellar...in the water world..."every tick on that planet is a day on Earth"
OkLot of overs
Jarrod Kimber said:Now think about peak de Villiers. Perhaps Steven Smith, Virat Kohli, Joe Root and Kane Williamson went past him as great batters. But at least part of that was because of de Villiers retiring from, or barely playing, international cricket. At his best, as great as the others were, there was probably no other player who was in position to play a ball as early as him. de Villiers slows the game down to his speed. In Centurion, when Mitchell Johnson was destroying South Africa, de Villiers was playing him like he was Boris, not Mitchell.