All posts by Harry Underwood

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About Harry Underwood

Website designer, blogger. Columbus, GA. #LGBT #p2 #wordpress

Why Spanish Sounds So FAST! (How to Finally Understand It)

🚀See everything I have available here: https://bit.ly/SpeakSpanishNowCatalog
In this video, I explain why spoken Spanish is hard to understand for beginners and how to improve your Spanish listening skills. You’ll learn about connected speech, sound reduction, common Spanish chunks, and a simple method to understand Spanish without hearing every word.
This video is perfect for beginners who want to improve Spanish listening comprehension and understand native speakers more easily.
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#LearnSpanish #SpeakSpanish #SpanishForBeginners #SpanishFluency #LanguageLearning #SpanishTips #SpeakSpanishNow

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The Onion Bought InfoWars. Now What? (ft. Ben Collins, CEO of The Onion)

The mainstream media failed to hold Alex Jones accountable for more than 30 years. A satire company is poised to do what journalism wouldn’t.

Ben Collins knows why. As a former far-right extremism reporter inside mainstream media, he watched newsrooms normalize and platform Alex Jones’ conspiracy theories in the name of “both sides” journalism. Now he’s chief executive officer of The Onion’s parent company, Global Tetrahedron — the company poised to turn Infowars into the joke it’s always been.

Infowars founder Alex Jones owes more than $1.4 billion to Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting families after years of defamation and harassment. In 2024, a bankruptcy court thwarted The Onion’s winning bid to buy Infowars and share proceeds with the Sandy Hook families.

Last month, The Onion reached a deal to license the Infowars website and its intellectual property for six months. Then Jones won an appeal to stop the process. But the appeal could be overturned at any moment, allowing The Onion to finally have the last laugh over Infowars.

This week, Katelyn and Christine discuss the evolving situation with Collins. Why did it take a satire company to defeat Infowars? His answer is a structural indictment of journalism itself.

Cancel Me, Daddy is a progressive media criticism show hosted by journalists Katelyn Burns and Christine Grimaldi. New episodes every other week.

Links:
– Grab a discounted bundle subcription to Katelyn’s and Christine’s newsletters at their TrustFnd collab! https://ift.tt/YshfZQy
– Elizabeth Williamson for The New York Times: Here’s what Jones has said about Sandy Hook., https://ift.tt/fAv1Qg5
– Benjamin Mullin and Elizabeth Williamson for The New York Times: The Onion Has a New Plan to Take Over Infowars, https://ift.tt/6ioqBpy
– Pablo Torre for Pablo Torre Finds Out: How The Onion Finally Shut Up Alex Jones for Good (ft. Ben Collins), https://ift.tt/BrUNRd7
– Tovia Smith for NPR: The Onion’s bid to take over Infowars moves to the Texas Supreme Court, https://ift.tt/Hv4nt5i

Links:

Merch Store: https://cancelmedaddy-shop.fourthwall.com/
CMD Patreon: https://ift.tt/QZ52xnO
CMD TikTok: https://ift.tt/1qBxalZ
CMD Instagram: https://ift.tt/dJgEDuO
CMD BlueSky: https://ift.tt/zcaxn9m
Linktree: https://linktr.ee/CancelMe_Daddy

Chapters
00:00 Why Alex Jones Is Still Here
01:56 How a Joke Company Bought a Conspiracy Empire
10:04 How Mainstream Media Fed the Extremism Machine
18:24 30 Years of Letting Alex Jones Win
25:54 Profiting Off Sandy Hook — and What That Broke
27:44 Who’s Actually Paying for Infowars?
28:20 Fighting Conspiracies With Comedy
30:28 So What Happens to Alex Jones Now?
32:05 What The Onion Will Actually Do With Infowars
34:07 Why Satire Did What Journalism Couldn’t
35:01 Ben Collins on What’s Next for The Onion
35:33 Out of Context Cancellations

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They’re NOT Skittles… They’re GIGGLES?! (Healthy Candy Review)

Welcome to the bizarro world of “better-for-you” candy
I grabbed three popular vegan candies from YumEarth to see if they actually hit or if this is just health food cosplay. Are these legit swaps for your favorite classics, or are we lying to ourselves in the name of ingredients we can pronounce?
Texture, flavor, sour level, and overall snackability… nothing is safe in this review.
Let’s find out if “better-for-you” actually means better

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Observations on a Historic Qualifying Week in Georgia

I have lots of thoughts about this past week and its potential impact on November.

  • State House: 160/180 Dems, 138/180 GOP
  • State Senate: 46/56 Dems, 47/56 GOP
  • All statewide executive and congressional seats contested by both parties.

Georgia has more legislative districts than there is any capacity for either major party to contest.

In 2020, with 141 nominees, Democrats achieved their highest State House popular vote share in decades, 48.66 to Republicans’ 51.31 (while winning only 42.78 of House seats).

With 160 nominees, this State House election will serve as more of a combined popular vote measure for the Democrats, given the sheer number of decades-uncontested areas which will see Democrats run for the first time this century.

Similarly, in the State Senate with 46 nominees, Democrats could see an increase in the popular vote, with the highest number of nominees since 1992 (which had 48 nominees).

Democrats’ largest share of the popular vote may have been in 2018, when 38 nominees won 45.58%. Weirdly, Dems’ vote share in the Senate decreased by 0.16 in 2020, despite running 42 nominees and flipping one seat.

In Congress, Democrats have only ran in all 14 districts since 2020, when they achieves 49% of the popular vote. Since then, while running in all districts, they’ve declined to 47% in 2022 and 2024, which may increase in this midterm environment.

1990 was the last time that Democrats ran nearly as many nominees for the General Assembly, with 162 Democrats running for House and 50 running for Senate. 1992 also comes close, with 154 Democrats for House and 48 for Senate.

Between us and TX/NC/FL

Meanwhile, this year, Texas Democrats filed for all federal, state legislative and statewide offices for the first time in decades. The campaign for all of Texas’ 150 state house seats may have an impact upward on the top-of-ticket races for James Talarico’s run for U.S. Senate and Gina Hinojosa’s Governor, with downballot Democrats being motivated to campaign throughout rural Texas and run up the numbers. Democrats led the primary ballot statewide on March, so maybe it’s a sign of things to come.

OTOH, its crazy how Florida Democrats ran for all 120 state house seats in 2024 but still lost 7 seats and got bodied in the popular vote. Never want to be in that position in Georgia. Hopefully Texas Democrats don’t end up in the same position with running for all 150 state house seats.

North Carolina Democrats have challenged up to 119 state house districts (out of 120) in the last handful of elections, and (unlike Florida) won the popular vote in 2024. That election, while not flipping the NC House, did flip one seat to break the Republican supermajority on paper. The primary, on the same day as Texas’, removed the remaining conservadems who collaborated repeatedly with Republicans to overturn Governor Josh Stein’s vetoes.

Texas Democrats can win the State House popular vote and improve upon their then-record 2018 popular vote performance, when they ran in a record 132 districts to gain 46.58% (and winning 44% of the seats), outstripping Lupe Valdez’ performance for governor but behind Beto O’Rourke’s performance for Senate.

As is the case with TX, FL, and NC, GA Dems will still run up against the sometimes-permeable wall of Republican gerrymandering. For obvious reasons, this year is one of those permeable times. Maybe not for Florida Democrats (unless they fix what messed them up in 2024 and prior), but definitely for Democrats in Texas, North Carolina and Georgia.

After our success for the two PSC seats last year, maybe this is our year to flip Georgia blue.

The Poster’s Madness Rat King Special (2/24/2026)

A four-hour streaming PowerPoint party telethon featuring 13 of Bluesky’s most unhinged super posters saving you from watching the State of the Union by sharing their hottest takes.

More info at https://ift.tt/hxIgv0r

FUNDRAISING FOR:

The UNITE HERE Local #17 Hardship Fund providing mutual aid to Minnesota’s immigrant hospitality workers – https://ift.tt/dsa8NS2

The Twin Cities ICE Relief Fund offering rent support for 1000+ Minneapolis residents – https://ift.tt/TrAdCt6

The Marsha P. Johnson Fund providing emergency microgrants to BIPOC trans people in Portland, Oregon – https://ift.tt/wCvfGD0

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WATCH LIVE: Democratic lawmakers join ‘People’s State of the Union’ rally during Trump’s address

Watch PBS News for daily, breaking and live news, plus special coverage. We are home to PBS News Hour, ranked the most credible and objective TV news show.

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AI Slop Will Save The Internet… Seriously.

Support me on Patreon! https://ift.tt/WxPBz8w

I hate AI slop, but I genuinely think its flood of bots, deepfakes, and algorithmic garbage might be the tipping point that finally breaks Big Tech and saves the internet. In this video, I discuss how AI-generated content, enshittification, and dead internet theory could push us away from platform monopolies and back toward a healthier, more trustworthy web.

Sources: https://docs.google.com/document/d/106sN3DILXjUHbWgCQ5v9ODJXWdrsb1Bi7ahVlruNunE/edit?usp=sharing

00:00 Blessing In Disguise
01:19 Enshittification
11:39 A New Internet

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