Pigs are hot sex videoflying over Chicago and Cleveland as the Cubs take on the Indians in the World Series on Tuesday.
If you're not from either city, which team should you choose? Casual fans usually pick the underdogs, but in this case, they've both played the lovable loser for decades.
CARD ID: 107864
The Indians have the second-longest championship drought in baseball at 68 years -- topped only by the Cubs, who haven't won in 108 years.
Well, as someone who watched the Cubs beat my beloved Dodgers, I'm still going to root for Chicago. Here is why you should do the same.
CARD ID: 107892
CARD ID: 107918
Ah, 1908. The Chicago Cubs were on top of the world, Theodore Roosevelt was president, and Henry Ford produced a new-fangled driving machine called the Model T. Yeah, it's been awhile ....
Sure, Back to the Future: Part II took place in 2015 and predicted the Cubs would beat Miami, but it's close enough.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
All season, Cubs catcher Miguel Montero has been pushing this delightfully simple hashtag. Are the Cubs bad? No. Great? Meh. Good? Sure, why not.
The fact that the Indians are called the Indians is bad enough. But their logo, Chief Wahoo? C'mon, Cleveland. The smile, the red skin, the feather, the grin -- Chief Wahoo has to go.
SEE ALSO: The dark side of a feel-good World SeriesPeople have been protesting the logo for decades. Last week, a Canadian judge ruled against an effort to stop the Indians from using their name and logo while competing against the Toronto Blue Jays.
"It’s embarrassing, and it’s even more embarrassing that it’s necessary to convince many Americans that racism against Native Americans is real," wrote Lindsey Adler in Deadspin.
I have to agree. For any Cleveland fan arguing this is PC culture run amok, I hope you have to wait another 68 years to win a World Series.
Way back in the 2003, the Cubs held a 3-2 lead over the Florida Marlins in the National League Championship Series (NLCS). In the eighth inning, Cubs outfielder Moisés Alou ran for a foul ball, only to be foiled by Chicago fan Steve Bartman, who interrupted the play.
Instead of getting a second out, the Cubs went on to surrender eight runs and Bartman became a pariah, as shown by the excellent ESPN documentary Catching Hell.
A Chicago victory would help quell anger toward Bartman, who, really, was just trying to catch a foul ball at a baseball game.
Every time you start to feel sorry for Indians fans, just remember the city just won the NBA Finals. They can dry their tears by watching LeBron's Game 7 block over and over again.
"Hey, what if I dumped a pan of lasagna on some dough and called it pizza?"
Lol, just kidding. Chicago residents can easily get quality pizza by getting on a plane and flying to New York.
Via GiphyRemember when the Boston Red Sox won the World Series in 2004? I grew up hating Boston teams and even I was rooting for them. Manny Ramirez and Johnny Damon breaking the "Curse of the Bambino" and helping the team win its first Fall Classic since 1918.
Then, they spent a ton of money and won again in 2007 and 2013, allowing me to go back to drinking some delicious Boston haterade. If you dislike the Cubs (we're looking at you, White Sox fans), you can put it aside for this year, and then go back to your usual routine after they win.
Remember Major League? Those were good times. I wonder whatever happened to that Charlie Sheen fellow.
How to block a number on iPhoneApple confirms Screen Time bug in Parental ControlsThe iPhone 15 lineup might come with major display changes'Barbenheimer' is still going strong at the box office after its second weekendAttention, Angelenos: We Are in Your Fair City by Dan PiepenbringFor His Birthday, the Illustrated Buffalo BillHow to change the order of photos in a carousel on InstagramHappy Birthday, Gabriel García MárquezWordle today: Here's the answer and hints for August 2At an Academic’s Party, Come for the Riddles, Stay for the FightsThe Morning News Roundup for March 3, 2014Chase Twichell’s “To the Reader: Twilight” by Sadie SteinWhat We’re Loving: Science, Spicer, Sea Maidens, Sandwiches by The Paris ReviewThe Morning News Roundup for Wednesday, March 5, 2014The History of Chock Full o’ Nuts (That Heavenly Cup)Happy Birthday, Howard Pyle! Look at these illustrations from his Book of Pirates.TikTok has turned against resin artists in the name of sustainabilityLove and Friendship by Sadie SteinSwitch back to the old Twitter bird logo from X with this iOS featureBizarre History Lessons from an 1897 Children’s Magazine On Cary Grant, Darryl Pinckney, and Whit Stillman by The Paris Review Free Dirt by Angella d'Avignon 'Palworld' on sale: Save 10% on Steam until Thursday at 1 p.m. ET Announcing Our Fall Issue by Emily Stokes Emma Cline, Dan Bevacqua, and Robert Glück Recommend by The Paris Review Goethe’s Advice for Young Writers by Johann Peter Eckermann Apple Vision Pro scalpers are making a killing. Here's why. Laptop vs. tablet: Which device works best for you? Elon Musk confirms: Tesla to build new, cheap model in 2025 TikTok could allow 30 If Kim Novak Were to Die: A Conversation with Patrizia Cavalli by Annalena Benini Mary Gaitskill’s Veronica and the Choreography of Chicken Soup by The Paris Review Softball Season by Sophie Haigney Like Disaster by Rachel Heise Bolten Snapchat+ is reportedly introducing an AI Bitmoji pet Best pizza oven deal: Save $150 on Chefman Indoor Pizza Oven The Entangled Life: On Nancy Lemann by Krithika Varagur In Occupied Cities, Time Doesn’t Exist: Conversations with Bucha Writers by Ilya Kaminsky Abandoned Books, Anonymous Sculpture, and Curves to the Apple by The Paris Review Beautiful Losers: On Leonard Cohen by Nell Zink
2.6455s , 10520.6640625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【hot sex video】,Exquisite Information Network