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Tag: Friends
What’s the ‘S.N.L.’ Line That You and Your Friends Use?
My earliest memories of “Saturday Night Live” were hearing my parents incorporate catchphrases from Dana Carvey’s Church Lady — “Could it be … Satan?” or “Well isn’t that special?” — into casual conversation.
Once I was allowed to stay up late enough to watch, I started doing the same thing — and looking for friends who didn’t think it was weird to respond to someone winning a video game with “We’re not worthy!”
For the 50 years it has been on the air, “S.N.L.” has changed how we talk. That was the basis of our roundup of 50 catchphrases the show has popularized.
Now we want to hear from you. Is there a catchphrase you’ve found yourself saying? Tell us about it and what your connection to it is.
We will read every response and plan to publish a selection of them, but we won’t publish yours without following up with and hearing back from you. We won’t share your contact info outside the Times newsroom, and we won’t use it for any reason other than to get in touch.
One of the most iconic comedy shows on television, “Saturday Night Live” has given us countless memorable catchphrases and lines that have become ingrained in popular culture. Whether you’re a die-hard fan or just someone who enjoys a good laugh, chances are you and your friends have at least one “S.N.L.” line that you love to quote.From “More cowbell” to “I’m on a boat” to “Schweddy balls,” there are so many classic lines to choose from. So, what’s the “S.N.L.” line that you and your friends use the most? Share your favorite in the comments below and let’s reminisce about some of the best moments from “Saturday Night Live”!
Tags:
SNL, Saturday Night Live, comedy, sketch comedy, pop culture, TV show, catchphrases, viral, trending, humor, entertainment
#Whats #S.N.L #Line #FriendsImaginext DC Super Friends Bat-Tech Batbot Batman 3D Printed Missiles & Discs
Imaginext DC Super Friends Bat-Tech Batbot Batman 3D Printed Missiles & Discs
Price :16.64– 14.14
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Introducing the new Imaginext DC Super Friends Bat-Tech Batbot Batman with 3D printed missiles and discs! This incredible toy brings the world of Batman to life with its interactive features and realistic design.With the Bat-Tech Batbot, kids can imagine themselves as the Caped Crusader, taking on villains and saving the day. The 3D printed missiles and discs add an extra level of excitement to playtime, allowing kids to launch projectiles at enemies and defend Gotham City.
This toy is perfect for young Batman fans who want to immerse themselves in the world of their favorite superhero. With its detailed design and interactive features, the Bat-Tech Batbot is sure to provide hours of fun and imaginative play.
Don’t miss out on the chance to add this amazing toy to your collection. Get your hands on the Imaginext DC Super Friends Bat-Tech Batbot Batman with 3D printed missiles and discs today!
#Imaginext #Super #Friends #BatTech #Batbot #Batman #Printed #Missiles #Discs,ages 3+Elk and Friends Kids 6.7” Porcelain White Plates with Silicone Suction Sleeves + Silicone Lids | Divided Plates | Suitable for Kids/Toddlers | Microwave & Dishwasher Safe | Non Slip | Snack Dishes
Price: $36.49
(as of Jan 31,2025 15:02:05 UTC – Details)
Elk and Friends Kids 7.8” Porcelain White Plates with Silicone Sleeves | Divided Plates | Suitable for Kids/Toddlers | Microwave & Dishwasher Safe | Non Slip | Snack Dishes…
INNOVATIVE: Our porcelain kids plates are designed so kids can eat from safe non-absorbent materials. Porcelain provides a pure taste with no leaching as well as being so easy to clean – unlike plastic, silicone and bamboo.
WHAT’S INCLUDED: This set includes 4 * porcelain divided plates + 4 x silicone sleeves + 4 x Silicone Lids. Size – 6.7″(w) x 1″(h). 100% BPA, phthalate, PVC free, porcelain plate and FDA food grade silicone sleeve. Dishwasher and microwave safe (no need to remove silicone sleeve).
SILICONE SLEEVE: Designed to be worry free – each plate comes with a silicone sleeve for an extra layer of protection. The sleeve also allows the plate to be slip resistant as it grips to the surface which will make eating less messy and easier with no sliding dishes.
ALL AGES: Our plates can be used and enjoyed at any age. Designed for toddlers first eating on their own with the high walls and divided sections as well as for older kids. Fun and very versatile – kids will use them for years!
WHO WE ARE: Since 2015, Elk and Friends have been creating safe, fun and environmentally friendly products for the most precious little people in your life! All products are created from quality, natural materials and independently tested, ensuring each design is 100% safe for your children and the environment. Thanks for supporting small and shopping with Elk & Friends.
Introducing our Elk and Friends Kids 6.7” Porcelain White Plates with Silicone Suction Sleeves + Silicone Lids!These adorable divided plates are perfect for serving up snacks and meals for your little ones. The silicone suction sleeves help to keep the plates in place, preventing any spills or messes. The silicone lids are great for storing leftovers or taking meals on the go.
Made from high-quality porcelain, these plates are microwave and dishwasher safe, making mealtime cleanup a breeze. The non-slip design ensures that the plates stay put on the table, giving you peace of mind while your child eats.
Whether you’re looking for a practical solution for mealtime or a cute addition to your child’s dinnerware collection, Elk and Friends Kids Plates are the perfect choice. Order yours today and make mealtime fun and easy for your little ones!
#ElkandFriends #KidsPlates #DividedPlates #MealtimeFun #ToddlerApproved #ParentingEssentials
#Elk #Friends #Kids #Porcelain #White #Plates #Silicone #Suction #Sleeves #Silicone #Lids #Divided #Plates #Suitable #KidsToddlers #Microwave #Dishwasher #Safe #Slip #Snack #Dishes,safe
for toddlersSuper Silly Jokes for Kids: Good, Clean Jokes, Riddles, and Puns (Happy Fox Books) Over 200 Jokes for Kids to Tell Their Friends & Parents, from the Creative Minds at Kid Scoop; for Children Ages 5-10
Price:$5.99– $5.39
(as of Jan 31,2025 13:00:54 UTC – Details)From the brand
Sticker Painting
Ninja Kitties
Paint with Water
BigFoot Seek-and-Find
Coloring for Kids
Kid Scoop
Origami for Kids
Peek Inside Board Books
Activities for Kids
Find Me! Adventures
Future Genius
Baby’s First Books
Dinosaur Books
Finger Puppet Books
Publisher : Happy Fox Books; First Edition (September 8, 2020)
Language : English
Paperback : 80 pages
ISBN-10 : 1641240679
ISBN-13 : 978-1641240673
Reading age : 6 – 9 years, from customers
Grade level : 1 – 2
Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
Dimensions : 5.25 x 8.25 inchesCustomers say
Customers enjoy the book’s humor and find the jokes easy for kids to understand. They appreciate the good readability, clean jokes for all ages, and great gift value. The illustrations are wonderful and cute.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Looking for some super silly jokes to make your kids giggle? Look no further than “Super Silly Jokes for Kids” from Happy Fox Books! This collection of over 200 jokes, riddles, and puns is perfect for children ages 5-10 to tell their friends and parents.From knock-knock jokes to pun-tastic one-liners, this book is sure to have your little ones laughing out loud. The creative minds at Kid Scoop have put together a hilarious collection of jokes that are guaranteed to bring a smile to your child’s face.
So if you’re looking for some good, clean fun for your kids, be sure to check out “Super Silly Jokes for Kids” today! With jokes like these, you’ll be the coolest parent on the block in no time.
#Super #Silly #Jokes #Kids #Good #Clean #Jokes #Riddles #Puns #Happy #Fox #Books #Jokes #Kids #Friends #Parents #Creative #Minds #Kid #Scoop #Children #Ages,kids and children‘Dog Man’ Review: Best Friends Forever
The hero of the animated feature “Dog Man” has his origin in a twisted bit of business that wouldn’t be out of place in “RoboCop”: A bomb injures a policeman named Officer Knight and his canine partner, Greg. To make the best of the organs that are still working, the medical team sews the dog’s head onto his human buddy’s body. Dog Man, as he is now known, returns home to an abandoned house. His girlfriend has left him for a new guy — and a new dog.
Nothing that follows in “Dog Man” is nearly as grim as that setup might suggest, and frankly neither is that setup, which traffics in the kind of body-twisting absurdism that will be familiar to any devotee of Wile E. Coyote cartoons. Nevertheless, that kickoff offers a foretaste of the film’s demented sense of humor, derived from the wildly successful graphic novel series of the same name by Dav Pilkey, the author of “Captain Underpants.”
In this screen adaptation, written and directed by Peter Hastings, jokes fly with the bouncy randomness of Dog Man’s favorite tennis ball, and there are so many that a fair number of them would land even if they weren’t pretty good. Mostly, it’s a visual pleasure: The computer renderings have just enough texture, and the movements enough jittery tactility, to give the film a handmade feel. The splashy color palette keeps the eye engaged.
The plot involves the seemingly intractable rivalry between Dog Man (voiced by Hastings, but he speaks in barks) and Petey (Pete Davidson), “the world’s most evilest cat,” who — in a montage explicitly labeled a montage — breaks out of prison each time Dog Man arrests him. An Australian-accented reporter (Isla Fisher) provides running commentary on Dog Man’s derring-do. A police chief (Lil Rel Howery) is sympathetic to his efforts, but the mayor (Cheri Oteri) isn’t.
The pop-culture shout-outs (Dog Man howling along to Hank Williams) and bids to seem current (Petey’s henchgirl saying “bee-tee-dubs”) are gratifyingly few. It’s hard to hate a film in which a cloning machine is an ordinary e-commerce purchase, a robotic contraption has the name 80-HD (say it aloud) or a hotline exists specifically to tell callers that life’s not fair. Even the running gag of giving buildings on-the-nose names (“Petey’s Secret Lab” “Abandoned Expendable Warehouse”), which should get old, doesn’t overstay its welcome: A movie with a genuine comic-book sensibility ought to have some love for onscreen text.
Dog Man
Rated: PG. Running time: 1 hour 29 minutes. In theaters.
“Dog Man” Review: Best Friends ForeverIf you’re a fan of graphic novels and hilarious stories, then you need to check out “Dog Man” by Dav Pilkey. This series follows the adventures of a half-dog, half-man police officer who fights crime and protects the city with his loyal friends.
With its colorful illustrations and witty humor, “Dog Man” is a joy to read for readers of all ages. The characters are lovable and the stories are full of action and heartwarming moments. Whether you’re a dog lover or just appreciate a good story, “Dog Man” is sure to become one of your favorite graphic novels.
Overall, “Dog Man” is a delightful and entertaining read that will leave you laughing and cheering for Dog Man and his friends. So grab a copy and join in on the fun – you won’t be disappointed!
Tags:
- Dog Man review
- Best Friends Forever
- Children’s book review
- Dav Pilkey
- Dog Man series
- Graphic novel review
- Kids’ books
- Book recommendations
- Funny books for kids
- Dog Man characters
#Dog #Man #Review #Friends
Oso panda, oso panda, ¿qué ves ahÃ? (Brown Bear and Friends) (Spanish – GOOD
Oso panda, oso panda, ¿qué ves ahÃ? (Brown Bear and Friends) (Spanish – GOOD
Price : 4.36
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Oso panda, oso panda, ¿qué ves ahí? (Brown Bear and Friends)¡Hola amigos! Hoy quiero compartirles un libro muy especial que me encanta: “Oso panda, oso panda, ¿qué ves ahí?” de Bill Martin Jr. y Eric Carle.
Este libro es perfecto para los más pequeños, ya que presenta de manera sencilla y divertida a diferentes animales y sus colores. A través de las ilustraciones coloridas y llamativas de Eric Carle, los niños podrán aprender sobre la diversidad de la naturaleza de una manera muy entretenida.
Además, la repetición del verso “Oso panda, oso panda, ¿qué ves ahí?” hace que los niños participen en la lectura y se diviertan adivinando qué animal verán a continuación.
Así que si están buscando un libro educativo y entretenido para compartir con los más pequeños, les recomiendo sin duda “Oso panda, oso panda, ¿qué ves ahí?”. ¡Seguro que se convertirá en uno de sus favoritos!
#OsoPanda #BrownBear #EricCarle #LibrosInfantiles #AprendizajeDivertido
#Oso #panda #oso #panda #Âquà #ves #ahà #Brown #Bear #Friends #Spanish #GOOD,ages 3+Elk and Friends Kids Porcelain Bowls with Silicone Suction Sleeve | Kids/Toddler/Baby Feeding | Microwave & Dishwasher Safe | Non slip | Cereal/Soup/Snack Dishes & Dinnerware
Price: $35.99
(as of Jan 30,2025 09:39:38 UTC – Details)
Elk and Friends Kids Porcelain Bowls with Silicone Suction Sleeve | Kids/Toddler/Baby Feeding | Microwave & Dishwasher Safe | Non slip | Cereal /Soup/Snack Dishes & Dinnerware
INNOVATIVE: Our porcelain kids porcelain bowls with suction sleeve (patent pending) makes mealtimes a lot easier. Designed for babies first eating on their own with the suction sleeve and shallow walls. This set includes 4 * porcelain bowls with silicone suction sleeve. Size – 5”/12.7ccm x 2.2”/5.5cm.
TODDLER PROOF SUCTION: Toddler and tantrum proof, the silicone sleeve includes a 3 point strong suction base allowing the bowl to stay put on the table.
NON POROUS: Our bowls are made from high quality porcelain. Unlike plastic, silicone and bamboo; porcelain has a non porous surface which doesn’t absorb bacteria, soaps and germs. Food will taste fresh and with no soapy residue. Say goodbye to stubborn stains, porcelain is easy to clean, eliminating chemicals, grease and colored stains effortlessly.
ALL AGES: Our bowls are suitable for all ages, from babies/toddlers learning to eat independently to older kids. With shallow walls, suction and the versatility for all ages, these bowls will be enjoyed for years to come!
SAFE: 100% BPA, phthalate, PVC free, porcelain bowl and FDA food grade silicone sleeve. Dishwasher and microwave safe (no need to remove silicone sleeve).
WHO WE ARE: After more than six years, Elk and Friends have been creating safe, fun and environmentally friendly products for the most precious little people in your life! All products are created from quality, natural materials and independently tested, ensuring each design is 100% safe for your children and the environment. Thanks for supporting small and shopping with Elk & Friends.Customers say
Customers appreciate the dishwasher-safe and easy-to-clean bowls. They find the suction feet work well and stick to all surfaces. The design is nice and neat, with vibrant sleeves that make them easier to carry. Customers are also satisfied with toddler safety, microwave safety, and silicone durability. However, opinions differ on the overall durability.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Introducing Elk and Friends Kids Porcelain Bowls with Silicone Suction Sleeve!Are you tired of your little one’s bowls sliding all over the table during mealtime? Say goodbye to messes and spills with our innovative porcelain bowls featuring a silicone suction sleeve that keeps them firmly in place.
These bowls are perfect for kids, toddlers, and babies who are learning how to feed themselves. The non-slip design ensures that the bowl stays put, giving your child the independence to eat without the worry of accidents.
Our bowls are microwave and dishwasher safe, making meal prep and clean-up a breeze. They are also perfect for serving cereal, soup, snacks, and more.
Invest in high-quality dinnerware that makes mealtime fun and stress-free for both you and your little one. Get your Elk and Friends Kids Porcelain Bowls today!
#ElkAndFriends #KidsBowls #ToddlerFeeding #BabyDinnerware #NonSlipBowls #MealtimeEssentials
#Elk #Friends #Kids #Porcelain #Bowls #Silicone #Suction #Sleeve #KidsToddlerBaby #Feeding #Microwave #Dishwasher #Safe #slip #CerealSoupSnack #Dishes #Dinnerware,safe
for toddlersElon Musk and His Friends Help Trump Shake Up the Government
On Friday afternoon, the world’s richest person showed up at what sounds like one of the world’s most boring agencies to demand a list.
Elon Musk had arrived at the Office of Personnel Management, a mundane-sounding agency with vast power overseeing the federal civilian work force. During President Trump’s first term, the nation’s leader used the agency to enforce loyalty to his agenda. During his second term, it appears Mr. Musk may try to use the office to enforce loyalty to his own agenda.
Mr. Musk has stormed into Washington with a host of friends and paid employees, determined to leave his imprint quickly. Never before in modern times has someone so rich played such a hands-on role in American government, with Mr. Musk making himself omnipresent in Washington since flying there for Mr. Trump’s inauguration. His plane has not left.
On Mr. Trump’s first day, he empowered Mr. Musk by establishing the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, a cost-cutting effort that the tech billionaire is leading. Mr. Trump gave the group the authority to work on a plan to reduce the size of the federal work force, among other things.
Taking to Washington with his trademark single-mindedness and bravado, Mr. Musk is reprising the tactics he deployed at Twitter, which he bought in 2022. He has brought to bear the full weight of his Silicon Valley network, installing some of the same executives who cut 80 percent of the social network’s staff, and even using the same email subject lines. He has promised “mass head-count reductions across the federal bureaucracy,” and is now racing to do just that.
Mr. Musk’s slash-first, fix-later approach to cost-cutting has been intentional throughout his career. And some of the early moves by the Trump administration to freeze funding for federal programs and entice federal workers to resign have led to mass confusion or are being legally challenged. (On Wednesday, the White House walked back an order that froze trillions of dollars in federal grants and loans.)
But Mr. Musk wants to see radical change — and he is pressing forward.
This article is based on interviews with a dozen people briefed on how Mr. Musk has spent his first week in Washington, all of whom insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about his activities.
Musk allies to oversee the work force
On Friday, Mr. Musk showed up at the Theodore Roosevelt Federal Building and asked Office of Personnel Management staff to produce a list of the federal chief information officers. The request reflected how Mr. Musk’s plans seem to heavily involve the agency, which is set to be run by a supporter of his, Scott Kupor, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist at Andreessen Horowitz who is awaiting Senate confirmation.
Mr. Musk, however, is wasting no time before Mr. Kupor’s arrival.
Several of Mr. Musk’s top aides have landed senior adviser roles at the Office of Personnel Management. They include Brian Bjelde, a human resources executive at SpaceX who has identified himself as the company’s 14th employee and who played a role in Mr. Musk’s takeover of Twitter, where he helped carry out widespread layoffs. Another arrival is Riccardo Biasini, an executive at the Boring Company, Mr. Musk’s tunneling company, who also joined Mr. Musk’s team at Twitter.
But the most empowered of Mr. Musk’s allies at the Office of Personnel Management has been Anthony Armstrong, a top technology banker at Morgan Stanley who worked on the billionaire’s acquisition of Twitter in 2022.
Mr. Musk appears to have even taken over internal communications. On Tuesday evening, an email from the Office of Personnel Management offered about two million federal employees the option to resign, and to be paid through the end of September, with the subject line: “Fork in the road.” That was exactly the subject line that Mr. Musk used to encourage Twitter employees to resign in November 2022.
Most of the people whom Mr. Musk has brought to Washington are young engineers who did not know him but have signed up for 80-hour workweeks and are being deployed at federal agencies.
But he does not readily trust new people, and so he is calling largely on his inner circle.
Confidants in his vast war on the bureaucracy include the investor Antonio Gracias, a former board member of Tesla, and Terrence O’Shaughnessy, a retired four-star Air Force general who is one of Mr. Musk’s top advisers at SpaceX. Mr. Musk has pushed Mr. O’Shaughnessy for administration positions, and the general told others he was being considered as a possible replacement for Pete Hegseth during Mr. Hegseth’s turbulent but successful bid to lead the Pentagon.
One new person to have gained Mr. Musk’s trust is Baris Akis, a Turkish-born leader of a Silicon Valley venture firm who graduated from Stanford in 2016.
Mr. Akis had no meaningful relationship with Mr. Musk until just a few weeks ago. But he was deeply involved in Mr. Trump’s transition — perhaps putting in more hours than any other tech leader beyond Mr. Musk — and he has emerged from that effort as a right-hand man to Steve Davis, a Musk lieutenant who has overseen the Department of Government Efficiency.
Mr. Davis and Mr. Akis have been heavily involved in the Office of Personnel Management in recent weeks. But neither of them actually work there. Mr. Davis nowadays spends much of his time detailed to the General Services Administration, which helps manage federal agencies and which is a likely next target of Mr. Musk’s war on the bureaucracy.
At the General Services Administration, Mr. Musk has installed a Tesla software engineer, Thomas Shedd, as its director of “Technology Transformation Services.”
Another Musk ally, Amanda Scales, who previously worked for the billionaire and before that for Mr. Akis, has played a particularly outward-facing role at the Office of Personnel Management. Federal agencies were asked to send Ms. Scales a list of the workers who are still on probationary status — and are therefore easier to fire.
Ms. Scales has been appointed as the agency’s chief of staff at a time when it has no full-time director, and she has faced much anger online as the face of Mr. Trump’s proposed reductions to the federal work force.
Fingerprints on key moves
In Washington, Mr. Musk is both a celebrity and a bureaucrat, sometimes simultaneously.
At one moment, he and several of his billionaire friends, including Mr. Gracias, were mingling with fixtures of the Washington establishment at the annual dinner of the Alfalfa Club, where several attendees broke the event’s unwritten no-phones policy and mobbed him for selfies. At another, he was spotted in the White House mess, where 20-something staff members grab sandwiches between meetings — but unlike Mr. Musk, most do not return to a West Wing office to help oversee what Mr. Trump says is a 40-person team carrying out his executive orders.
Mr. Musk has found himself focused on bureaucratic maneuvers in his first week.
His team has prioritized finding a way to email all 2.3 million federal civilian employees at once, the type of thing that is easy to do at a company like Tesla but more challenging to do across the vast federal work force, in which agencies can typically email only their own employees. The Office of Personnel Management was able to use that list to deliver its Tuesday evening memo.
All of this is in pursuit of what Mr. Musk initially said would be $2 trillion in annual cost savings through the use of technology, deregulation and budget cuts (he has more recently lowered his estimate to closer to $1 trillion). In several posts on X since Mr. Trump’s inauguration, the Department of Government Efficiency has boasted of more than $500 million in immediate savings through the curtailing of D.E.I. initiatives and the renegotiation of unused office leases, which officials called the “initial focus” of the group.
On the first day of the Trump administration, Mr. Musk’s team took over the United States Digital Service, a unit in the president’s executive office that has been renamed the “U.S. DOGE Service.” The service’s roughly 200 employees are expecting substantial layoffs, and a different Silicon Valley executive, Tom Krause, has conducted some interviews of employees. Among other questions, Mr. Krause has asked the employees what makes them exceptional and who the agency’s best workers are.
Mr. Musk’s team has also taken on a range of roles, including I.T. staff members and detectives. Mr. Trump has said that Mr. Musk’s job includes carrying out his executive orders. And so Mr. Musk has tried to deploy his engineers to find ways to turn off the flow of money from the Treasury Department to things that Mr. Trump wants to defund.
Mr. Musk’s allies in the Department of Government Efficiency and the White House say they snuffed out an attempt from some federal employees to rush money out to the World Health Organization just after Mr. Trump said he was withdrawing the country from the global agency. Their claims could not immediately be verified.
And according to at least one Trump aide, Mr. Musk also played a role in the president’s sweeping grant of clemency to the people charged in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.
On the evening of the prisoners’ release, Paul Ingrassia, a White House liaison to the Justice Department, claimed to a crowd at a Washington jail that “Elon Musk knew a lot about this and was the mastermind behind it.”
Next to Mr. Ingrassia was an aide to Mr. Musk: Christopher Stanley, who has worked as a security engineer at SpaceX and X and recently relocated to a role “at the White House,” Mr. Ingrassia said. Mr. Stanley has complained on social media about federal employees’ work ethic and speed at returning emails since he arrived in Washington.
Mr. Musk may be something of a super-aide, but he is generally liked by Mr. Trump’s inner circle, texting memes and trading intel with staff members who are worth a minuscule fraction of what he is. He does not find it beneath him: In a conversation with a friend, Mr. Musk seemed almost amazed at his fortune.
Kirsten Grind and Ryan Mac contributed reporting.
Elon Musk, the billionaire entrepreneur and CEO of SpaceX and Tesla, has long been known for his close relationship with President Donald Trump. Now, it seems that Musk and his friends are helping Trump shake up the government in a big way.According to reports, Musk and his inner circle have been advising Trump on a range of issues, from technology and innovation to space exploration and energy policy. Musk’s influence on the president is said to be significant, with Trump reportedly seeking his input on a wide range of topics.
In recent months, Musk has also been vocal in his support for Trump’s controversial policies, including his push for deregulation and his stance on immigration. Musk’s outspoken support for the president has drawn criticism from some quarters, but it seems that he is determined to use his influence to shape the direction of the Trump administration.
With Musk and his friends by his side, Trump is poised to make some major changes to the government in the coming months. Whether these changes will be for the better or for the worse remains to be seen, but one thing is for certain: Elon Musk is not afraid to shake things up.
Tags:
Elon Musk, Trump, Government, Politics, Shake Up, Friends, Innovation, Leadership, Entrepreneurship, Technology, Collaboration, Change, Influence, Reform.
#Elon #Musk #Friends #Trump #Shake #Government