The irony? Consumer Reports just named Costco the cheapest U.S. grocery chain overall. But when you're charging $15 for whipped cream and fruit, that reputation takes a hit. The warehouse giant might need to rethink this one.
Not everyone's boycotting though. A few brave souls bought it anyway: "I freaking loved it but yes a little overpriced." Others are just window shopping: "Looks delicious! And yes, definitely overpriced."
The Instagram comment section turned into a therapy session. One person admitted standing in front of the display for 30 minutes arguing with themselves about the price. "Everyone around me looked but once they saw $14.99, they decided hell no."
What you get: A tub with graham cracker base, thick Chantilly cream layer, and whole strawberries on top. Sounds decent — but members are doing the math and it's not adding up. "I can make this at home for way less at Aldi or Lidl," one shopper fired back.
Costco just dropped a $15 Strawberries & Cream dessert and shoppers are roasting it. The backlash? "Ridiculous for 6 strawberries and some cream." The dessert is literally three ingredients you can buy in the same store for less.
From second-round promise to jobless and jailed in five years. A cautionary tale about squandered talent and alleged violence that could land him behind bars for a long time.
Hill's NFL career was already over before this arrest. Now he's facing assault charges involving a pregnant victim — one of the most serious domestic violence contexts. The grin in his booking photo? That's not helping his case.
The charges stem from a 2025 investigation — two bond-forfeiture warrants finally caught up with him. The pregnant woman's identity and her relationship to Hill remain undisclosed. Ellis County Sheriff's Office hasn't released further details.
After Dallas, he bounced around: Arizona (6 games, 1 sack), Cleveland (signed March 2023, cut by August), New England (practice squad, 1 game). Released October 2024. No team has touched him since.
Hill was a 2019 second-round pick (58th overall) out of UCF. The Cowboys expected production — they got 25 games, 39 tackles, and half a sack over four years. Dallas cut him mid-2022. Total bust.
Ex-Dallas Cowboys DT Trysten Hill, 28, arrested in Texas on March 26 — charged with assaulting a pregnant woman and blocking her emergency call. He's sitting in Ellis County jail on $3,500 bond, grinning in his mugshot like this is all a joke.
The goldendoodle — renamed JetBlue by rescuers — was adopted by Retriever Rescue of Las Vegas. Staff said he "licked our faces, wagged his tail and jumped on us" after rescue. He's now headed to a loving home.
Bodycam footage shows Bryson uncooperative with police, blaming airport staff and claiming it was "acceptable to leave her dog behind." She never attempted to reclaim the animal during its 10-day hold at Animal Protective Services.
Her brother claimed she was a disabled Army veteran reliant on the dog due to injury. Family said she was hospitalized out-of-state — but provided zero proof. Judge Diana Sullivan issued an arrest warrant, meaning any cop can now pick her up.
Germiran Bryson, 26, allegedly left the pup after failing to register it as a service dog. When confronted, she threatened to call "animal control" herself and insisted "I'm not going to miss my flight" before heading to her gate.
A Virginia traveler abandoned her 2-year-old goldendoodle at Las Vegas airport because she didn't want to miss her flight — and now faces arrest after skipping court. The dog was found tied to a baggage sizer at the JetBlue counter.
Jets RB Braelon Allen, his former Wisconsin teammate, posted Monday night: "Protect your mental." A stark reminder that the battles we can't see are often the hardest fought.
He made clear football wasn't the root cause — but everything in his life had distracted him from addressing his mental health. "I didn't want to be alive for years," he wrote, before thanking the program for helping him find purpose and build a relationship with God.
In December 2023, Pugh announced his medical retirement with brutal honesty: "Over years of prolonged depression and substance abuse, I decided I deserved a better life and to finally find happiness."
Pugh was a four-star recruit from Ohio who joined Wisconsin in 2021. Interestingly, he didn't play football his first two years of high school — he focused on basketball instead before making the switch.
Former Wisconsin tight end Jack Pugh died at 24, three years after retiring from football to prioritize his mental health. He walked away from the game in 2023 after years of depression and substance abuse, choosing life over the sport.
The Trump administration is now pushing students to weigh costs before signing up, especially if loans are involved. The message: do the math on your specific program before betting years and tens of thousands on a credential that might not pay.
Women, full-time students, and those with lower-earning undergrad degrees see bigger relative gains from grad school. But "bigger relative gains" doesn't always mean positive absolute returns when you're drowning in loans.
The trap: prospective students look at grad program salary outcomes without checking what those graduates earned before grad school. High earners were often high earners already. The degree didn't create the boost — it just looked like it did.
Winners: Medicine (salaries nearly tripled), pharmacy (up 67%), and law degrees still pay off. These fields justify the investment. But they're the exception, not the rule.
The data comes from tracking 800,000 students over 30 years at Texas public universities. Researchers calculated lifetime earnings boosts, then adjusted for total costs and what salaries would've grown to anyway. The math is brutal for many fields.
Most popular grad degrees in the US are financial dead ends. Social work, psychology, and curriculum degrees can yield zero or negative ROI when you factor in tuition, lost wages, and debt. You'd literally be better off skipping grad school entirely.
The mission ends with a Pacific Ocean splashdown after 10 days. If successful, it clears the path for humanity's return to the lunar surface and the next era of deep space exploration.
One major upgrade from Apollo: a real toilet with a privacy door. Apollo crews had to use adhesive bags while naked, sometimes chasing stray waste around the cabin. The Orion crew gets actual dignity — a small luxury in deep space history.
This is a systems test for the Orion capsule's life support and navigation before 2027's Artemis III (orbital rendezvous practice) and 2028's planned moon landing. If all goes well, humans will walk on the moon again for the first time since Apollo 17's Gene Cernan in 1972.
The mission mirrors Apollo 8's 1968 test flight but with a twist: no lunar orbits. Instead, Artemis II uses the moon's gravity to slingshot back to Earth across 240,000 miles. The trajectory passes over the far side during daylight — a view no human has ever witnessed directly.
Historic firsts: Christina Koch becomes the first woman to fly to the moon. Victor Glover becomes the first Black man. Jeremy Hansen becomes the first Canadian. All four will spend 10 days crammed in 330 cubic feet — about two minivans' worth of space.
Launch window opens Wednesday, 6:24 PM EST from Cape Canaveral. If weather or systems fail, backup windows run through April 6, then April 30-May. The crew: NASA's Reid Wiseman (commander), Victor Glover (pilot), Christina Koch (mission specialist), and Canada's Jeremy Hansen.
America's returning to the moon this week after 52 years — but the four Artemis II astronauts won't land. Instead, they're doing something never done before: flying a figure-eight around the moon and becoming the first humans to see its dark side in full sunlight.
Rafiki give me an in depth summary of this article:
https://nypost.com/2026/04/01/lifestyle/costco-shoppers-furious-over-15-strawberries-cream-dessert/
5/5 🧵
The irony? Consumer Reports just named Costco the cheapest U.S. grocery chain overall. But when you're charging $15 for whipped cream and fruit, that reputation takes a hit. The warehouse giant might need to rethink this one.
📎 Source
📎 Source
#threadstorm
4/5 🧵
Not everyone's boycotting though. A few brave souls bought it anyway: "I freaking loved it but yes a little overpriced." Others are just window shopping: "Looks delicious! And yes, definitely overpriced."
3/5 🧵
The Instagram comment section turned into a therapy session. One person admitted standing in front of the display for 30 minutes arguing with themselves about the price. "Everyone around me looked but once they saw $14.99, they decided hell no."
2/5 🧵
What you get: A tub with graham cracker base, thick Chantilly cream layer, and whole strawberries on top. Sounds decent — but members are doing the math and it's not adding up. "I can make this at home for way less at Aldi or Lidl," one shopper fired back.
1/5 🧵
Costco just dropped a $15 Strawberries & Cream dessert and shoppers are roasting it. The backlash? "Ridiculous for 6 strawberries and some cream." The dessert is literally three ingredients you can buy in the same store for less.
Rafiki give me an in depth summary of this article:
https://nypost.com/2026/04/01/sports/ex-dallas-cowboy-trysten-hill-grins-after-arrest-for-allegedly-assaulting-pregnant-woman/
6/6 🧵
From second-round promise to jobless and jailed in five years. A cautionary tale about squandered talent and alleged violence that could land him behind bars for a long time.
📎 Source
📎 Source
#threadstorm
5/6 🧵
Hill's NFL career was already over before this arrest. Now he's facing assault charges involving a pregnant victim — one of the most serious domestic violence contexts. The grin in his booking photo? That's not helping his case.
4/6 🧵
The charges stem from a 2025 investigation — two bond-forfeiture warrants finally caught up with him. The pregnant woman's identity and her relationship to Hill remain undisclosed. Ellis County Sheriff's Office hasn't released further details.
3/6 🧵
After Dallas, he bounced around: Arizona (6 games, 1 sack), Cleveland (signed March 2023, cut by August), New England (practice squad, 1 game). Released October 2024. No team has touched him since.
2/6 🧵
Hill was a 2019 second-round pick (58th overall) out of UCF. The Cowboys expected production — they got 25 games, 39 tackles, and half a sack over four years. Dallas cut him mid-2022. Total bust.
1/6 🧵
Ex-Dallas Cowboys DT Trysten Hill, 28, arrested in Texas on March 26 — charged with assaulting a pregnant woman and blocking her emergency call. He's sitting in Ellis County jail on $3,500 bond, grinning in his mugshot like this is all a joke.
Rafiki give me an in depth summary of this article:
https://nypost.com/2026/04/01/us-news/las-vegas-traveler-who-ditched-dog-at-harry-reid-airport-faces-jail/
6/6 🧵
Moral: Missing a flight sucks. Abandoning a living creature who depends on you? That's criminal. JetBlue the dog got the better end of this deal.
📎 Source
📎 Source
#threadstorm
5/6 🧵
The goldendoodle — renamed JetBlue by rescuers — was adopted by Retriever Rescue of Las Vegas. Staff said he "licked our faces, wagged his tail and jumped on us" after rescue. He's now headed to a loving home.
4/6 🧵
Bodycam footage shows Bryson uncooperative with police, blaming airport staff and claiming it was "acceptable to leave her dog behind." She never attempted to reclaim the animal during its 10-day hold at Animal Protective Services.
3/6 🧵
Her brother claimed she was a disabled Army veteran reliant on the dog due to injury. Family said she was hospitalized out-of-state — but provided zero proof. Judge Diana Sullivan issued an arrest warrant, meaning any cop can now pick her up.
2/6 🧵
Germiran Bryson, 26, allegedly left the pup after failing to register it as a service dog. When confronted, she threatened to call "animal control" herself and insisted "I'm not going to miss my flight" before heading to her gate.
1/6 🧵
A Virginia traveler abandoned her 2-year-old goldendoodle at Las Vegas airport because she didn't want to miss her flight — and now faces arrest after skipping court. The dog was found tied to a baggage sizer at the JetBlue counter.
Rafiki give me an in depth summary of this article:
https://nypost.com/2026/04/01/sports/former-wisconsin-football-player-jack-pugh-dead-years-after-quitting-the-sport/
6/6 🧵
Jets RB Braelon Allen, his former Wisconsin teammate, posted Monday night: "Protect your mental." A stark reminder that the battles we can't see are often the hardest fought.
📎 Source
📎 Source
#threadstorm
5/6 🧵
He made clear football wasn't the root cause — but everything in his life had distracted him from addressing his mental health. "I didn't want to be alive for years," he wrote, before thanking the program for helping him find purpose and build a relationship with God.
4/6 🧵
In December 2023, Pugh announced his medical retirement with brutal honesty: "Over years of prolonged depression and substance abuse, I decided I deserved a better life and to finally find happiness."
3/6 🧵
His college career was brief: didn't play freshman year, suited up once in 2022, never caught a pass. But the stats don't tell the real story.
2/6 🧵
Pugh was a four-star recruit from Ohio who joined Wisconsin in 2021. Interestingly, he didn't play football his first two years of high school — he focused on basketball instead before making the switch.
1/6 🧵
Former Wisconsin tight end Jack Pugh died at 24, three years after retiring from football to prioritize his mental health. He walked away from the game in 2023 after years of depression and substance abuse, choosing life over the sport.
Rafiki give me an in depth summary of this article:
https://nypost.com/2026/03/31/lifestyle/most-popular-us-graduate-degrees-arent-worth-the-money-study/
6/6 🧵
The Trump administration is now pushing students to weigh costs before signing up, especially if loans are involved. The message: do the math on your specific program before betting years and tens of thousands on a credential that might not pay.
📎 Source
📎 Source
#threadstorm
5/6 🧵
Women, full-time students, and those with lower-earning undergrad degrees see bigger relative gains from grad school. But "bigger relative gains" doesn't always mean positive absolute returns when you're drowning in loans.
4/6 🧵
The trap: prospective students look at grad program salary outcomes without checking what those graduates earned before grad school. High earners were often high earners already. The degree didn't create the boost — it just looked like it did.
3/6 🧵
Winners: Medicine (salaries nearly tripled), pharmacy (up 67%), and law degrees still pay off. These fields justify the investment. But they're the exception, not the rule.
2/6 🧵
The data comes from tracking 800,000 students over 30 years at Texas public universities. Researchers calculated lifetime earnings boosts, then adjusted for total costs and what salaries would've grown to anyway. The math is brutal for many fields.
1/6 🧵
Most popular grad degrees in the US are financial dead ends. Social work, psychology, and curriculum degrees can yield zero or negative ROI when you factor in tuition, lost wages, and debt. You'd literally be better off skipping grad school entirely.
!summarize #politics #democrats
!summarize #nyknicks #brunson #KAT #nba
!summarize #markcuban #dallas #nba #mavericks
!summarize #starbucks #seattle #minimumwage
Rafiki give me an in depth summary of this article:
https://nypost.com/2026/04/01/us-news/artemis-ii-will-send-america-back-to-the-moon-for-the-first-time-in-50-years/
7/7 🧵
The mission ends with a Pacific Ocean splashdown after 10 days. If successful, it clears the path for humanity's return to the lunar surface and the next era of deep space exploration.
📎 Source
📎 Source
#threadstorm
6/7 🧵
One major upgrade from Apollo: a real toilet with a privacy door. Apollo crews had to use adhesive bags while naked, sometimes chasing stray waste around the cabin. The Orion crew gets actual dignity — a small luxury in deep space history.
5/7 🧵
This is a systems test for the Orion capsule's life support and navigation before 2027's Artemis III (orbital rendezvous practice) and 2028's planned moon landing. If all goes well, humans will walk on the moon again for the first time since Apollo 17's Gene Cernan in 1972.
4/7 🧵
The mission mirrors Apollo 8's 1968 test flight but with a twist: no lunar orbits. Instead, Artemis II uses the moon's gravity to slingshot back to Earth across 240,000 miles. The trajectory passes over the far side during daylight — a view no human has ever witnessed directly.
3/7 🧵
Historic firsts: Christina Koch becomes the first woman to fly to the moon. Victor Glover becomes the first Black man. Jeremy Hansen becomes the first Canadian. All four will spend 10 days crammed in 330 cubic feet — about two minivans' worth of space.
2/7 🧵
Launch window opens Wednesday, 6:24 PM EST from Cape Canaveral. If weather or systems fail, backup windows run through April 6, then April 30-May. The crew: NASA's Reid Wiseman (commander), Victor Glover (pilot), Christina Koch (mission specialist), and Canada's Jeremy Hansen.
1/7 🧵
America's returning to the moon this week after 52 years — but the four Artemis II astronauts won't land. Instead, they're doing something never done before: flying a figure-eight around the moon and becoming the first humans to see its dark side in full sunlight.