“Lightly fried fish filets” still gets me every time.
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Big Ed blasted by 90 Day Fiance fans for crude joke about Jovi Dufren
Big Ed Brown had the audacity to make fun of Jovi Dufren’s appearance, but 90 Day Fiance fans were not having it!
They took to social media to blast the 58-year-old over the crude post where he had someone create a cartoon version of Jovi with oversized lips.
Big Ed first made the joke about Jovi on the latest episode of Day Fiance: The Last Resort during a sex education class with all the couples.
No one was amused by the comment then, and when he shared it again online, it also fell flat.
However, unlike Big Ed’s castmates — who didn’t say anything when he made the rude remark — viewers are bashing him for being a bully.
This is not the first time the photographer has been called out for his inappropriate jokes, it’s a major problem in his relationship with Liz Woods.
While she has been taking the therapy sessions seriously in an attempt to fix their relationship, the same can’t be said for Ed, who’s been making light of the situation.
Big Ed Brown makes a recycled joke about Jovi Dufren’s appearance
Big Ed tried to shift the focus off himself as things got awkward during a therapy session focused on sex education.
His fiance Liz got brutally honest and revealed that things were not going well in the bedroom. However, it was Ed’s corny joke about Jovi that had us rolling our eyes.
He didn’t get the laugh he had anticipated when he exclaimed, “Have you seen the size of Jovid’s mouth? He could fit that whole cucumber in there sideways.”
Ed wasn’t done yet, he later posted a cartoon reenactment with Jovi using the voiceover clip from the episode.
However, 90 Day Fiance viewers were not amused when they saw it on TV, and they still didn’t find it funny when he recycled the corny joke on Instagram.
“Have you seen the size of @jovid11 mouth? We got sex ed on the latest episode, have you seen it?” he captioned the post.
90 Day Fiance fans blast Big Ed and call him a ‘bully’
After the controversial TLC star posted the clip online, viewers had a lot to say.
One viewer said “You act like a victim of bullying because of your looks, but then bully literally everyone you come in contact with. You need to rewatch these scenes and see the face of every person in the room after your ‘jokes.’ Not a single laugh.”
“Always playing the victim or the bully. I’m so tires of seeing you on the show,” wrote someone else.
One Instagram user exclaimed, “The more air time you get the more obnoxious you get grow up man child.”
One person noted, “You’re lucky he didn’t deck you.”
“Omg grow tf up you look like a f o o l,” commented someone else.
90 Day: The Last Resort airs on Mondays at 9/8c on TLC, Max, and Discovery+.
Killing Joke Guitarist Geordie Walker Dead At 64
Killing Joke Guitarist Geordie Walker Dead At 64 Killing Joke guitarist Geordie Walker has died at 64. His close friend Luca Signorelli broke the news on Facebook, writing that he suffered a massive stroke on Friday in Prague, where had been residing for decades. Walker was born in England in 1958. In 1978, he became a founding member of Killing Joke after answering an advertisement placed in a magazine by singer Jaz Coleman. Killing Joke released their debut EP Turn To Red the following year, and they had an early champion in John Peel. Their self-titled debut album was released in 1980. Coleman and Walker were the two core members of the group, navigating an ’80s run that included seven studio albums that straddled post-punk, goth, metal, and alternative rock. It also included a fascination with the occult, a move to Iceland to escape the apocalypse, and a number of different lineup configurations. Killing Joke’s output slowed in the ’90s and beyond, and they went on hiatus for a time, but they continued putting out new music, most recently last year’s Lord Of Chaos EP. They influenced acts like Metallica, who covered “The Wait” early on in their career, and Nirvana, whose “Come As You Are” riff was likened to Killing Joke’s “Eighties.” Dave Grohl would later drum on the band’s 2003 album. “Killing Joke, the band he spearheaded through four decades of successes and crises, [is] still one of the most influential ever,” his friend Luca Signorelli wrote in his eulogy to Walker. “Others will certainly talk about Geordie’s musical record better than I could ever do. None of this really matters to me now. What I want to remember is that Geordie was, for 40 years, the closest friend and most important person I’ve ever had outside my family.”
U.S. Nationals To Mark Nat’l Event Debut Of Two A/Fuel Funny Cars
The injected nitromethane (A/Fuel) engine combination, the predominant configuration in the Top Alcohol Dragster category over the last couple of decades, was added to the Top Alcohol Funny Car category in the offseason, largely in an effort to promote participation in a class defined by high engine RPM and equally high costs. Former A/Fuel Dragster competitor Mick Steele was the first driver to tackle the combination in the spring 2023, and has since competed at three Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series events with mixed results. This weekend, Steele will make his national event debut with the combination, and he won’t be alone, as successful Top Alcohol Dragster team owner Anthony Dicero has also brought out a nitro-burning car with veteran nitro pilot Tommy Johnson, Jr. at the controls.
Last weekend, Steele reset the national record for injected nitro A/Fuel Funny Cars, a mark set in 1998 by Scott Weis at 5.74 seconds, by carding a 5.73 at just 235 mph.
“This is the very same engine combination that was in the dragster, motor and clutch-wise. But we’ve figured out that this isn’t a dragster…it doesn’t like the name tuneup, it likes different things,” says Steele, who has about 30 runs on his car thus far. “Part of the process that we dealt with were the rule changes. We started at 85-percent nitro, then it went to 90, and now 95-percent. So part of the challenge was that transition, as the balance of the car was different. Once we got the 95-percent, then we had a downforce problem with the rules package for the spoiler on it. When we’d get out there and lock the clutch up it would start spinning the tires, and when you’re going 200 mph and you start spinning, it’s an adventure, crossing lanes and taking out blocks. We had the Top Fuel wing on the dragster, because the engine wants the load on it, so NHRA gave us more wing and made the car much more drivable.”
“Up until last week we hadn’t been faster to the 1/4-mile than we had the 1/8. Once we lose our load in the clutch, the fuel system doesn’t want as much fuel, so we’re trying to lear how to burn the fuel. We only way we make power is when we burn nitro, and if we’re bleeding it all off, we’re not making power. Last week we broke that record, and even put it in a little deep, so it may have been a 5.69 or .70. It’s just been a process of figuring out what it wants and making it happy. We knew when we got into it that this was kind of how this season was going to go…there just isn’t anybody to lean on for information to make one of these cars run.”
The A/Fuel Funny Cars cross the finish stripe at roughly 6,800 rpm, a similar RPM to what an alcohol car leaves the starting line, so Steele says the combination — despite the high cost of nitromethane — is considerably less costly than a blown alcohol car.
“We ran a blower car 20 years, but without a supercharger, without a transmission, it’s so much more cost-effective,” Steele says. “They’re going through crankshafts, rods, valves springs. You have to feed the blower car so many parts just to make sure you don’t have any kind of catastrophic failure. We can get 100 runs out of a crank on this car. The rods, everything lasts longer.”
‘Crazy 24 hours’ – the story behind Diogo Jota’s 50th Liverpool goal – Liverpool FC
Reaction’Crazy 24 hours’ – the story behind Diogo Jota’s 50th Liverpool goal Diogo Jota was delighted to make a goalscoring return to action in Liverpool’s 2-0 win over Burnley – having initially not expected to even be involved in the game. The Portugal international had been sidelined since late November due to injury, but was able to take a place on the bench for the Reds’ Boxing Day trip to Turf Moor. And having been introduced for Darwin Nunez in the 84th minute, Jota went on to score his side’s all-important second goal, smashing home from Luis Diaz’s backheel in the final minute of the 90. Speaking to Liverpoolfc.com afterwards, the No.20 reflected on the perfect Christmas present, saying: “It’s massive, it’s a special feeling. It was a crazy 24 hours and I was not expecting to be in this squad list, to be honest. “I was already at home when I found out I needed to travel back out again to train with the team, but from that moment on I just felt I needed to do this. “I had some special people in the crowd today, my family, and they came over for Christmas. It was great to get the win, score and be back on the pitch and get these three points. I think it was the best Christmas gift for everyone here.” Jota, whose late finish brought up the milestone of 50 goals for Liverpool, continued: “I trained with the team for the last couple of days obviously, but it’s like ‘be ready for this’. “I’m ready for this, that’s why we work and it was such a special feeling knowing I would probably come on today, and to be back with a goal is always special.” Jota’s goal was a vital one, sealing a victory that was earlier set up by Nunez’s fine sixth-minute strike on an evening when Jürgen Klopp’s men had to dig deep. Cody Gakpo and Harvey Elliott saw goals disallowed in either half amid the visitors’ dominance, with Burnley also fighting back strongly after the interval. “We were contemplating on the bench as well,” Jota said. “Because these are the type of games when you are 1-0 up, you have chances, you miss them and you score then it’s disallowed for offside or a foul, and you just feel ‘we need this second goal’ because they will believe, they are playing at home, it’s Burnley and they are able to score. “They had a couple of chances as well but fortunately for us we were the ones scoring that second goal and it was decisive.”