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A Castle Full of Chaos: How Season 4 of The Traitors Became Reality TV Perfection
I started watching The Traitors for one simple reason: they kept casting my favorite Survivor players. That was the hook. I tuned in for strategy, chaos, and the familiar faces I already loved. But somewhere between the Scottish castle, the velvet cloaks, the dramatic roundtables, and Alan Cumming serving theatrical excellence in every scene, something shifted. I fell in love with the show itself. Now I literally only have Peacock during the months The Traitors is airing.
Feb 276 min read


Survivor 50 Premiere: A Study of Personalities in Motion
The Survivor 50 premiere feels like a social laboratory where twenty five years of character types collide in a modern game. The episode reveals how each returning player approaches pressure, connection, and identity. Strategy is present, but personality drives the narrative. The Trio of Christian, Emily, and Devens Christian, Emily, and Devens emerge as the psychological core of the premiere. Their styles differ, yet they share a similar wavelength built on intellect, humor,
Feb 264 min read


Northbound, With the Windows Down
The drive from Long Beach to Banff feels like a slow unfolding of everything you forget to appreciate when life moves too fast. It starts with the familiar warmth of home, the kind of sunlight that settles into your skin, and the easy rhythm of coastal streets. Then the road stretches out, and the world begins to shift in quiet, honest ways. You pass through long desert corridors where the light feels softer than you expect. Nevada gives you wide open space that lets your tho
Oct 26, 20242 min read
Writing always helped me cope.
When putting words in a piece of paper defined so much more of what I was feeling,than what I ever said or could’ve possibly said. I struggled to use my voice in any other way. It’s like the ink was screaming louder than my throat. It helped me heal in ways I didn’t think possible. A sense of relief that even if no one else was listening, I found who I am in a long-winded text. I saw myself grow in those sheets of paper. It put into sentences what I felt in the lowest and hig
May 28, 20241 min read


Weekend in the Gateway City
St. Louis has this way of surprising you. It’s a city that wears its history openly, but with a kind of quiet charm that makes everything feel a little more magical. 🗺 St. Louis is known as the “Gateway to the West” because it became part of the United States through the 1803 Louisiana Purchase. It later became the launch point for the Lewis and Clark expedition, which mapped the American West. 📏 The Gateway Arch is a perfect catenary curve, standing 630 feet tall and 630 f
Jun 26, 20221 min read


Blown Away by the Windy City
Chicago has this bold, cinematic presence with towering architecture, a river that slices through downtown like a runway, and neighborhoods that feel like their own little worlds. What surprised me most was not the skyline or the deep dish, although both are unforgettable. It was how many quirky and delightful facts the city hides in plain sight. Here are some of my favorites from our visit: 🧅 A city named after a wild onion New York may be the Big Apple, but Chicago’s name
Jan 22, 20222 min read
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