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Andulka
Not today Justin
$LAYYYTER
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Mike Driver
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JVL
hello vonnie
Stranger Things
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

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taylor price
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@jaebae-21
Another rainy day by ă˘ă˘
by martynaszalacka
Splendid Fairywren (Malurus splendens), family Maluridae, order Passeriformes, Australia
photograph by Peter Nydegger
âWe all eat lies when our hearts are hungry.â
â Unknown
Making the people you adore laugh is literally everything
In 2026, Ilia Malinin made headlines for landing a backflip at the Winter Olympics after the move was officially re-approved under updated competition rules.
But this moment did not come out of nowhere.
In 1998, Black Olympic skater Surya Bonaly executed a one-foot backflip at the Nagano Winter Olympics, officials had deemed the move unacceptable at the time. She completed it, on one blade, in an iconic defiance of standards that repeatedly limited her innovation and expression.
What governing bodies labeled as ânot allowedâ in 1998 is now celebrated as history-making in 2026.
Bonalyâs backflip wasnât a mistake or a gimmick. It was skill, athleticism, and vision, long before the sport was willing to reward it. And while rules may change, her contribution should not be erased or reframed as an afterthought.
This moment isnât about taking anything away from todayâs athletes.
While Ilia Malinin is being credited with making Olympic history in 2026, the truth is that Surya Bonaly made that history in 1998.
Her one-foot backflip was revolutionary then, and it remains iconic now.
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