What a game, what a series of moments, what a display of spirit and skill from Cape Verde, a tiny island nation with a far-flung diaspora team, who took Argentina right to the brink of one of the great sporting shocks in Miami.
How to tell the story of this game? Imagine being pounded around the head for 120 minutes, first slowly, then much more quickly, with moments of brilliance, narrative shifts, epic subplots and violent tonal contrasts, from the Messi-Vozinha double header, to the elite cinematic brilliance of Cape Verde’s second equalising goal deep into extra time. Well, it was a bit like that.
Continue reading...Tasmanian.Kris has added a photo to the pool:
An old frontage holding its shape while the street moves past it. There’s history baked into those details, even if most people aren’t looking. Cities perform continuity like this all the time.
Tasmanian.Kris has added a photo to the pool:
A sticker on a pole, half lost in the noise of traffic and shadow, but clear enough if you bother to look. Anti-fascism does not need subtlety. It needs repetition, presence, and a bit of nerve. The street is still one of the few places where that message can’t be politely ignored.
Tasmanian.Kris has added a photo to the pool:
Jen walking ahead, the street opening up in front of her. The frame keeps her central without making it about control. More about movement than destination. The kind of shot that feels like it could keep going.