Pete Rose’s Hall of Fame Case After MLB’s 2025 Ban Lift

On May 13, 2025, Major League Baseball announced a game-changing policy: permanent ineligibility ends upon a player’s death. For Pete Rose, who died in September 2024 at 83 from a heart condition, this means he’s no longer on MLB’s banned list (MLB.com). As baseball’s all-time hit leader with 4,256 hits, Rose’s removal has sparked heated debate about his Baseball Hall of Fame eligibility. His on-field brilliance makes a strong case for induction, but the Hall’s character clause, tied to his gambling scandal and off-field issues, creates hurdles. This post explores why Rose deserves a spot in Cooperstown, how he violated the character clause, and what MLB’s decision means for his legacy.

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The Mavs Defy the Odds: Is the NBA Lottery Rigged?

Spending my middle school years in DFW, I lived for Mavericks games. I cheered on Dirk Nowitzki’s fadeaways and marveled at how our scrappy team battled NBA giants. But in 2025, I’m sitting here, jaw dropped, trying to make sense of the NBA Draft Lottery. The Mavericks traded Luka Dončić, a generational superstar, to the Lakers in a deal that felt like a betrayal and possibly the dumbest move in NBA history. And for what? Because he was getting fat? Then, against a measly 1.8% chance, they land the #1 pick to draft Cooper Flagg? Come on, NBA. You’re telling me this is pure luck? Fans on X aren’t buying it, and neither am I. This smells like another chapter in the league’s history of lottery conspiracies, where big markets like LA get the goods while smaller ones like Utah get the shaft.

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The Accountant 2 Review

I was a big fan of the first Accountant movie. An autistic accountant who’s also a trained assassin? Sounds nuts, but Ben Affleck and Anna Kendrick made it work. Christian Wolff was intense, the action was killer, and the story stuck with you. So I was stoked when I heard about The Accountant 2, hoping it’d bring the same heat. It’s got some of the juice that made the first movie great, like solid fights and brotherly love, but it ultimately holds itself back from reaching those heights again.

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Dire Wolves Live While Winds of Winter Hopes Die

Dire wolves are back, baby! Sort of. For the past few years I’ve been seeing article pop up about this company that’s trying to bring the woolly mammoth back to life. As elephants are my favorite animals, I also love the woolly mammoth by extension. I’ve also been fascinated by the concept of cloning and DNA splicing since I was a child. The first time I read The House of the Scorpion, I wondered why we couldn’t just clone people. Scientists at Texas A&M cloned a cat and then there’s Dolly the sheep, so why not people? There are specific answers to that but I won’t get into it right now because I don’t remember and I don’t feel like looking it up again but you can if you feel so inclined. I figure God doesn’t want us doing it so He put some safeguards in us on a molecular level. Or maybe there’s a scientist out there who figured out how to do it but was too afraid of what world governments would do with access to cloning technology so they decided to scrap the idea. Either way, it’s a fascinating subject that’s becoming more science and less science fiction as the years go on.

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Donald Trump and the Prisoners of Alcatraz

Howdy, everybody, I just caught wind of Trump’s latest master plan: he wants to reopen Alcatraz. Yeah, that Alcatraz, the old island prison in San Francisco Bay, now a tourist hotspot. I thought it was a joke account at first, but no, it’s pure Trump energy. It’s got his signature bold, in-your-face style, and I’m intrigued, but I’m also like… huh? I’m all for his knack for stirring the pot, but why Alcatraz? What’s the play here? It’s wild, a bit hilarious, and I’m dying to see where this goes.

Trump’s pitching Alcatraz as a lockup for “America’s most ruthless criminals.” Think Al Capone and Machine Gun Kelly, back when the Rock was the ultimate bad-guy hotel. He’s selling it as a law-and-order flex, which, let’s be honest, is his brand. Gotta love how he swings for the fences with ideas nobody else would touch. But here’s the thing: Alcatraz hasn’t been a prison since 1963. It’s been raking in over a million visitors a year for the National Park Service. Shutting that down for a symbolic stunt? That’s peak Trump, but is it practical?

Here’s the deal: Alcatraz closed because it was a money pit. Saltwater eats everything, and it only held about 300 inmates back then. Fixing it up could cost a billion bucks and take six to eight years, plus there’s already a $63.6 million project to make it earthquake-proof. Turning it back into a prison sounds like a logistical dumpster fire. And even if Trump bulldozes through the legal mess, what happens when he’s out of office? No way JD Vance or whoever’s next keeps this circus going. I dig the tough-on-crime vibe, but is this the move?

Trump’s got his reasons, and I respect the hustle. He’s fed up with “radical judges” slowing deportations and wants a big, scary symbol to scream, “Not on my watch.” Alcatraz, with its escape-proof rep (minus those three guys in ‘62—still a head-scratcher!), fits the bill. Word is Don Jr. might’ve pitched it, maybe after binging Escape from Alcatraz. I mean, who doesn’t get hyped for Clint Eastwood? But Congress has to sign off, and with tax cuts and tariffs on the table, I’m not holding my breath. Plus, San Francisco will lose its mind if their cash cow becomes a cellblock again.

I’ve voted Trump three times, and I love how he grabs headlines like nobody else. This Alcatraz idea is nuts, and I’m low-key rooting for him to pull it off, or at least keep us entertained. But is it the best way to flex? Could the cash go to border security or something less… island-y? Either way, he’s got my attention, and I’m grabbing popcorn for the show.

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