The billionaire Tesla CEO has changed his Twitter bio to Chief Twit. On Thursday his biographer Walter Isaacson posted a picture of Musk hobnobbing with Twitter employees at its San Francisco headquarters. He brought in Tesla engineers to “assess” the company’s code. And in a conciliatory post, Musk promised advertisers that under his watch Twitter would not be “a free-for-all hellscape, where anything can be said with no consequences.”
You Absolutely Need to Watch This Heartbreaking Documentary on Netflix
Netflix has a ton of world-class sports documentaries.
At the top of the pile is Untold, a series of immaculate features about the strangest, most incredible stories in sport over the past few decades. But there’s one documentary I rarely hear people discuss. And they should, because it’s incredible.
Coming in at an accessible 40 minutes, The Speed Cubers is a short, barely feature-length documentary about speed cubing, the act of solving different types of Rubik’s Cubes as quickly as possible.
Speed cubing is mind boggling. Most people would struggle to figure out a 3x3x3 Rubik’s Cube in hours if challenged, but the best can solve them in seconds. The Speed Cubers explores this subculture, focusing on the stories of two of the world’s fastest, the legendary Feliks Zemdegs and the new king of speed cubing, Max Park.
In some ways, Zemdegs is the Roger Federer of Rubik’s Cubes. Despite the fact every speed cubing record he once held has now been broken, he’s widely considered the greatest of all time, having established up to 121 world records and winning the speed cubing world championship twice, in 2013 and 2015.
Zemdegs is the hero of Parks, who now, in 2022, has broken almost every record Zemdegs once held. Now 20 years old, Park was diagnosed with moderate to severe autism at the age of two. After his mother gave him a Rubik’s Cube to help develop his motor skills, Parks