
37 People Who Just Don't Give A 操 (That's Chinese For, Well, You Know)
1. First, there's this kid who isn't afraid to let his feelings known:
3. And this old lady who does not give a damn who has to wait for her:
4. Here's Keanu Reeves who has no time for bullshit:
5. This guy who has taken to heart the book he's reading (It's The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuck):
6. And this person who — when their flight got seriously delayed — decided to camp out right at the airport:
7. Here's 19-year-old David Isom — a legendary DGAFer — who, on June 8, 1958, broke the color line in St. Petersburg, Florida, by swimming at a whites-only public pool.
8. This father and son who — after seeing a dad play airplane with his 5-year-old — decided to try it themselves:
9. And Leah who doesn't care about what anyone says is "impossible":
10. This carefree kid playing on the swing as the world literally burns around him:
11. This author really has things figured out:
12. And this seasoned gent definitely DGAF about what people think of him:
13. Nobody ever said not giving an eff was smart, as this guy proves right here:
14. This grown-ass adult wanted a dinosaur lunch pail, so he got one, coworkers' judgment be damned:
15. And this dude vacuums his lawn at night (for reasons known only to himself):
16. This person has an honestly inspiring philosophy:
17. This professor does not care one bit what their students think of this test:
18. And this official is going to take a little "me time" playing Solitaire no matter how long the line gets, LOL:
19. This elementary school teacher has got to have a DGAF attitude if they decided to teach little kids with this name:
20. Ditto for this high school teacher:
21. And this mom didn't have any birthday candles in the house, but she's not going to apologize for it:
iCeCoCaCoLa64 / Via reddit.com
22. This server does NOT suffer fools, so they charged an annoying table a "bitching fee":
smokeymctokerson / Via reddit.com
23. This guy — I honestly don't know what's going on with him — but he definitely does things his own way:
GallowBoob / Via reddit.com
24. And I think we can all appreciate Chunk:
deleted / Via reddit.com
25. The bored nurse who put 50 Shades of Grey on the TV over the children's play area 100% belongs on this list:
aceofdemons / Via reddit.com
26. This person's grandma is largely responsible for this sign being put up in her apartment complex (Spoiler alert — she didn't stop):
deleted / Via reddit.com
27. And this grandma has big DGAF energy by deciding to do this instead of tossing out the batch:
u/HOLD_MY_POCKETS / Via reddit.com
28. This wife doesn't care what her husband — or anyone else — thinks about her skincare mask:
u/iamthedreadpiraterob / Via reddit.com
29. If you think this guy cares what anyone thinks, take another look at his car:
Akriax / Via reddit.com
30. The driver of this big truck doesn't care about what anyone thinks it says about him:
invisiblemachine / Via reddit.com
31. And if you want a ride from this very sassy Lyft driver (who drives with a parrot), you gotta do things her way:
joyisnotdead / Via reddit.com
It reads:
"FIRST AND FOREMOST, MY GRANDS AND GREATS RIDE IN THIS VEHICLE! BE CONSIDERATE OF THAT! I HAVE FAMILY AND I'M RAISING A GREAT THAT NEEDS ME! BE SURE I GET HOME SAFE TO HER AND MY FAMILY! I DON'T CARRY MONEY OR REAL JEWELS! IF YOU CARJACK ME WRECK IT GOOD! I WANT A NEW ONE!
DO NOT TOUCH OR CUSS AROUND MY PARROT! I WILL PUT YOU OUT! I DON'T TOUCH YOUR KIDS AND I DON'T TEACH YOUR KIDS TO CUSS, DON'T TEACH MINE!
NO SMOKING, VAPING, SMOKING POT, OR SNORTING/SMOKING DOPE! THIS ISN'T YOUR HOOKAH ROOM! OR TRAP HOUSE!
NO SPRAYING PERFUME, DOING YOUR HAIR AND MAKEUP (I don't want your hair all over the place and other customers don't want to get in to your hair all over them), SPRAYING HAIR SPRAY OR COLOGNE! THIS ISN'T YOUR BATHROOM!
NO SEX OR MAKING OUT. THIS ISN'T YOUR HOOKER ROOM/HOTEL ROOM.
NO EATING OR DRINKING IN MY CAR! I PROVIDE WATER FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE! THIS ISN'T YOUR DINER!
And I can translate all of this to you in Spanish. If you can't be respectful, I will gladly accommodate you with another driver."
32. This person is NOT going to be told how to act:
nexus82 / Via reddit.com
33. This person has their own way of telling coworkers not to steal their lunch:
Both-Track-3842 / Via reddit.com
34. And this very unique person somehow got this license plate:
u/jamesian / Via imgur.com
Of course it was New Jersey, LOL.
35. The people behind this Nike knockoff definitely DGAF:
aligador / Via reddit.com
36. This person doesn't give a damn about niceties:
tatsmith / Via reddit.com
37. And whoever delivered this piece of wisdom, is a DGAFer through and through:
Crystal-Clear-Waters / Via reddit.com
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
This Action-Packed 'John Wick' Sequel Is The Top Movie On Hulu Right Now
'John Wick: Chapter 4' is currently the top movie on Hulu, according to the platform's public ranking system. The fourth entry in the Keanu Reeves-led franchise catches up with the titular hit man as he unearths a path to defeating The High Table, the powerful council that rules the underworld in the John Wick universe. But first, John must face a sadistic crime lord and a band of international killers before getting his freedom. In addition to Reeves, the 2023 action flick stars Laurence Fishburne, Bill Skarsgård, Rina Sawayama, Donnie Yen, Hiroyuki Sanada, Shamier Anderson, Scott Adkins, Clancy Brown, Ian McShane and the late Lance Reddick. Read on for more trending movies across streaming services, including Netflix, HBO Max and AmazonPrime Video. And if you want to stay informed about all things streaming and entertainment, subscribe to the Culture Catchall newsletter. Related: 'Night Always Comes' 'Night Always Comes,' a new survival thriller on Netflix, is one of the top movies currently trending on the streamer. It stars Vanessa Kirby as a woman who, facing eviction in a city her family can no longer afford, goes on a desperate and dangerous all-night cash search to raise $25,000. Julia Fox, Randall Park, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Zack Gottsagen, Stephan James, Eli Roth and Michael Kelly also star. 'The Legend of Ochi' 'The Legend of Ochi' is one of the top movies currently trending on HBO Max. The A24 fantasy flick, which hit theaters in April, follows a shy farm girl named Yuri (Helena Zengel), who was raised in her remote island village to fear an elusive species known as ochi. However, when she stumbles upon a wounded baby ochi, she embarks on a quest to bring the forest creature home. Related: The cast also includes Finn Wolfhard, Emily Watson and Willem Dafoe. 'Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes' 'Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes,' the latest installment in the reboot film series, is one of the top movies currently trending on Prime Video. Years after Caesar's reign and the events of 'War for the Planet of the Apes,' one young ape emerges and sets out on a journey that defines the future for apes and humans alike. The cast includes Owen Teague, Freya Allan, Kevin Durand, Peter Macon and William H. Macy. Revisit HuffPost's review of the film here. If you're looking for other films to watch, check out our What We're Watching blog. Related... 'Freakier Friday' Isn't The Classic You Remember — But It Pulls Off A Big Surprise This New Movie Is So Bad, Even Netflix's Big Movie Star Can't Save It Denzel Washington And Spike Lee Reunited For A New Thriller In 'Highest 2 Lowest'. It Is A Marvel — Mostly.


USA Today
4 days ago
- USA Today
35 years of Microsoft Solitaire: An illustrated history of the game's evolution
Over 500 million people have played Microsoft Solitaire since its 1990 release as an included game in the Windows 3.0 operating system. In 2019, it was inducted into the World Video Game Hall of Fame, marking it as one of the most influential video games of all time. Since its inception, it's been localized into 65 languages and played on every continent, including Antarctica. Though it doesn't come pre-installed in Windows computers anymore, users continue to download and play it on computers, tablets and phones 35 years later. USA TODAY's Ariana Torrey recounts her experience as a millennial growing up playing Microsoft Solitaire and how she evolved alongside the game: I was six-years-old when we got our first Windows PC. Before Windows 95, games were things I played on my Super Nintendo, sometimes my Gameboy, rarely our family Macintosh. But after being given my very own Windows login with a neon-colored icon as my profile picture, it only took me four clicks to find the 'Games' folder hidden in the START menu of the Windows taskbar. The games that came preinstalled on Windows 95 were FreeCell, Hearts, Minesweeper and Solitaire. The pickings were slim, but for a girl in the '90s, it amounted to hours of entertainment, and later, an obsession with solitaire-based card games that spanned well into adulthood. The Windows 95 version of Solitaire wasn't like the one I had seen my Nana play, meticulously laying out cards one-by-one into neat stacks, moving each row gingerly by hand. This version sported bright pixel art decks that you could change at will, and a mesmerizing animation of the cards cascading down and bouncing whenever you won a game. Originally included in Windows 3.0 in 1990, developers hoped Solitaire would help beginner computer users get familiar with the functionality of a mouse – a relatively new tool for people at the time. The computer did indeed make shuffling, ordering and restacking cards as simple as a single click. It also recorded your win percentages diligently, making it perfect ammo to hurl at your brother during arguments about who got to play next on the computer. As I aged and we upgraded to Windows 98 and then 2000, the gaming landscape was shifting before me with the release of the PlayStation 2, which pushed graphic capabilities as we knew it to places we had only dreamed of before. But these tried-and-true Windows games remained largely untouched. Always preinstalled, they changed very little with the turn of the millennium. They were simple. Reliable. Comforting. It became second nature to click into Solitaire while waiting around for my mom to get off the landline phone so I could log onto AOL messenger, or when patiently watching jpegs load, lines by blurry line, on 56k dial up. Along with millions of other Americans, I played Solitaire in the moments I was procrastinating, reflecting, bored, overwhelmed or needing a break. It required no commitment. No CD-Roms. No beefy hardware. Just your idle mind. With the launch of Windows XP in 2001, a whole new set of Internet-connected games were built into the operating system. Now with the ability to face opponents online, they included Internet Backgammon, Internet Checkers, Internet Hearts, Internet Reversi and Internet Spades. My beloved solo games were still available too, along with a brand new Solitaire mode – Spider Solitaire. All of the Internet games disappeared with later versions of Windows, but Spider Solitaire remained. It became a new staple in the pre-installed Windows zeitgeist for more than a decade, included with the four original games in the releases of Windows Vista in 2006 and Windows 7 in 2009. This strong quintuple of games remained with me all throughout high school and college with every upgrade we made on our family PC, and later, on my college laptop. I still played regularly, getting more competitive in my pursuit of better streaks and win percentages. I wasn't competing with anyone besides myself, but that is what I liked about it. When Windows 10 released in 2015, I had already started my career, and the world had grown up along with me; We all had less idle time, more distractions, an entire internet full of content to consume at any given moment. Solitaire couldn't compete with the dopamine hits of doom-scrolling social media or binge-watching Breaking Bad for the third time. Plus, there were just so many games now. Hundreds. Thousands. Some so addicting people were spending real life money on virtual, sparkly gems for games they would abandon six months later. Microsoft knew this. They had launched an entire empire of gaming with the Xbox console, and their operating system followed suit. Instead of coming pre-installed, Solitaire was now offered as an app you had to download from the Windows Store on your phone or PC in a suite of games called 'The Solitaire Collection.' It included the classics – Solitaire, FreeCell and Spider Solitaire, along with two other Solitaire modes – Pyramid and TriPeaks. All could be played as one-off games, but now there were also challenges, which gave you daily medals, which counted towards monthly achievements. Dopamine galore for any goal-oriented gamer. I greedily snatched them up. This is how Solitaire mostly remained until Windows started including ads between draws, some of them un-mutable and unskippable, which made the collection of games nearly unplayable in my eyes. But by this point, there were plenty of other options available for the Solitaire-obsessed. Do a quick search on the Google Play Store and you'll find thousands of hits for Solitaire from a myriad of developers, some with full story modes, eye-catching art, or other game mechanics woven in. There are a slew of card-based indie games, like the 2024 smash hit Balatro, which credits Solitaire as its inspiration. And with mega-giants like Microsoft-owned Activision cashing in with their release of Candy Crush Solitaire earlier this year, it's no surprise that this simple game has evolved just like we all have. The world demanded it. But for me, I'm a purist. Nothing will ever replace the simple pleasure of organizing randomized stacks of cards into ordered piles, whether by number, suit, or alternating back and forth. Sometimes I long for the days when everything felt that simple – back when I was young and the world was smaller, still contained to my home and bus stop and school. Back when I would play just to play, even with no one around to compete against. Just me. And a deck of cards. CONTRIBUTING Carlie Procell


Forbes
5 days ago
- Forbes
‘John Wick' Spinoff ‘Ballerina' Rental Price Drops Big On Streaming
Ana de Armas and Keanu Reeves' From the World of John Wick: Ballerina is now available for a lot less on digital streaming. From the World of John Wick: Ballerina opened in theaters on June 6 and debuted on digital streaming via premium video on demand on July 1. The official logline for the movie reads, 'Taking place during the events of John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum, the film follows Eve Macarro (Armas), who is beginning her training in the assassin traditions of the Ruska Roma.' Produced by John Wick franchise director Chad Stahelski and directed by Underworld helmer Len Wiseman, From the World of John Wick: Ballerina also stars Anjelica Huston, Ian McShane, Gabriel Byrne, Catalina Sandino Moreno, Norman Reedus and the late Lance Reddick. Reeves, of course, returns as John Wick. From the World of John Wick: Ballerina is available for purchase or rent on several digital platforms, including Apple TV, Fandango at Home, Prime Video and YouTube. Earlier this week, the platforms dropped the 48-hour rental price for Ballerina from $19.99 to $9.99, while the digital purchase price for the film dropped from $24.99 to $19.99. The film is not yet available on streaming video on demand on a subscription platform. When it is, From the World of John Wick: Ballerina will first be available on the STARZ streaming app. Ana De Armas Has A Striking Memory Of Seeing Keanu Reeves On Set As John Wick During an interview from CinemaCon 2025 in April with The Hollywood Reporter, Ana de Armas recalled seeing Keanu Reeves the first time he appeared on the Ballerina set as John Wick. 'That day, just seeing him walking on set when everyone was waiting. He just walked in with the John Wick suit on again. It was the first time after John Wick 4, which was a very iconic moment,' de Armas told THR. 'I'll never forget that.' Reeves, of course, plays a supporting role in From the World of John Wick: Ballerina, including a showdown with de Armas' character, Eve. 'We shot that scene for three or four days, and he was just full on,' de Armas told THR. 'It was actually longer than we thought, I think, originally in the script. It just kept getting more and more intricate and complicated, and then we found those action moments in between. It became something really special, and it was a good setup for that relationship.' From the World of John Wick: Ballerina is now available for reduced rental and purchase prices on digital streaming.