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3 shockers that can happen at WWE Saturday Night's Main Event
3 shockers that can happen at WWE Saturday Night's Main Event

Time of India

time21-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

3 shockers that can happen at WWE Saturday Night's Main Event

Image via WWE WWE Saturday Night's Main Event can witness some shocking moments that can change the direction of the company going forward. WWE Saturday Night's Main Event is the next top event in store for fans worldwide. The vintage show is set to take place on Saturday, May 24, at the Yuengling Center in Tampa, Florida. WWE has announced a stellar match card featuring top names like John Cena , Seth Rollins, CM Punk, and Logan Paul. Moreover, the recent events hint that the fans might be in store to witness some jaw-dropping moments at the show. Here are the top three shocking moments that can happen at the WWE Saturday Night's Main Event: 3. The return of Roman Reigns — RomanNMReigns (@RomanNMReigns) Roman Reigns has not been seen on WWE television since the RAW after WrestleMania 41 episode. The last time Reigns was on TV, he took a beatdown from Seth Rollins and Bron Breakker and saw them align with his former Wiseman, Paul Heyman. With both of them laying havoc on Monday Night RAW, the time for his return might be on the horizon. The OTC can emerge back at the WWE Saturday Night's Main Event to exact revenge on Rollins and Breakker, right after their tag team match against CM Punk and Sami Zayn. 2. Sami Zayn turns on CM Punk to join the Paul Heyman Guys Seth Rollins offered his former friend, Sami Zayn, a chance to step out of his way and huge opportunities to take his WWE career to the next level. Instead, he retaliated and sided with Rollins' rival, CM Punk, setting the stage for their tag team match at WWE Saturday Night's Main Event. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Complete protection with iPru All-in-one Term Plan ICICI Pru Life Insurance Plan Get Quote Undo However, intrigued by the power Rollins now has and being enticed by the advancement of his own career, Zayn could do the unthinkable by turning on CM Punk mid-match and aligning with the Paul Heyman Guys as their third member in a major shocker. 1. R-Truth defeats his childhood hero John Cena R-Truth helped John Cena retain his Undisputed WWE Championship against Randy Orton at WWE Backlash. Instead, he got an AA from Cena at the post-show conference for a comment he made that Cena did not like. Truth is on a quest to bring back the Cena he looked up to at WWE Saturday Night's Main Event in their non-title match. He could even pull a major upset by picking up a shocking win over the 17-time World Champion, which could put him in line for a future World title match. Also read: John Cena's skin cancer story: A reminder to prioritize sun protection Get IPL 2025 match schedules , squads , points table , and live scores for CSK , MI , RCB , KKR , SRH , LSG , DC , GT , PBKS , and RR . Check the latest IPL Orange Cap and Purple Cap standings.

This truth-telling book unsettled me, both mentally and physically
This truth-telling book unsettled me, both mentally and physically

The Age

time20-05-2025

  • The Age

This truth-telling book unsettled me, both mentally and physically

But this had to be a consideration through the land itself, to see if it could speak to her, not in any mystical way or intricate pilgrimage but through a simple road trip. Grenville decided to walk on the places her ancestors settled, on the country itself. It might say something. There are roads, she has a car, there are places she can stay. She sets out, neither a pioneer nor a pilgrim, just a woman on a quest. With a car, not a gun. She begins at Wisemans Ferry, a place about an hour's drive from Sydney and named after her ancestor Solomon Wiseman who came as a convict, transported for stealing wood in 1805. In London Wiseman was a man at the bottom of the heap, a man who would never dream of being 'the possessor and master of a piece of earth.' But Wiseman's dreams did, in fact, come true; he took up land, started the ferry, built a pub, made a lot of money. There is a swirl of stories here and Solomon's descendant is sceptical of them all. What? He 'took up' land? Took. Grenville defines the relationship First Peoples had to the land in cool, legal terms: '…the landscape was, and is, the embodiment of a vast and timeless spiritual reality. The identity and meaning of any individual human life is profoundly connected to a particular tract of country and the stories it features. It's more than living on it, more than knowing it, more than being sustained by it, more than loving it, though it's all of those. It's an inextricable, inseparable, existentially vital part of who a person is and where they fit in the cosmos.' For a week Grenville walks through, or across all the places in country NSW she knows are connected to her family; in each place she silently names it as stolen. She doesn't know what to expect, she doesn't in fact, expect anything and often thinks of turning back. She doesn't because something is taking shape, although it could be just the intensifying of her despair. Loading Towards the end of her journey she turns the wheel in the direction of Bingara, nothing to do with her ancestors but everything to do with her journey. Bingara is the town closest to the site of the 1938 Myall Creek Massacre. Descendants of the white men who did the killing and descendants of some of the survivors of those massacred still live here. Grenville finds evidence of something here, could it be openess, on both sides? Or a similar uneasiness that Kim Scott explored in Taboo and Lia Hills in The Desert Knows Her Name? I could have written thousands of words, every one inadequate, about Unsettled. Grenville's pages are streaked with light, with the desire to reach some understanding of the weight of real history as opposed to narrated stories as she walks on and through 'hard places of the spirit' and I thank her for every one of them. She is, like Kim Scott and Lia Hills here and Percival Everett in the US, turning our faces towards the two dazzlingly contemporary questions central to all of us, Colonisation and Race.

This truth-telling book unsettled me, both mentally and physically
This truth-telling book unsettled me, both mentally and physically

Sydney Morning Herald

time20-05-2025

  • Sydney Morning Herald

This truth-telling book unsettled me, both mentally and physically

But this had to be a consideration through the land itself, to see if it could speak to her, not in any mystical way or intricate pilgrimage but through a simple road trip. Grenville decided to walk on the places her ancestors settled, on the country itself. It might say something. There are roads, she has a car, there are places she can stay. She sets out, neither a pioneer nor a pilgrim, just a woman on a quest. With a car, not a gun. She begins at Wisemans Ferry, a place about an hour's drive from Sydney and named after her ancestor Solomon Wiseman who came as a convict, transported for stealing wood in 1805. In London Wiseman was a man at the bottom of the heap, a man who would never dream of being 'the possessor and master of a piece of earth.' But Wiseman's dreams did, in fact, come true; he took up land, started the ferry, built a pub, made a lot of money. There is a swirl of stories here and Solomon's descendant is sceptical of them all. What? He 'took up' land? Took. Grenville defines the relationship First Peoples had to the land in cool, legal terms: '…the landscape was, and is, the embodiment of a vast and timeless spiritual reality. The identity and meaning of any individual human life is profoundly connected to a particular tract of country and the stories it features. It's more than living on it, more than knowing it, more than being sustained by it, more than loving it, though it's all of those. It's an inextricable, inseparable, existentially vital part of who a person is and where they fit in the cosmos.' For a week Grenville walks through, or across all the places in country NSW she knows are connected to her family; in each place she silently names it as stolen. She doesn't know what to expect, she doesn't in fact, expect anything and often thinks of turning back. She doesn't because something is taking shape, although it could be just the intensifying of her despair. Loading Towards the end of her journey she turns the wheel in the direction of Bingara, nothing to do with her ancestors but everything to do with her journey. Bingara is the town closest to the site of the 1938 Myall Creek Massacre. Descendants of the white men who did the killing and descendants of some of the survivors of those massacred still live here. Grenville finds evidence of something here, could it be openess, on both sides? Or a similar uneasiness that Kim Scott explored in Taboo and Lia Hills in The Desert Knows Her Name? I could have written thousands of words, every one inadequate, about Unsettled. Grenville's pages are streaked with light, with the desire to reach some understanding of the weight of real history as opposed to narrated stories as she walks on and through 'hard places of the spirit' and I thank her for every one of them. She is, like Kim Scott and Lia Hills here and Percival Everett in the US, turning our faces towards the two dazzlingly contemporary questions central to all of us, Colonisation and Race.

Elgin police remember the 10 Illinois law enforcement officers killed in line of duty in last year
Elgin police remember the 10 Illinois law enforcement officers killed in line of duty in last year

Chicago Tribune

time17-05-2025

  • Chicago Tribune

Elgin police remember the 10 Illinois law enforcement officers killed in line of duty in last year

Debbie Wiseman's brother, Iowa State Trooper Mark Toney, died in the line of duty in September 2011. As the years have passed, Wiseman worries his sacrifice will be forgotten. She wants to make sure that doesn't happen for her brother or any other officer killed while protecting the lives of others, she said during her keynote speech Thursday at the Elgin Police Department's 2025 Memorial Service, held at The Hemmens Cultural Center on National Peace Officers Memorial Day. 'He is never forgotten. Neither are the other fallen officers,' said Wiseman, who also spoke at last year's service. The memorial day was established by President John F. Kennedy in 1962. It always falls within National Police Week, which this year was May 11-17. During the ceremony, Elgin police recognized the 10 Illinois law enforcement officers who died in 2024. They were: There were 165 on-duty police deaths nationwide last year, Police Chief Ana Lalley said at the event. This year, 25 have been killed as of mid-May, she said. Wiseman's brother died 13 years ago. He was the youngest of four children from a military family. 'He always wanted to be a cop,' Wiseman said. With 24 years served, Toney was looking forward to retirement when he died in a car crash during a high-speed chase. Wiseman had talked to him right before his shift started, she said. After his death, Wiseman's family received a lot of support from other officers, she said. 'I lost a brother, but I gained an entire family,' she said. Wiseman is past president of the Illinois Chapter of Concerns of Police Survivors (C.O.P.S.), an organization that assists families of fallen police officers and supports officers while on the job. Families know how difficult it is to be a police officer in these times, she said. 'We see you. We appreciate you,' Wiseman said. Police Chaplain Al Keating offered a prayer for Elgin officers and all police officers. The meaning of the memorial day is to 'honor the courageous who selflessly answered the call to protect and serve, often (giving) the ultimate cost of their own lives,' Keating said. 'Lord, we thank you for these remarkable individuals, for their unwavering commitment to justice, for their courage in the face of danger and for their willingness to place the safety of others above their own. 'Let their stories of bravery ignite passion within the hearts of those who continue to carry the torch of justice forward,' Keating said.

WWE 'Raw': Jey Uso defends title against Seth Rollins
WWE 'Raw': Jey Uso defends title against Seth Rollins

Yahoo

time07-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

WWE 'Raw': Jey Uso defends title against Seth Rollins

May 6 (UPI) -- World Heavyweight Champion Jey Uso defended his title against Seth Rollins in the main event of WWE Raw. Uso accepted the match after talking with Rollins' new manager, The Wiseman Paul Heyman. Rollins has started a new group with Heyman that also includes Bron Breakker after he defeated Roman Reigns and CM Punk at WrestleMania 41. Advertisement Heyman told Uso that Rollins was willing to face him anytime and anywhere. Uso decided that Raw was the best time as he wasn't afraid of any challengers. Uso and Rollins had a highly-competitive match for Raw's top prize in the main event. Rollins was joined at ringside by Heyman and Breakker. Rollins, during the bout, impressively countered a Spear from Uso and turned it into a Pedigree to nearly win. As things started to look dire for Uso, his best friend Sami Zayn arrived from the audience to take out Breakker and even the odds. Breakker was only stunned momentarily and was eventually able to take out both Zayn and Uso with a Spear as Heyman distracted the referee. Advertisement Rollins then nailed Uso with a Stomp and seemed just seconds away from capturing the World Heavyweight Championship until Punk's music hit, much to the crowd's delight. Punk rushed to the ring with a steel chair and attacked Rollins, ending the match in a disqualification. With a disqualification, Uso remains the World Heavyweight Champion. After Raw went off the air, Uso was attacked by Logan Paul, who also has his sights set on the World Heavyweight Championship.

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