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The past few days have been a heartbreaking time for Denver Nuggets fan as their star point guard Jamal Murray tore his ACL and is out for the season. The Nuggies finally felt confident in the pieces built around MVP candidate Nikola Jokic, but hopes of making a deep playoff run are fading. It sucks (see Arenas, Gilbert; 2007). We’re pretty sure not everyone who reads this column follows the NBA as closely as us, but who knows, maybe both of you do. This week, we play around with some basketball-related hypotheticals involving things everyone can appreciate: booze, gambling and partying like an A-lister.
Philly iceberg meme will test your obscure knowledge of the city phillyvoice.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from phillyvoice.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Wu-Tang Clan Releasing 400 Pound Coffee Table Book
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Fans of American hip hop know the group Wu-Tang Clan does not mess around when it coms to limited edition merchandise. From the lone copy of the album
Once Upon A Time In Shaolin to coffee table books. A new, limited edition coffee table book of photography, which comes inside of a 400-pound steel globe.
Peta Pixel reported on Wu’s new coffee table book, which, unfortunately, will only be available to some very wealthy and very lucky buyers. The group’s only producing 36 of the coffee table books, and the photography tomes alone would likely be quite pricey. Add in the custom 400-pound steel globe with bronze accents, and we’d guess this book would cost at least a few grand? (Official price isn’t available yet as far as we can tell.)
The crypto-art market is being infiltrated by fakes, thieves and scammers
The craze for non-fungible tokens was supposed to help artists keep control of their work, but has created juicy incentives for fraudsters
15 March 2021 • 7:00am God of the Grove by Hedi Xandt, an artwork that was sold as an NFT without its creator s knowledge
Credit: Hedi Xandt
David Drayton had been so excited to own some real crypto-art. Intrigued by the growing buzz, the German designer paid about €50 (£43) in cryptocurrency for a digital certificate of ownership for a lovingly computer-rendered Grecian statue with its face worn away to reveal a golden skull.