
In PICS: Inside Leanna Lenee and Travis Hunter's lavish Turks and Caicos honeymoon
From oceanfront views to a sprawling two-story suite, Lenee's video revealed not only the scenery but also the luxury touches that defined the trip. 'Finally got to take our honeymoon,' she captioned the post, as footage from the Caribbean getaway quickly spread online.
Inside the Rock House Villa
As reported by the New York Post, the couple stayed at the Rock House resort, a luxury beachfront destination known for its private villas and sweeping ocean views.
Lenee gave her followers a complete tour of the suite, which featured a private infinity pool, expansive deck, and two spacious floors connected by a staircase.
The TikTok clip also showed Hunter gazing out over the water near yatchs, while in another scene Lenee walked viewers through a massive bathroom with oversized shower space, followed by shots of their suite's living area and master bedroom.
'Going to enjoy our honeymoon,' Lenee wrote, closing the clip with a view of a yacht just steps from their room.
The couple's life after 'I do'
According to Sports Illustrated, the honeymoon came just weeks after Hunter inked a four-year, $46.65 million rookie contract with the Jaguars. The 2024 Heisman winner also recently purchased a $3.275 million home in Jacksonville's Deerwood Country Club.
Lenee, a Kennesaw State graduate and social media influencer, has been steadily documenting their life post-wedding—giving fans a curated look at their new chapter together before Hunter shifts focus to his NFL debut.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
The great ice debate: Why Americans pile it on while Europeans keep it chill
A debate sparks between America and Europe over ice in water. Americans expect ice, while Europeans often don't serve it. This difference reflects cultural norms and historical habits. The US embraced ice commercially, while Europe values tap water quality. The debate highlights differing preferences and environmental considerations. Travelers should understand these customs. It is all about tradition and personal choice. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads The humble ice cube—a hero at the bottom of an American glass, a rare sight in Europe 's cafés—has ignited a cross-continental controversy that's far more than a culinary afterthought. Every summer, as American tourists clutch tepid water in Paris or Rome, social media inflates with incredulity, memes, and gentle mockery under the hashtag #IceWaterDebate. But what lies beneath the surface of the cube? Authors and experts see more than a trivial travel squabble: the ice divide is a window into culture, climate, and even people have traced this chilly divide as deeply as Amy Brady, author of Ice: From Mixed Drinks to Skating Rinks - A Cool History of a Hot Commodity. Brady recounts how America's love affair with ice began in the 19th century, when Boston's 'Ice King,' Frederick Tudor, pioneered the mass harvesting and global shipping of New England lake ice. 'The US became the first nation to make ice a household staple,' Brady writes, describing how, by the early 20th century, 'no respectable American home or hotel would serve drinks without it.'American travelers to Europe have expressed surprise and sometimes frustration at the European tendency to serve drinks, especially water, without ice. On platforms like TikTok , US tourists share clips highlighting the scarcity or outright absence of ice cubes in European beverages, a stark contrast to US customs where ice is often generously added to drinks. This has led to a viral, humorous, and sometimes bewildered conversation dubbed the " Ice Water Debate " between the two the European perspective, serving drinks without ice is common and tied to local preferences and historical habits. Europeans, particularly in northern countries, often drink tap water straight or with minimal chilling, as they trust the quality and prefer the natural flavor unaltered by melting ice. For example, Scandinavian countries consider access to clean tap water so reliable that ice is not deemed necessary for hydration. Europeans also point out that many public places and hotels offer free water refills and emphasize hydration through readily available tap American habit of filling glasses with large amounts of ice stems partly from a preference for extremely cold drinks and the use of ice to dilute the drink slightly as it melts. This habit dates back to commercial ice availability and cultural norms that celebrate chilled beverages, especially in warm climates or fast-paced lifestyles where refreshing coolness is prized. The debate touches on dietary and environmental considerations as well, with some Europeans noting that the US consumption of ice might contribute to higher energy and water on water consumption habits also highlight the differences. Studies indicate that water intake in some European countries is below recommended levels compared to the US, though accessibility to clean water is widespread in Europe. This paradox is partly due to differing drinking patterns and social customs around hydration versus beverage suggest this debate is largely about what individuals are accustomed to rather than objective advantages of one approach. European residents emphasize that the absence of ice does not reflect a lack of hydration but a cultural norm where water quality and drinking practices differ. American travelers are encouraged to adapt to local customs and understand the reasons behind these differences, which ultimately relate to each region's infrastructure, climate, and if you're parched in Provence or sweating in Seville and the server delivers a cool—but never cold—glass, you're not being shortchanged. You're sipping on centuries of tradition, personal preference, and maybe a pinch of passive-aggressive iced or not.


Time of India
8 hours ago
- Time of India
Drake and Bobbi Althoff fallout explained as the duo rekindles their friendship two years after dating rumours and podcast drama
Drake and Bobbi Althoff's relationship started with major internet attention when the rapper appeared on The Really Good Podcast in July 2023. The awkward, dry-toned banter between them went viral almost instantly, helping Bobbi skyrocket from a niche TikToker to one of the most talked-about podcast hosts online. For many, it was the first time seeing the Hotline Bling appear in such a stripped-down, casual setting and it worked. Why did Bobbi Althoff delete her Drake podcast episode? But just as fans were rewatching clips on loop, the full video mysteriously vanished. Bobbi deleted the Drake episode only a month after it aired, and no real explanation was given. That decision quickly fuelled speculation online, with many assuming some kind of behind-the-scenes drama had gone down between the two. Theories about a fallout started circulating on social media, made worse when Bobbi was reportedly kicked out of Drake's SXSW afterparty for showing up without an invite. The duo also ended up unfollowing each other on social media, sparking further speculations. Bobbi Althoff & Drake unfollowed each other on instagram and she seems to have deleted any content from her Drake interview on socials. 🤔 When Bobbi sparked Drake dating rumours after divorce filing The timeline only got messier. In February 2024, Bobbi Althoff filed for divorce from her husband, Cory, with whom she shares two daughters, while also revealing that they had separated in July 2023. That's the exact same month her interview with Drake dropped, leading fans to connect dots that may or may not be real. Romance rumours flooded TikTok and Reddit, but Bobbi was quick to shut them down. She even posted a private DM exchange with Barstool's Dave Portnoy, writing, 'I did not want to do this podcast in the first place, and now so much negativity is coming from it.' Bobbi Althoff shuts down Drake romance speculation—sort of Despite the rumours, both Bobbi and Drake stayed publicly silent about each other for months. The only hint of closure came during a January 2024 interview with Keke Palmer, where Bobbi briefly addressed her experience with the rapper. 'He's a very nice person,' she said, offering neither confirmation nor denial, just a neutral statement that didn't add much to the mystery. Drake tells Bobbi to 'unblock' him in surprise Instagram comment Then came a surprising twist. Recently, Bobbi shared a screenshot of a comment Drake left on one of her Instagram posts: 'UNBLOCK MY NAME FROM YOUR COMMENTS.' Her dry response? 'I'll consider it.' While no one knows why his name was blocked to begin with, the interaction was enough to get fans speculating all over again. It's unclear if the comment was serious or playful, but it was the first public acknowledgement between the two in years, suggesting maybe their alleged beef is cooling off. Who is Bobbi Althoff? Bobbi Althoff is a social media personality and podcast host best known for her deadpan interview style and rapid rise to fame. Originally gaining popularity on TikTok for her satirical 'mom content,' she pivoted into podcasting in 2023 and quickly went viral thanks to interviews with celebrities like Drake, Lil Yachty, and Offset. Her show, The Really Good Podcast, has since become one of the internet's most discussed platforms for awkward celebrity interactions. To stay updated on the stories that are going viral, follow Indiatimes Trending.


Indian Express
14 hours ago
- Indian Express
The Harvard-educated linguist breaking down ‘skibidi' and ‘rizz'
Adam Aleksic has been thinking about seggs. Not sex, but seggs — a substitute term that took off a few years ago among those trying to dodge content-moderation restrictions on TikTok. Influencers shared stories from their 'seggs lives' and spoke about the importance of 'seggs education.' Lots of similarly inventive workarounds have emerged to discuss sensitive or suggestive topics online. This phenomenon is called algospeak, and it has yielded terms like 'cornucopia' for homophobia and 'unalive,' a euphemism for suicide that has made its way into middle schoolers' offline vocabulary. These words roll off the tongue for Aleksic, a 24-year-old linguist and content creator who posts as Etymology Nerd on social media. Others may find them slightly bewildering. But, as he argues in a new book, 'Algospeak: How Social Media Is Transforming the Future of Language,' these distinctly 21st-century coinages are worthy of consideration by anyone interested in the forces that mold our shifting lexicon. 'The more I looked into it, the more I realized that algorithms are really affecting every aspect of modern language change,' Aleksic said in a recent interview, padding around the Manhattan apartment he shares with a roommate and wearing socks stitched with tiny dolphins. Even those who steer clear of social media are not exempt. If you have encountered Oxford University Press's 2024 word of the year, 'brain rot' (the 'supposed deterioration of a person's mental or intellectual state,' thanks to a firehose of digital content), you, too, have had a brush with social media's ability to incubate slang and catapult it into the offline world. Aleksic has been dissecting slang associated with Gen Z on social media since 2023. In wobbly, breathless videos that are usually about a minute long, he uses his undergraduate degree in linguistics from Harvard University to explain the spread of terms including 'lowkey' and 'gyat.' (If you must know, the latter is a synonym for butt.) The videos are more rigorous than their informal quality might suggest. Each one takes four or five hours to compose, he said. He scripts every word, and combs Google Scholar for relevant papers from academic journals that he can cite in screenshots. He appears to be fashioning himself as Bill Nye for Gen Z language enthusiasts. In the process, he has become a go-to voice for journalists and anyone older than 30 who might want to understand why 'Skibidi Toilet,' the nonsensical name of a YouTube series, has wormed its way into Gen Alpha's vocabulary. What he wants now is to be taken seriously outside of those circles. 'I want to balance being a 'ha-ha funny' TikToker with academic credibility,' he said. 'It's a little hard to strike that balance when you are talking about 'Skibidi Toilet' on the internet.' Aleksic settled in his living room, under the apparent surveillance of several stick-on googly eyes left over from his most recent birthday party. To the left of the entrance was a makeshift ball pit filled with orbs that resembled enormous plastic Dippin' Dots. (He installed it as a bit, but has come to appreciate its ability to foster conversation.) In person, he is animated but not frenetic, a click or three less intense than he appears in his videos. He is happy to lean into the persona of a fast-talking know-it-all if it means engaging people who wouldn't otherwise spare a thought for etymology. He started speeding up his cadence when he realized that brisk videos tended to get more views. 'I'll retake a video if I don't think I spoke fast enough,' he said. Just as Aleksic changed the way he spoke in response to algorithmic pressure, language, too, can be bent by users seeking an audience on social media. Take 'rizz,' which means something along the lines of 'charisma.' According to Aleksic, the word was popularized by Twitch streamer Kai Cenat, whose young fans picked up the term. So did the robust ecosystem of people online who make fun of Cenat's every move. Soon, the word had been flagged by TikTok's recommendation algorithm as a trending topic that it could highlight to keep viewers engaged. Influencers — including Aleksic — who wanted their posts to be pushed to more viewers now had an incentive to join in. This process slingshots trendy coinages into the broader consciousness. But it also yanks terms from their original context faster than ever before, he said. Words with origins in African American English or ballroom culture, for instance, are often mislabeled as 'Gen Z slang' or 'internet slang.' Aleksic tackles that well-documented phenomenon in a chapter titled 'It's Giving Appropriation.' Other sections of the book, which was released by Knopf this month, spend time with subcultures that play an outsize role in modern language generation, including K-pop fans, who boosted the term 'delulu,' and incels, or involuntary celibates, who popularized the term 'sigma.' Words have always traveled from insular communities into wider usage: Aleksic likes the example of 'OK,' which was Boston newspaper slang in the 19th century that spread with the help of Martin Van Buren's reelection campaign. (His nickname in full, 'Old Kinderhook,' was a bit of a mouthful.) But 'delulu' and 'rizz' didn't need the eighth president's help to travel across the country — they had the internet. And TikTok's powerful algorithm is more efficient at getting the word out than Old Kinderhook's most overachieving press secretary. Today, the cycle of word generation has been turbocharged to the point that some of its output hardly makes sense. Nowhere is that more evident than in a chapter titled 'Sticking Out Your Gyat for the Rizzler,' a chaotic mélange of slang that is hilarious to middle schoolers precisely because it is so illegible to adults. Words and phrases don't need to be understood to go viral — they just have to be funny enough to retain our attention. Aleksic argues that 'algospeak' is no longer as simple as swapping sex for 'seggs'; it is a linguistic ecosystem in which words rocket from the margins to the mainstream in a matter of days, and sometimes fade just as fast. When influencers modify their vocabulary and speech patterns for maximum visibility, those patterns are reinforced among their audiences. Aleksic said he works hard to keep viewers' attention, for example, jumping between camera angles roughly every 8 seconds. He longed for a forum in which he could discuss his ideas at length, and last January, he began refining an idea for a book about algorithms and language. That's an ambitious goal for a recent college graduate without an advanced degree or decades of research experience, the kinds of qualifications that abound in the linguistics publishing crowd. But youth has its upsides when it comes to the world of internet slang, said Gretchen McCulloch, the author of 'Because Internet: Understanding the New Rules of Language.' 'The tricky thing with internet linguistics is that the point at which you're the most qualified to speak about it from personal experience is also the point at which you have the least, sort of, academic credibility,' McCulloch said in an interview. She, too, is fascinated by how short-form video is affecting language, though she wonders which changes will be permanent and which will fade with time. Take the way that influencers often begin their videos with superlatives like 'The most interesting thing about …' Will those hyperbolic phrases bleed into other forms of communication, or will they lose their potency with overuse? There is a whole graveyard full of internet-speak — 'on fleek,' you will be missed — that has fallen out of fashion. While Aleksic wades through these big questions, he is also making time for really small ones. He is hoping to make a video about urinal conversations, which have been the subject of more academic papers than you might think. While we spoke, he pulled up his email inbox to scan through the questions that had come in from his followers. (He gets about 10 a day.) 'Somebody emailed me about the word 'thank' versus 'thanks,'' he said, scrolling through a message. 'You know, that's kind of interesting.'