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angel reese

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Source: Apple / Beats / Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
It’s a new year, meaning new Apple/Beats products. To help roll them out, the company enlisted the help of top female athletes Angel Reese, Naomi Osaka, and Sha’Carri Richardson.
The Apple-owned company unveiled the latest model in its long line of over-ear wireless headphones, the Solo 4. At launch, the Solo 4 headphones will cost $199 and promise up to 50 hours of battery life.
The Solo 4’s exceptional battery life can be attributed to the lack of active noise cancellation, a must-have feature now more than ever. It’s a bummer the Solo 4 headphones do have it, but Beats promises the other features make up for the lack of noise cancellation.
Those features include wired audio and passive tuning, allowing the Solo 4s to continue to work when the battery is dead and plugged in without sacrificing sound quality.
The Solo 4 also features custom acoustic architecture and supports native software on both Android and iOS devices.
Beats Also Announces The New Solo Buds
Source: Apple / Beats / Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats also announced a new entry-level wireless earbuds model, the Solo Buds, which cost $79.99. While they might not be a premium offering, Beats still promises the Solo Buds will offer users “big Beats sound in the smallest case we’ve ever made.”
Also, for a $79.99 price point, you’re not getting ANC (active noise cancellation) or a charging case, but Beats boasts the Solo Buds will offer 18 hours of use on a single charge; after that, you have to plug up via USB-C.
The Solo 4 headphones are now available for pre-order and launch on May 2 in Matte Black, Slate Blue, and Cloud Pink.
The Solo Buds will arrive sometime in June, along with Matte Black, Storm Gray, Arctic Purple, and Transparent Red color options.
You can see more photos of both accessories in the gallery below.

1. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

2. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

3. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

4. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

5. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

6. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

7. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

8. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

9. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

10. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

11. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

12. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

13. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

14. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

15. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

16. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

17. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

18. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

19. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

20. Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds

Source:Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds
Beats Solo 4 & Solo Buds naomi osaka,sha’carri richardson,angel reese,apple. beats

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Emmanuel Acho, currently a sports analyst and a former professional athlete, is certainly qualified to speak on the happenings of the sports world. However, the former NFL linebacker delivered an awful take that he tried to dress up nicely regarding Angel Reese, and many of Acho’s peers are checking him while other fans are going at his well-manicured fade.
In a now-viral clip shared to social media, Emmanuel Acho, 33, appeared on his Fox Sports 1 program SPEAK to discuss Angel Reese and LSU falling to Caitlin Clark and Iowa during the NCAA Women’s Elite 8 games this past Monday (April 1). While Reese was doing her best while being reportedly hobbled by an injury, LSU fell to Iowa behind the scoring explosion from Clark.
In the postgame press conference, Reese, 21, tearfully explained that after her team defeated Iowa last year for the championship, the vitriol she’s experienced since that epic contest has been too much to bear.
“I’ve been through so much,” Reese said. “I’ve seen so much. I’ve been attacked so many times. Death threats. I’ve been sexualized. I’ve been threatened. I’ve been so many things.”
Despite this, Acho found it necessary to deliver what he framed as a “gender neutral and racially indifferent” —which doesn’t make any sense because you’re discussing a women’s basketball tournament contest featuring a Black woman who is a superstar opposite a white woman who is considered the next great hope for the game. That alone negates the low shot Acho took at Reese’s experience by comparing her tears to that of the animated character, Courage the Cowardly Dog.
People with far more access to Emmanuel Acho have checked him on his dressing down of Angel Reese and the accomplishments of her team. Others are dragging Acho’s name through the mud while others are muting his entire name from their feeds. What’s worse is that the MAGA nuts and closet racists loved the take because of course they did.
Check out the reactions below.


Photo: Getty

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Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark lit the NCAA Women’s Basketball world on fire after their teams locked horns in the championship game this past April. Helping to elevate the women’s game to fans, the pair were named The Sporting News Athletes of the Year, which has sparked some interesting debates on social media.
Angel Reese, a forward for Lousiana State University, and Caitlin Clark, a guard for Iowa State University, were electrifying during their run through the NCAA Women’s Basketball tournament. Some observers of the individual players have said Clark is the better overall player but the Reese won the Most Outstanding Player award of the Final Four. It isn’t exactly apples and oranges but a case could be made for how great both players were.
More from The Sporting News:
Their impact on their sport in particular, on the world of sports in general, compelled The Sporting News to select Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese as our Athletes of the Year for 2023, making them the successors to soccer superstar Lionel Messi baseball’s Shohei Ohtani and placing them in the same category as icons LeBron James, Tom Brady, Michael Jordan and Jackie Joyner-Kersee.
“I was at the game. Caitlin and I are friends, and Angel is remarkable … It just made me smile, honestly made me smile, just to see the growth of the game, the incredible athletes on both sides,” Nancy Lieberman, the first woman to become a household name playing basketball, told The Sporting News. “It’s really wonderful to see where the game has gone and finally to be able to catch on with some mainstream appeal.”
The opinions on X have been divided with some saying Angel Reese should have the honor on her own with others saying Caitlin Clark deserved the honor. We’ve got reactions from all sides below.

Photo: Ben Solomon / Getty

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Source: C. Morgan Engel / Getty
One thing Gen Z is gonna do…is tell more than they should. LSA women’s basketball star Angel Reese is sharing who slid in her social media DM’s after her historic NCAA Championship win earlier this month. 

Reese and teammate Flau’jae Johnson stopped by the Breakfast Club to talk about their win as well as other ways their lives have changed since the win. 

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According to Complex, Reese revealed that Drake and Future have slid into her DMs. “You said two that you need to stay far away from,” Charlamagne tha God joked. 
The 20-year-old forward clarified that the multi-platinum rappers just offered congratulations. “They just congratulated me. It’s all congratulations,” she said with smile. 
Still, the idea earned a few more jokes from The Breakfast Club hosts. “Then Drake gonna say, ‘Yo, you know I got a basketball court at the crib?’ Did he say that yet?” Envy asked. Reese and Johnson exchanged a knowing glance and broke out in laughter, while declining to answer the question. 
Reese became a national sensation after leading her team to the NCAA championship beating Iowa. However, questions about her sportsmanship by mimicking the “You Can’t See Me,” dance led to vicious and racist attacks on social media. Rapper Tony Yayo, who first popularized the gesture, took to her defense. 
“Any kind of sports, talking trash is a part of the game,” Yayo told TMZ Sports. “I mean, it was for the championship game. It’s competition. Even when I’m playing 2k — if you playin’ in the game, with video games, we get excited. You know?”
Yayo continued, “It’s just a dance. I don’t take nothin’ personal. It was a dance I created because I was trying to hide from the police. But shout out to all them people — John Cena, Angel Reese, Caitlin Clark — and definitely Flavor Flav. But Angel Reese? You know, she took the ‘U Can’t C Me’ dance to a whole ‘nother level.”
The gesture first popped up in the series when Iowa’s Caitlin Clark used it against players from South Carolina. She was praised as “passionate.” 
Reese, also known as Bayou Barbie,  is one of the NCAA’s highest-grossing NIL players with a value of over $1.5 million. 
She also talked about getting praise from fellow LSU baller, Shaquille O’Neal saying that his support sometimes put “pressure” on her, an idea that the NBA legend brushed off.
On his podcast, O’Neal said of Reese:”She’s probably the greatest athlete to ever come out of LSU sports. You heard it here first. Man and female,” O’Neal said on the latest episode of “The Big Podcast with Shaq.”

“Because, guess what? She delivered. She delivered that package. See, a lot of us got the package, and we still got the package in our truck. She delivered that package. So, you know, there’s a lot of names you could throw around — men and women — but she’s probably the greatest athlete.
“Some people are going to exclude it to women athletes. I’m not doing that. She’s the greatest athlete to ever come out of LSU.