@fatemehabbasi791: #فوریو_پاشم_بیام_جرت_بدم

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Wednesday 03 June 2026 15:11:42 GMT
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hana243887
Hanna :
وای فقط پسره غشش کردم😭😂
2026-06-03 16:21:12
44
mobinarad6
🤡ᴛʜᴇ ᴄʟᴏᴡɴ🤡 :
وای پسره چقددد خوبه🤣🤣🤣🤣
2026-06-03 20:50:56
16
nigivoq
nigi :
وای جعر
2026-06-03 21:19:34
1
niayesh.abdollahi
آجی چی اج 🙂🎀 :
😂😂
2026-06-04 23:18:59
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raha.iy
-𝗥💢' :
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
2026-06-04 19:27:58
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fatemeh_mahmoodi
fatemeh🎀 :
🤣🤣🤣🤣
2026-06-04 12:31:04
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itsh3lma
̀ 𝗛𝖾𝗅︎𝗠𝖺 :
🤣🤣🤣🤣
2026-06-03 21:34:14
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John Candy: The Big Heart of Comedy John Candy was more than a comic actor—he was the embodiment of warmth wrapped in laughter. Born in Newmarket, Ontario, in 1950, Candy rose from Toronto’s Second City stage to become one of the most beloved figures in Hollywood. His humor was never cruel, his presence never small; he had the rare ability to turn his size and vulnerability into comedy that was as gentle as it was side-splitting. At Second City and later on SCTV, Candy became a master of character sketches, slipping into larger-than-life personas with effortless timing. He played bombastic blowhards, hapless nerds, and sweet souls just trying to get by—always with a twinkle of empathy behind the punchline. When he transitioned to film, his style carried him to some of the most enduring comedies of the 1980s and early ’90s: Stripes, Planes, Trains & Automobiles, Uncle Buck, and Cool Runnings. Steve Martin, his frequent co-star, once said Candy had “a deep soulfulness that showed in everything he did.” Indeed, his most famous roles often blended slapstick with an undercurrent of melancholy—a reminder that comedy works best when rooted in truth. Tragically, Candy’s life was cut short in 1994 at the age of 43. His death left a void in comedy, but his legacy endures in the tenderness he brought to every performance. Off-screen, colleagues remember him as generous, humble, and endlessly supportive, the rare star who never lost sight of the ensemble around him. Today, John Candy remains a symbol of a style of comedy that feels increasingly rare: big, physical, and wildly funny, yet infused with humanity. His work endures because it wasn’t just about getting a laugh—it was about making audiences feel welcome, seen, and loved. #JohnCandy #ComedyLegend #SCTV #UncleBuck #PlanesTrainsAutomobiles
John Candy: The Big Heart of Comedy John Candy was more than a comic actor—he was the embodiment of warmth wrapped in laughter. Born in Newmarket, Ontario, in 1950, Candy rose from Toronto’s Second City stage to become one of the most beloved figures in Hollywood. His humor was never cruel, his presence never small; he had the rare ability to turn his size and vulnerability into comedy that was as gentle as it was side-splitting. At Second City and later on SCTV, Candy became a master of character sketches, slipping into larger-than-life personas with effortless timing. He played bombastic blowhards, hapless nerds, and sweet souls just trying to get by—always with a twinkle of empathy behind the punchline. When he transitioned to film, his style carried him to some of the most enduring comedies of the 1980s and early ’90s: Stripes, Planes, Trains & Automobiles, Uncle Buck, and Cool Runnings. Steve Martin, his frequent co-star, once said Candy had “a deep soulfulness that showed in everything he did.” Indeed, his most famous roles often blended slapstick with an undercurrent of melancholy—a reminder that comedy works best when rooted in truth. Tragically, Candy’s life was cut short in 1994 at the age of 43. His death left a void in comedy, but his legacy endures in the tenderness he brought to every performance. Off-screen, colleagues remember him as generous, humble, and endlessly supportive, the rare star who never lost sight of the ensemble around him. Today, John Candy remains a symbol of a style of comedy that feels increasingly rare: big, physical, and wildly funny, yet infused with humanity. His work endures because it wasn’t just about getting a laugh—it was about making audiences feel welcome, seen, and loved. #JohnCandy #ComedyLegend #SCTV #UncleBuck #PlanesTrainsAutomobiles

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