Twitter reacts to Armando Bacot Outer Banks appearance

Twitter reacts to Armando Bacot’s acting debut on season three of Outer Banks.

North Carolina basketball star [autotag]Armando Bacot[/autotag] has added another highlight reel to his resume, but this one was done off the court.

Bacot has been a marketable machine, earning significant NIL deals throughout his UNC career. However, his image grew stronger after last season when it was announced that Bacot would make an acting debut on a TV series.

UNC fans witnessed that acting debut on the Netflix Original Outer Banks. Season three of the hit TV series was released early Thursday morning, and fans immediately went looking for Bacot.

I won’t spoil the show like the Tar Heels did Coach K., but you can see Bacot in episode eight.

Unsurprisingly, this had Twitter talking as fans discussed Bacot and his acting debut. Bacot has been a pivotal piece for North Carolina.

This season, Bacot is averaging 17 points and 11 rebounds. He also broke Tyler Hansbroughs’ record for most double-doubles in the program’s history.

Let’s look at how Twitter reacted.

Season 3 of Outer Banks is now on Netflix, and here’s a reminder that you should be watching this ridiculous show

The new season of Outer Banks dropped today on Netflix, and it’s somehow infuriatingly absurd and also a must-watch.

It’s time to head back to the OBX, folks. The third season of Netflix’s drama Outer Banks drops on the streaming platform Thursday and anticipation is high. If you somehow missed the Outer Banks obsession during April of 2020, when everyone binged the Dawson’s-Creek-meets-Uncharted series, it’s time to get on it.

Outer Banks is an absolutely ridiculous, absurd show that will drive you nuts and probably make you angry more than a few times an episode. This is the show that purported you can take a ferry from the Outer Banks to the college town of Chapel Hill, after all.

And I cannot recommend it enough.

As we look forward to whatever glorious nonsense happens this season, let’s take a quick look at the endeavors of the first two seasons to make sure everyone is all caught up with where we left off with John B, JJ, Pope, Kiara and Sarah.

In season one, John B (Chase Stokes), Kiara (Madison Bailey), Pope (J.D.) and JJ (Rudy Pankow) — who go by Pogues, the nickname for locals — are on the hunt for a long lost treasure. The fancy and rich Sarah (Madelyn Cline) joins the crew on this journey as the group uses various maps and knicknacks (mostly left by John B’s missing and mysterious father) to attempt to track down the gobs of gold somewhere out there in the OBX. There’s a lot of drama and intrigue (and a few murders), and we learn Sarah’s dad, Ward (Charles Esten), is bad news in the worst way.

The season ends with a cliffhanger as John B and Sarah head into a storm.

BUT IT’S OK! THEY SURVIVE.

John B and Sarah make their way to the Bahamas to try and steal back the gold bars from Ward, but things go awry. While everyone thinks John B and Sarah are dead, life continues in North Carolina. Pope gets involved in a journey searching for a giant gold cross that has ties to his family lineage in the Outer Banks (and rumored magical healing powers — not joking), and things end up with more murders and Ward faking his own death with a yacht explosion.

After all that, no one got any treasure, and John B’s dad is alive!

If you’re thinking, “Wow this sounds like an absolute mess,” well, you’d be 100 percent correct. You should also stop what you’re doing and immediately watch it. Let IMDb user symmetrymis sell you on it with this flawless review:

IMDb review that reads "My goodness this show is garbage. Beautiful unreal garbage. Everything that happens is unintentionally hilarious. I can't wait for season 3." and gives 5 of 10 stars.

Broken reel doesn’t prevent catch of 1,000-pound tuna

A father and son, with help from others, landed what might have been a record-size bluefin tuna, despite a reel handle that wouldn’t turn.

A father and young son, with help from others, reeled in what might have been a North Carolina record for bluefin tuna had it been a qualifying catch and weighed properly, but it was impressive nonetheless, considering the reel broke during the 2½-hour battle.

fishing

Josiah VanFleet of Virginia was fishing with his 9-year-old son Zeke on his 22-foot Grady-White boat about 45 miles out on the Outer Banks of North Carolina last week when they hooked up at around 8:15 a.m. while trolling, according to The Virginia-Pilot and WAVY-TV.

VanFleet and four others took turns reeling with the rod firmly planted in a rod holder.

“That went on for quite a while,” VanFleet told the Pilot. Until the reel malfunctioned three-quarters into the fight.

Also on FTW Outdoors: Huge shark that barely fit into fishermen’s boat ignites controversy

The handle would no longer turn. So the crew had to take a second reel, quickly strip a bunch of line off and then attach the line with the fish onto the line from the new reel to finish the job.

“We’re literally holding a 1,000-pound fish with our hands on the line while [crimping] the lines together,” VanFleet told the Pilot. “We finally got the fish to the surface, where we pretty much harpooned him.”

It took nearly as much time to get the bluefin tuna into the boat as it did to catch it, as reported by The News&Observer. It took two hours to haul the fish aboard, thanks to some help from friends who accompanied them on the trip to the Outer Banks in another boat.

Back at Oregon Inlet, the scale was broken, but the U.S. Coast Guard helped measure the bluefin tuna and estimated its weight as 1,000 pounds. It was 9½-feet long with an 83-inch girth.

North Carolina’s current state record for a bluefin tuna is 877 pounds caught in 2017. But since multiple anglers participated, it wouldn’t have qualified as a record even had it been weighed on a certified scale.

Still, it was an impressive catch for the fishermen who reeled it in, the others identified as Steve Hux, Steven Griggs and Frank Amato by Carolina Sportsman.

“I was absolutely in awe,” VanFleet told WAVY-TV. “I had no idea; I was not expecting on catching, like, an almost 10-foot-long fish. I mean, I just never dreamed of it. I knew we’d catch a big one. I was thinking maybe [300] or 400 pounds. You know, because when you’re watching ‘Wicked Tuna,’ I mean those inches that size fish is, like, very rare on that show. And I’m like there’s no way we’re gonna get something like that. And lo and behold.”

Also on FTW Outdoors: Boy’s disqualification in ice fishing tourney proves controversial

They had packed the fish with 200 pounds of ice and later spent two hours filleting the fish.

“We gave it to lots of friends, because what are you going to do with that much fish?” he told the Pilot. “We just kind of spread the love around Virginia.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vWlDkTKOSD4&feature=share&fbclid=IwAR2BHdKEEstbhlRM3df2esA9wESnp9vDFSBBLsGHJzLvYsjmBTewkdiRRtE

Photos courtesy of Josiah VanFleet. 

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