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Paige Spiranac dials in golf content for Fourth of July

Paige Spiranac posted new golf clips on Instagram in the days leading up to the Fourth of July, mixing slow‑motion swings and short collaborations with other women in golf. The posts — timed just before holiday grills and weekend plans — gave followers a breezy summer highlight to kick off long weekend chatter.

What Paige Spiranac posted

Spiranac’s recent uploads stuck to the approach that has kept her audience engaged: brief instructional beats, clean production and a few partner spots that spotlight other players. The Instagram material balanced quick swing tips with lighthearted, stylized moments meant to entertain the casual scroller and the golf fan alike.

The Screencaps roundup noted the timing was intentional: a pre‑holiday run of short clips that keep her audience tuned in between travel, cookouts and fireworks. Fans responded in comments and DMs, praising the mix of useful tips and celebratory summer energy.

Reader grilling and holiday plans

After the Spiranac update, the column pivoted to reader mail about Fourth of July menus. A common theme: grills and smokers running full tilt. Typical submissions described backyard burgers and hot dogs, pork butt on the smoker, small briskets for a tight crew and even turkey for more traditional or larger family gatherings.

One reader wrote, “Pork butt on the smoker by noon, poppers for starters, tiny brisket to finish — simple, smoky, perfect.” Another: “Last‑minute burger night for the kids — quick and no fuss.” These lines underscore that many holiday plans aim for tasty results with minimal stress.

Some notes veered into nostalgia or regional flair: an RV road‑trip memory that ended in a lakeside grill, and a tip about pairing sharp cheese with apple pie as a salty‑sweet surprise. Those submissions help paint the larger holiday picture beyond just the core barbecue staples.

Screencaps mailbag highlights

The Outkick mailbag spread a wide range of sports views. Several readers used the space to discuss the WNBA and Caitlin Clark’s influence, arguing that Clark has become a major driver of attention for the league. Typical reader phrasing ranged from measured to blunt: “Clark is definitely the storyline drawing casual fans right now,” wrote one contributor. Another said, “Ratings spikes follow big names — that’s just sports.”

There were sharper takes, too. One short submission labeled the WNBA a “clown show,” while a more detailed letter suggested that attendance and broadcast strategies are structural questions the league must address. The Screencaps format deliberately presents these as reader opinions; they are not verified league assessments.

To add texture, readers also praised the community tone of the column. “I like the mix — sports takes, grilling tips and the occasional memory,” wrote a longtime reader. Those positive notes help explain why the mailbag continues to draw a cross section of viewpoints each week.

What readers warned and praised

Besides food and sports, readers shared safety tips and local observations. One South Florida reader described seeing people with larger fireworks sometimes referred to as “mortars.” That account was relayed as a reader observation and remains unverified; editors advise caution. Mortars and other high‑powered fireworks can be dangerous and may be illegal in some jurisdictions, so stick to consumer‑grade fireworks where allowed and follow local safety guidance.

On the praise side, several notes cheered Spiranac’s recent clips for being both instructive and fun. “She gave me a tip I used on the course this week,” one reader said. Others thanked Screencaps for including both new voices and veteran contributors, calling out the variety of perspectives as the column’s strength.

What comes next

Screencaps will return with more quick hits after the holiday weekend. The editor indicated he’ll be on Fourth of July prep duty but promised more Weekend and Thursday Screencaps installments on Outkick via Fox News in the coming days. Expect continued mixes of short sports takes, lifestyle notes and reader mail.

Readers were invited to submit photos and short notes for possible future inclusion. To send grill photos, celebration snapshots or brief mailbag lines, email sean.joseph@outkick.com; clearly label submissions if you want them considered for the Screencaps mailbag. The editor may include selected images or excerpts in upcoming columns.

Quick takeaways

Paige Spiranac used a pre‑holiday Instagram push to deliver short, polished golf clips that doubled as light summer entertainment. The Screencaps mailbag flowed into holiday food talk — burgers, pork butt and brisket featured heavily — and carried spirited reader debate about the WNBA and Caitlin Clark’s role in the league’s profile. Safety‑minded notes about fireworks were presented as unverified reader reports and accompanied by a measured editorial caution.

Closing

As the Fourth of July weekend wound up, the mix of golf content, backyard cooking and pointed sports opinion captured how summer conversations often blend athletics, food and local color. If you shot a backyard spread, a Spiranac clip reaction or a safe fireworks setup you’d like considered for the mailbag, send it along — the Screencaps team reads every submission and may feature selected photos in an upcoming column.

Source: Fox News – Outkick Screencaps