Beyoncé has joined the ranks of billionaires, according to Forbes, becoming the fifth musician to be crowned the elite status.The Grammy Award-winning superstar now stands alongside Taylor Swift, Bruce Springsteen, Rihanna and her husband Jay-Z, according to a report published by the outlet Monday.The 44-year-old’s financial ascent follows a landmark year in her career. Beyoncé took home the industry’s top trophy, winning Album of the Year at the 2025 Grammys for her country album “Cowboy Carter,” released the year prior. She also made history as the first Black woman to win the award for Best Country Album.With 35 Grammy wins and 99 nominations, she is the most-awarded artist in the history of the awards, including those she won with Destiny’s Child, a chart-topping girl group that helped launch her storied career.The “Cowboy Carter Tour” grossed more than $400 million, making it the highest-grossing country tour in history, Reuters reported, citing Live Nation.In 2024, music charting site Billboard named her the greatest pop star of the 21st century, highlighting “her full 25 years of influence, impact, evolution,” Billboard’s Andrew Unterberger wrote.Her 2023 “Renaissance World Tour” drew massive crowds, with fans – known collectively as the BeyHive – flocking to see her perform across Europe and North America.In Stockholm, where she kicked off the tour, fanfare drove up hotel and restaurant prices and even slowed down Sweden’s declining inflation, according to economists.In addition to her musical achievements, Beyoncé has built a diverse business empire. She has launched successful clothing and hair care lines, and expanded into the beverage industry with a whisky brand named after her great-grandfather, SirDavis. Her entrepreneurial ventures have contributed to her growing fortune.Beyoncé’s road to superstardom began in the early 1990s, when she appeared on “Star Search” as part of Girl’s Tyme, a six-member group. She later joined Destiny’s Child, which became one of the best-selling girl groups in the late 90s and early 2000s.The group’s other members, Michelle Williams and Kelly Rowland, reunited with her on stage earlier this year during her “Cowboy Carter” tour in Las Vegas.Since Destiny’s Child announced its hiatus in 2001, Beyoncé has released a series of acclaimed solo albums, starting with “Dangerously in Love” in 2003, which won five Grammy Awards the following year.She has headlined major music festivals, including becoming the first woman of color to lead the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in 2018.In 2023, she surpassed conductor Georg Solti to become the most awarded artist in Grammy history.
Beyoncé has joined the ranks of billionaires, according to Forbes, becoming the fifth musician to be crowned the elite status.
The Grammy Award-winning superstar now stands alongside Taylor Swift, Bruce Springsteen, Rihanna and her husband Jay-Z, according to a report published by the outlet Monday.
The 44-year-old’s financial ascent follows a landmark year in her career. Beyoncé took home the industry’s top trophy, winning Album of the Year at the 2025 Grammys for her country album “Cowboy Carter,” released the year prior. She also made history as the first Black woman to win the award for Best Country Album.
With 35 Grammy wins and 99 nominations, she is the most-awarded artist in the history of the awards, including those she won with Destiny’s Child, a chart-topping girl group that helped launch her storied career.
The “Cowboy Carter Tour” grossed more than $400 million, making it the highest-grossing country tour in history, Reuters reported, citing Live Nation.
In 2024, music charting site Billboard named her the greatest pop star of the 21st century, highlighting “her full 25 years of influence, impact, evolution,” Billboard’s Andrew Unterberger wrote.
Her 2023 “Renaissance World Tour” drew massive crowds, with fans – known collectively as the BeyHive – flocking to see her perform across Europe and North America.
In Stockholm, where she kicked off the tour, fanfare drove up hotel and restaurant prices and even slowed down Sweden’s declining inflation, according to economists.
In addition to her musical achievements, Beyoncé has built a diverse business empire. She has launched successful clothing and hair care lines, and expanded into the beverage industry with a whisky brand named after her great-grandfather, SirDavis. Her entrepreneurial ventures have contributed to her growing fortune.
Beyoncé’s road to superstardom began in the early 1990s, when she appeared on “Star Search” as part of Girl’s Tyme, a six-member group. She later joined Destiny’s Child, which became one of the best-selling girl groups in the late 90s and early 2000s.
The group’s other members, Michelle Williams and Kelly Rowland, reunited with her on stage earlier this year during her “Cowboy Carter” tour in Las Vegas.
Since Destiny’s Child announced its hiatus in 2001, Beyoncé has released a series of acclaimed solo albums, starting with “Dangerously in Love” in 2003, which won five Grammy Awards the following year.
She has headlined major music festivals, including becoming the first woman of color to lead the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in 2018.
In 2023, she surpassed conductor Georg Solti to become the most awarded artist in Grammy history.
(CNN) — Beyoncé has joined the ranks of billionaires, according to Forbes, becoming the fifth musician to be crowned the elite status.
The Grammy Award-winning superstar now stands alongside Taylor Swift, Bruce Springsteen, Rihanna and her husband Jay-Z, according to a report published by the outlet Monday.
The 44 –year-old’s financial ascent follows a landmark year in her career. . Beyoncé took home the industry’s top trophy, winning Album of the Year at the 2025 Grammy for her country album “Cowboy Carter,” released the year prior. She also made history as the first Black woman to win the award for Best Country Album.
With 35 Grammy wins and 99 nominations, she is the most-awarded artist in the history of the awards, including those she won with Destiny’s Child, a chart-topping girl group that helped launch her storied career.
The “Cowboy Carter Tour” grossed more than $400 million, making it the highest-grossing country tour in history, Reuters reported, citing Live Nation.
In 2024, music charting site Billboard named her the greatest pop star of the 21st century highlighting “her full 25 years of influence, impact, evolution,” Billboard’s Andrew Unterberger wrote.
Her 2023 “Renaissance World Tour” drew massive crowds, with fans – known collectively as the BeyHive – flocking to see her perform across Europe and North America.
In Stockholm, where she kicked off the tour, fanfare drove up hotel and restaurant prices and even slowed down Sweden’s declining inflation, according to economists.
In addition to her musical achievements, Beyoncé has built a diverse business empire. She has launched successful clothing and hair care lines, and expanded into the beverage industry with a whisky brand named after her great-grandfather, SirDavis. Her entrepreneurial ventures have contributed to her growing fortune.
Beyoncé’s road to superstardom began in the early 1990s, when she appeared on “Star Search” as part of Girl’s Tyme, a six-member group. She later joined Destiny’s Child, which became one of the best-selling girl groups in the late 90s and early 2000s.
The group’s other members, Michelle Williams and Kelly Rowland, reunited with her on stage earlier this year during her “Cowboy Carter” tour in Las Vegas.
Since Destiny’s Child announced its hiatus in 2001, Beyoncé has released a series of acclaimed solo albums, starting with “Dangerously in Love” in 2003, which won five Grammy Awards the following year.
Caitlin Clark’s superstardom is unprecedented in the world of women’s sports.
Since her WNBA entrance as the Indiana Fever’s No. 1 overall pick in the 2024 draft, Clark has facilitated countless TV viewership and in-person attendance records for the league. The NCAA’s all-time leading scorer electrified the sports world in her debut professional season, setting several all-time league records and winning Rookie of the Year.
While Clark missed the majority of the 2025 WNBA season with a variety of injury issues, she remains one of the most influential athletes in the world.
On Wednesday, Forbes released its inaugural 2025 list of America’s Most Powerful Women in Sports.
Clark ranks No. 4 on the list, trailing only New Orleans Saints/Pelicans owner Gayle Benson, FanDuel CEO Amy Howe and Nike Brand president Amy Montagne.
Clark is the top-ranked active athlete on the list, leading a prestigious group featuring names like Breanna Stewart, Napheesa Collier, Coco Gauff, A’ja Wilson, Simone Biles and Nelly Korda.
“Caitlin Clark has turned her record-breaking college basketball career into early dominance in the WNBA,” Forbes writes in its description of Clark. “Her estimated $8.1 million in income from her rookie season with the Indiana Fever was bolstered by big deals with Nike, Wilson and Gatorade and signals a shift in how female athletes are being valued in the world of professional sports.
“Last month, the Fever announced that Clark would be sidelined with an injury for the remainder of the WNBA season to focus on her recovery, but the injury doesn’t change the fact that Clark has, in the last two years, been the spark that lit the match that set women’s sports on fire.”
Clark burst onto the WNBA scene in 2024, averaging 19.2 points, 5.7 rebounds and a league-leading 8.4 assists per game as an All-Star point guard for the Fever. She became the first rookie in WNBA history to record multiple triple-doubles in her debut campaign, and set the league’s all-time single-season assist record (337).
Clark appeared in just 13 games for the Fever in 2025, averaging 16.5 points, 8.8 assists and 5.0 rebounds per game. Despite her absence throughout the WNBA postseason, Indiana played its way to the semifinals before ultimately falling to the eventual-champion Las Vegas Aces.
Clark will look to resume her stellar play when she returns to the court for the Fever in 2026.
Forbes has published an into Amazon’s efforts to court law enforcement clients for artificial intelligence and surveillance services. The article reveals that not only is the company promoting Amazon Web Services as a potential police tool, but it has been partnering with other businesses in that sector to use its cloud infrastructure. According to the Forbes report, Amazon’s partners that are pitching police departments include car tracking tools and license plate readers from Flock Safety, gun detection by ZeroEyes, real-time crime center apps from C3 AI and Revir Technologies, and AI that helps compose police reports from Abel Police and Mark43. The piece estimated that the police tech business is worth $11 billion. Based on emails sent by members of Amazon’s law enforcement and safety team, the company is working awfully hard to get a share of those billions.
The company’s aggressive sales work has raised outcry for privacy issues around how police officers might use these tools, which is unsurprising given that AI tools can and easily . Regulation is still a affair and some law enforcement departments have failed to .
“It’s dismaying to see one of the largest and most powerful companies pushing authoritarian surveillance tech in this way,” ACLU Senior Policy Analyst Jay Stanley told Forbes. “I didn’t realize Amazon was serving as a midwife for AI law enforcement technologies.”
Nine different panels comprise the exhibit, each highlighting its own topics. All panels were designed on-site, and then they were produced off-site by a third-party company. Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice
A new exhibition at the Auburn Avenue Research Library on African American Culture and History seeks to rewrite the narrative of Black womanhood by reclaiming the idea of softness. Softness Was Always Ours, curated by project archivist Jami Adkins Murphy, opens this week with a public debut on Thursday, Sept. 18.
The exhibition draws heavily from the Ellie Lee Weems Photographic Negatives Collection (1928–1978), featuring over 100 digitized photographs, mounted prints, books, record covers, and rare periodicals. The images span five decades, capturing Black women and girls in moments of childhood, adolescence, and adulthood.
“Black women are often stereotyped as angry, bitter, or unprofessional, but history shows us the exact opposite,” Murphy said. “These images show Black women in moments of resilience, elegance, and joy. I wanted to lift that up at a time when so many are feeling exhausted or unseen.”
This exhibit comes at a time when Black women are being pushed out of the workforce after a reported job loss of 300,000, as reported by Forbes. The pressures of systemic bias, burnout, and constant expectations of strength have left many without the space to rest or be vulnerable.
Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice
Library administrator Victor E. Simmons Jr. described the project as a collective effort to transform the library’s second-floor gallery into a space dedicated to in-house exhibitions. “We wanted to highlight Black women not only as strong, but also as soft, caring, and loving, parts of their lives rarely celebrated in media,” Simmons said. He noted that while mainstream portrayals often reduce Black women to stereotypes of toughness, the exhibition’s images, from mothers at cotillions to women captured in moments of quiet study, reveal tenderness and dignity as just as central to their stories. For Simmons, the show is not only about countering negative imagery, but also about honoring the fullness of Black family and community life, echoing memories of his own upbringing.
Beyond the photographs, Softness Was Always Ours highlights how cultural institutions and publications affirmed Black womanhood when mainstream outlets did not. A panel on Black print media features covers and spreads from magazines such as Ebony, Jet, Hue, Color, and Candid. From the late 1930s through the 1970s, these periodicals placed Black women at the center, celebrating their beauty, grace, and style during a time when such representation was rare.
“These magazines created space for glamour and tenderness,” Murphy said. “They showed young Black girls that refinement and admiration were not reserved for others; they were always ours.”
Another section of the exhibition focuses on the Utopian Literary Club, founded in Atlanta in 1916. Composed of professors, attorneys, scientists, and businesswomen, members met to engage with scholarly literature, the arts, and philanthropy.
“The Utopian Literary Club represents an important message,” Murphy said. “Being academic doesn’t mean you lack softness, and being soft doesn’t mean you lack intellect.”
Artifacts from the club, including photographs, papers, and ephemera, highlight a tradition of elegance and intellectual fire that shaped Atlanta’s cultural life.
Murphy emphasized that the exhibition challenges one-dimensional portrayals of Black women in popular culture. “If all people know of Black women is the erotic side, they miss out on the elegance, the glamour, the grace, and the culture,” she said. By presenting images that range from swimsuits to evening gowns, opera dresses, military and band uniforms, and even fur coats, Softness Was Always Ours aims to show that Black women are never just one thing; they embody complexity, versatility, and dignity across every facet of life.
Murphy said she hopes visitors leave with a renewed sense of affirmation. “I want people to take away that Black women are beautiful, that Black women are loved, that Black women have value, and that Black women are worthy of joy.”
Softness Was Always Ours opens with a public reception on Thursday, Sept. 18, at the Auburn Avenue Research Library’s second-floor gallery.
While U.S. News and World Report crowned the top four Oklahoma colleges, Forbes is coming in with their own list of the best schools in the nation.
The 2025-26 Top Colleges list includes 500 universities and colleges that Forbes considers producing “successful, high-earning, and influential graduates from all economic backgrounds” with low student debt, according to an article that accompanied this year’s list. The rankings also reflect factors like enrollment and outcomes for low-income students.
“Schools ranked highly on our list if their students returned after the first year, graduated on time, secured high salaries after graduation and left college with little student debt,” the article stated.
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology reclaimed the top spot on Forbes’ list, second place on U.S. News’ list; meanwhile, three of Oklahoma’s schools made it to the top half of the list.
See how Oklahoma colleges and universities fared on Forbes’ latest rankings.
Oklahoma schools on the Forbes ‘America’s Top Colleges’ list
Only three of Oklahoma’s colleges and universities made the top 500 schools list for Forbes. While the University of Oklahoma took the top spot, the other two schools were similar to the U.S. News list.
The Sooners scored 96th on the 2026 Top Colleges list nationwide, with high marks in colleges in the South (22nd) and Research University (77).
Sitting at 96th, this puts the University of Oklahoma in conversation with schools like Indiana University, Bloomington (94), Babson College (95) and California State University, Long Beach (97).
The top colleges in Oklahoma, according to Forbes, are:
Oklahoma State and Tulsa both come in just shy of the 250 halfway mark of the list. This puts the Cowboys just below Oberlin College in Ohio and schools like Bentley University, Saint Louis University and Whitman College between the two northern Oklahoma schools.
Both schools still got distinctions in other categories.
OSU was ranked the 44th best school in the South and 138th for research universities. While Tulsa scored 46th in the South, 140th in research and 119th in Private colleges.
Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas previously worked at OpenAI. Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images
Perplexity AI, a startup that has previously come under fire from online publishers, is attempting to rebuild trust with media players through revenue-sharing agreements. But that effort hasn’t stopped complaints about how the company surfaces content. Its latest challenge comes from Japanese media groups Nikkei and Asahi Shumbun, which today (Aug. 26) filed a joint lawsuit accusing Perplexity of copyright infringement.
Co-founded in 2022 by CEO Aravind Srinivas, Perplexity has quickly become a leader in A.I.-powered search and is currently valued at $18 billion. Unlike traditional search engines that return links, Perplexity responds to queries by summarizing information found online, accompanies by citations.
Perplexity did not respond to Observer requests for comment on the lawsuit.
Nikkei, which owns the eponymous Japanese newspaper and the Financial Times, and Asahi Shumbun claim that Perplexity has been storing and resurfacing their articles since at least June 2024, a practice the publishers describe as “free riding” on journalists’ work. The lawsuit, filed in a Tokyo District Court, demands that the A.I. company delete stored articles, stop reproducing publisher content, and pay each media company 2.2 billion Japanese yen ($15 million) in damages.
The suit also alleges that Perplexity ignored robot.txt safeguards implemented by the news publishers to block unauthorized crawling and sometimes presented articles alongside incorrect information, a move the publishers argue “severely damages the credibility” of their newspapers.
This is not Perplexity’s first clash with news publishers. Earlier this month, Yomiuri Shimbun, another major Japanese newspaper, filed its own lawsuit against the company. U.S. outlets have also raised challenges.
Last year, Condé Nast, Forbes and The New York Times all threatened legal action over alleged copyright infringement. Perplexity is currently battling a 2024 lawsuit from Dow Jones and The New York Post—both owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp—claiming that the startup misused content to train A.I. models. A court recently rejected Perplexity’s bid to dismiss that case.
For now, the media industry remains divided on how to handle the rise of A.I. Some, like the Associated Press, Vox Media and The Atlantic, have signed licensing deals with OpenAI. Others remain wary. The New York Times is suing OpenAI and Microsoft over unauthorized use of its content, while Canadian startup Cohere was hit with a similar lawsuit this year from more than a dozen news publishers. Thompson Reuters has also accused A.I. platform Ross Intelligence of copyright infringement in a case that dates back to 2020.
Leading nonprofit recognized for advancing systemic change and technology innovation in accessible education
PALO ALTO, Calif., June 17, 2025 (Newswire.com)
– Benetech, the global nonprofit pioneering AI-driven accessible education, has been named to Forbes’ Accessibility 100 list, unveiled today at the Cannes Lions Festival. The prestigious list recognizes, for the first time, 100 organizations worldwide that are developing breakthrough impactful tools to eliminate barriers for people with disabilities.
At the heart of this recognition are Benetech’s innovations, such as Bookshare+, its AI-powered platform that instantly transforms classroom materials-handouts, assignments, and articles-into accessible formats. Developed with educators and students with disabilities, the platform offers personalization that provides accessibility and meaningful, tailored learning experiences to their needs.
“Students deserve tools that work the way they learn,” said Ayan Kishore, CEO of Benetech. “We’re harnessing advances in generative AI to support learners with differences and disabilities-creating new opportunities that level the playing field and elevate outcomes for all. We’re honored that Forbes recognizes our innovation and impact in accessible education.”
Benetech is building on the success of Benetech’s flagship platform, Bookshare, the world’s largest digital library of accessible eBooks. Bookshare has opened doors for over two million people with disabilities in more than 50 countries with print disabilities and learning differences, helping them access and engage with books in the best formats for them, enabling them to learn, graduate, work, and thrive.
The Forbes list was curated through interviews with more than 400 accessibility leaders across 15+ countries. Organizations were selected based on impact, innovation, and potential to drive systemic change across industries.
“Accessibility is a fascinating space that has never been captured like this before,” says Alan Schwarz, Forbes Assistant Managing Editor who spearheaded the project. “There are lone innovators, juggernaut tech companies, and startups. They are revolutionizing how people get around, learn, communicate, work, play sports, travel, and so much more. Their impact on people’s lives is monumental – and will only be getting more so soon.”
Benetech’s recognition by Forbes highlights its leadership in shaping an accessibility ecosystem that meets a broad range of student needs. The nonprofit has built infrastructure to help educators, publishers, and platform developers design materials and learning experiences for all learners. Beyond Bookshare and Bookshare+, Benetech’s comprehensive approach includes:
Benetech Accessibility Services for Education (BASE): Planning, training, and customized support to help schools and universities build sustainable accessibility strategies.
Global Certified Accessible: Partnering with publishers and content creators to ensure materials are accessible from day one or “born accessible”-no retrofitting required.
Saksharta Program: Model school digital transformation program pioneered in India to empower blind and visually impaired students with inclusive tools and training.
This recognition coincides with Benetech’s 25th anniversary and the launch of ‘All In: Empowering Change for Education and Accessibility’-a bold national campaign dedicated to advancing accessible education and dismantling systemic barriers for learners everywhere.
Hurricane Milton, one of the biggest storms in recorded history, is set to make landfall in Florida on October 9. It will likely cause tens of billions of dollars of damage and could kill or injure many people who are unable to evacuate Tampa Bay and the surrounding region in time.
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And yet, some influencers, TikTok content creators, and streamers are claiming that they will stick around and livestream through the historic storm. It’s a horrible idea and yet another example of how some creators are willing to do anything just to get more views, clicks, and subscribers.
On Tuesday, Forbes reported on numerous influencers who suggested in videos posted online that they would be sticking around even as Hurricane Milton makes its way closer and closer to Florida.
Influencer and writer Caroline Calloway posted on Twitter that even though her house is located in the evacuation zone and is on the beach, she won’t be leaving. Instead, she tweeted about how she’s not leaving and included an ad for her upcoming advice book. “I have champagne and four generations of Floridians in my veins. It’ll be fine,” tweeted Calloway.
Another TikTok creator, kricketfelt, has been posting videos about how her home is made out of concrete and she and her husband are going to stay and not evacuate. She’s continued to upload videos, making light of the situation, as the storm gets closer.
Meanwhile, a clip of controversial Kick Streamer Adin Ross supposedly offering people $30,000 to stick around and livestream through the hurricane went viral after being shared on Twitter and TikTok. However, during the full seven-hour livestream, it’s clear Ross isn’t offering this money to anyone and in fact, was just joking around with a friend. During that same stream, he also told viewers to evacuate Tampa Bay and suggested the hurricane was being used to “distract” people from the upcoming election. So a mixed bag.
Kotaku has reached out to Adin Ross for comment about his stream and statements.
Even though the offer wasn’t real, that didn’t stop some streamers from claiming that they were streaming live from Florida in the path of the hurricane. One Kick streamer, MikeSmallsJr, claimed to be streaming from Florida with nothing but an air mattress and some snacks. During one moment of his stream, he admitted that Ross’ offer wasn’t real and was taken out of context, but suggested the streamer still should pay him something for what he was doing.
“At the end of the day, I was the first Kick streamer to do this shit during Hurricane Helene. I’m out here busting my ass to entertain the people,” said MikeSmallsJr. Later he reportedly heard he wasn’t getting anything and wasn’t happy.
Another streamer, JamesWorley, claimed to be streaming during the storm and, when asked what he would do when or if he lost cell service, said: “I guess the stream will end.” A few moments later, his stream cut off. It returned a minute later.
Kotaku wasn’t able to verify their locations, but some did at least seem to be in Florida and were streaming during large amounts of rain. The storm isn’t set to make landfall until 8 p.m. EST, though thunderstorms and tornadoes are already covering much of the Sunshine State.
The reality is that even though Adin Ross didn’t actually offer large sums of money to encourage people to stream through the storm, the comments sadly might have inspired some people to stick around even as a deadly, incredibly powerful hurricane is about to hit where they live.
For some content creators, a massive hurricane is just an opportunity to risk their lives, troll their viewers, or create “edgy” content while possibly earning more views and subscribers. All of this in an effort to conquer the algorithm and rise above the thousands and thousands of other creators out there, all trying to desperately make money on social media and streaming platforms that, more and more, feel like sinking ships and not the future of entertainment.
Yep, the Galaxy S24 Ultra.Photo: Florence Ion / Gizmodo
Oh, the irony of the National Security Agency suggests that smartphone users turn off their phones occasionally. But the NSA is right: you do need to restart your phone regularly to rid it of demons. Some phones even let you schedule the restart, so you don’t have to think about it.
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Forbes uncovered a seriously dated NSA document outlining the best practices for keeping your phone safe from bad actors in the digital space. The phones depicted are a 2010s-era iPhone with the original push-button Home button and a Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
Over a dozen tips are included, ranging from “considering using Biometrics” to “only use original charging cords.” It’s all fundamental stuff you’ve seen before, but the advice that’s got everyone’s ears perked up is the NSA’s suggestion to power your device off and back on weekly. It isn’t a failsafe but could help reduce zero-click exploits and malware via spearphishing.
For those of you who are only hearing this for the first time, you can rest easy knowing that this is already a common practice among smartphone wielders.
It’s a simple way to either force a waning software update or clear any background apps and memory leaks that might contribute to a too-hot-too-handle metal phone. I’m a frequent restarter because I have cell signal issues in my area—a quick reboot usually does the trick, though not without my heart beating rapidly as I wait to see those mobile service bars return.
A hefty number of manufacturers have already built in the functionality to restart your phone periodically. This includes Samsung’s Galaxy devices and the latest OnePlus devices. The Google Pixel doesn’t have a scheduled offering, but there is an option you can toggle on to have the device automatically restart once it receives an over-the-air (OTA) software update. iOS users can craft an Automation that will restart the iPhone every few days.
There’s a lot of video games set to get TV or film adaptations in the next few years, and even more that seem like they’d be ripe for the picking. Bungie’s Destiny franchise seemed like a viable candidate, especially after the studio was acquired by PlayStation in 2022, but it sounds like any plans to bring the games to a new medium are have currently been dashed.
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According to Forbes’ Paul Tassi earlier in the week, Bungie was reportedly “tossing around” ideas for an animated Destiny series on Netflix before things fell apart.. Allegedly, this was in development prior to the aforementioned PlayStation acquisition, during which Sony said it would help Bungie “nurture the IP they have in a multi-dimensional manner.” (For extra context, this statement was made a few weeks before the Uncharted movie released and became a decent box-office success.) In regards to why it didn’t go forward, Tassi wasn’t sure, though he did say it just may not have gone farther than the scripting phase.
Destiny 2: Is There Any Way A Destiny Show Is Still Happening At This Point?
Before Sony bought Bungie, the developer brought on Derrick Tsai as its transmedia head. Tsai was a producer and director at Riot who helped pave the way for Arcane to get made and become a hit over at Netflix. He departed around this time last year, after which the studio hired Warner Bros. alum Gabriel VanHuss to serve as the Destiny’s head of linear media. VanHuss holds that position to this day, and his duties involve expanding the franchise in TV, comics (which it’s previously done), movies, and so on. It’s hard to know where this hypothetical show currently stands: Bungie’s currently focused on the Final Shape expansion dropping in June, its new Marathon game, and still reeling from its highly publicized layoffs (to say nothing of possibly working on Destiny 3). According to Tassi, if the hypothetical show isn’t fully dead, it’s not coming “anytime remotely soon.”
The idea of Destiny getting a TV show seemed like a cool idea two years ago, but it’s a little more dicey now. Bungie’s hoping to turn things around for both Destiny 2 and the company at large with Final Shape, and revealing a TV show weeks after the expansion drops could easily take things from “we’re so back” to “oh, it’s over” in a heartbeat. The series certainly has the potential to thrive in other mediums, but it’ll unfortunately have to be a waiting game until the smoke clears around The Final Shape.
Three Triangle restaurants were named Forbes Travel Guide Star Award Winners in a recent report, highlighting the very best restaurants in the world.
One was ranked a five-star restaurant, earning that accolade from Forbes alongside only 77 other restaurants across the globe in 2024.
The Forbes Travel Guide’s 2024 Star Awards reflect the best hotels, restaurants, spas and ocean cruises, taking into consideration “destinations offering meaningful experiences, as well as smaller U.S. cities that are often overlooked.”
This is FTG’s 66th annual list of Star Awards winners. To read the full list of 2024 winners, visit forbestravelguide.com/award-winners. You can filter the list to specific areas across the world.
Here are the three restaurants in the Raleigh area that received high praise.
Herons, located inside the Umstead Hotel in Cary, is an elegant, contemporary setting. Juli Leonard jleonard@newsobserver.com
Cary’s Herons named a 5-star restaurant
Forbes declared Herons — a nature, art and wellness-inspired restaurant within Cary’s luxury Umstead Hotel and Spa — a five-star spot.
“A passion for locally grown fruits and vegetables and farm-fresh meats and seafood is evident in the often-flawless fare. Fresh flavors, surprising combinations, and eye-catching presentations are the hallmarks of the dining experience here,” FTG wrote.
Herons’ chef de cuisine Spencer Thomson, left, laughs with executive chef Steven Devereaux Greene in the Cary restaurant’s kitchen at the start of dinner service on Tuesday, Jan. 18, 2019. Thomson and Greene have worked together for years at various restaurants including Devereaux’s. Juli Leonard jleonard@newsobserver.com
Here are FTG’s Inspector’s Highlights from the restaurant:
The intimate 98-seat dining room features a full-view kitchen, original artwork and floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the wooded grounds.
You can choose a three- or four-course meal, or opt for the chef’s signature eight-course kaiseki dinner. Each course showcases Herons’ style of food in an intricate and artful form and creatively puts a regional spin on American cuisine.
There is generally a pleasant background murmur of voices from fellow diners, hotel guests and bar patrons. It allows for conversation without feeling stuffy. Plus, there’s piano music and live jazz on Friday and Saturday evenings.
The dining room is elegant and hushed with an open, soundproof kitchen that often mesmerizes guests as they watch Heron’s culinary masters in action.
A stellar wine list features more than 1,600 wines. Craft beer and signature cocktails are also available.
In 2019, The News & Observer named Herons the top restaurant in the area for the second time.
“[Executive chef Steven Devereaux] Greene, a James Beard Award semifinalist, returned to Herons as executive chef in 2014 and has never failed to deliver a memorable meal when I’ve eaten there,” wrote The N&O’s then-restaurant critic Greg Cox.
“But the last one was an experience that rose to the level of transcendent. I indulged in an eight-course tasting menu called The Art Tour, with each course inspired by a work of art on the premises of the Umstead Hotel.”
Herons is located at The Umstead Hotel and Spa in Cary. Photographed Dec. 18, 2009. JULI LEONARD jleonard@newsobserver.com
To contact Herons:
To learn more about Forbes’ five-star review of Herons, visit forbestravelguide.com.
Pittsboro’s Fearrington House Restaurant named 4-star restaurant
Forbes declared The Fearrington House Restaurant — described as a charming dining room just a few miles south of Chapel Hill in Pittsboro — a four-star eatery.
“Dinner lives up to the lovely surroundings. The upscale menu is American, with techniques borrowed from France and robust flavors taken from the surrounding region. The thoughtful, seasonal menu is complemented by a deep international wine list that features close to 500 selections with a focus on California varietals,” FTG wrote.
Fearrington House Inn & Restaurant in Pittsboro announced this week that its longtime chef Colin Bedford would depart, and that sous chef Paul Gagne had been tapped to lead the famous kitchen. Krystal Kast
Removed from the city and sitting adjacent to grassy meadows, the restaurant and luxury inn exude peace and quiet. You’ll hear crickets and the trickling fountains when walking to the restaurant’s doorway at dusk.
The gardens surrounding the old 1927 farmhouse are worthy of a pre-dinner stroll. Take a seat in one of the Adirondack chairs under the ancient oak trees to watch the Belted Galloway cows make their evening migration from one meadow to the other.
Ingredients often hail from nearby farms, including eggs from Lu’s Farm, cheeses from Looking Glass Creamery and micro greens from Duckwood Farms — reminding you of the rural setting of this fine-dining locale. Some ingredients, like the honey, come straight from the Fearrington property itself.
Head chef Paul Gagne told The N&O in 2022 he was drawn to Fearrington because he found the kitchen to be a rare blend of artistry and cutting-edge techniques, then seeing fine dining in a whole new way.
“Building the plate, sure that’s artistry. But I always saw the cooking side as science,” he said.
Fearrington House’s then-Executive Chef Colin Bedford, working in the kitchen with 9 other members of his staff in preparation for dinner. clowenst@newsobserver.com
To contact The Fearrington House Restaurant:
To learn more about Forbes’ four-star review of The Fearrington House, visit forbestravelguide.com.
Durham’s Fairview Dining Room among best restaurants in the world
Fairview Dining Room is located in the Washington Duke Inn & Golf Club, a premier hotel in Durham that Forbes says intertwines tradition with a high-end class.
“Executive chef Troy Stauffer’s menu is one that’s filled with New American cuisine done with subtle preparatory winks to the old South. Parties of all shapes will enjoy the seasonal dishes — and while a few of them will tap their feet to the nightly piano tunes, all will certainly leave with a smile,” FTG wrote.
Murray Healy photographed at Fairview Dining Room in 2014. COURTESY OF TORIANO FREDERICKS
Fairview has a more refined feel. Servers’ uniforms are clean, conversations are muted and window adornments are classic. But it’s not to be taken too seriously.
Many tables look directly onto the Duke University Golf Course.
At breakfast and lunch, the energy is quite bright. A lot of this is because the floor-to-ceiling windows overlook the greens.
At dinnertime, the mood is still easy, many thanks to the nightly piano tunes.
This global event aspires to bring together experts from diverse viewpoints to foster rational and collaborative conversations envisioned as a celebration of reasoned debate.”
— Chris Fronda, Co-Founder of Logictry & World Logic Day Austin
AUSTIN, TEXAS, UNITED STATES, January 21, 2024 /EINPresswire.com/ — The World Economic Forum (WEF) stands as a global platform where leaders convene to address pressing issues shaping our interconnected world. In recent years, discussions at the WEF have increasingly revolved around the transformative impact of artificial intelligence (AI) and logic in various domains, from technological innovation to global finance. These technologies have become integral components of policy discussions, influencing decision-making processes and strategic considerations. World Logic Day, in this context, emerges as a pivotal occasion that furthers these discussions. By acknowledging and celebrating the role of logic in shaping the discourse around AI and its applications, the day underscores the importance of informed and thoughtful deliberations. It serves as a reminder that, in the dynamic landscape of global affairs, logic-based approaches are fundamental in navigating the complexities of emerging technologies, ensuring ethical considerations, and driving positive…
Everyday on your work commute, you probably think to yourself “My state has the worst drivers ever,” and for some of you, that’s absolutely true. But some of you out there don’t have it nearly as bad as others do. ForbesAdvisor has released their stats on our country’s drivers.
The results are based on each state’s Number of Fatal Crashes Per 100,000 Drivers. Try not to be offended if your state makes the top 25 worst, we’re sure it’s definitely not your fault personally.
NEW CITY, N.Y., August 3, 2023 (Newswire.com)
– UnboundEd is thrilled to announce that UnboundEd President & CEO Lacey Robinson has been named to this year’s Forbes 50 Over 50 list featuring female leaders who are creating their greatest impact at 50 and beyond. The announcement follows the release of Robinson’s first book, Justice Seekers: Pursuing Equity in the Details of Teaching and Learning. Robinson has gained national recognition for her lifelong work helping teachers build a path to success for students from traditionally marginalized groups.
“I’m incredibly excited to be recognized among this distinguished group of women leaders driving meaningful change in the world,” Robinson said. “My belief in the power of education to transform the lives of students, their families, and their communities is what first led me to become a teacher, and ultimately what brought me to UnboundEd. At UnboundEd, we have a saying that ‘justice is in the details of teaching and learning.’ I am proud of the work our teams are doing to empower educators to provide the kind of instruction that allows students to unlock the bright futures they deserve.”
Additional Background Information:
Robinson has served as President & CEO of UnboundEd since 2019, building UnboundEd’s organizational health, sustainability, and future-driven vision for what teaching and learning can be. In 2022 she also oversaw the merger of UnboundEd, Pivot Learning, and CORE Learning under the UnboundEd banner — creating the largest K-12 educator development organization in the country with an explicit focus on improving teaching and learning for underserved students.
Robinson is a leading literacy, school leadership, and educational equity expert with over two decades of experience as a classroom teacher, principal, and staff development specialist. Her life’s work aims to help educators better serve all students by disrupting systemic inequities across school systems.
Robinson recently published her first book, Justice Seekers: Pursuing Equity in the Details of Teaching and Learning, an intuitive and exciting field guide for K-12 teachers, teachers-in-training, school administrators, and principals who aim to rectify the racial injustices today’s children face every day. Robinson wrote Justice Seekers as a love letter to educators, which also belongs in the hands of parents, community members and everyone who cares about educational equity.
En 2020 el empresario mexicano, Carlos Slim Helu, dejó de ser parte de la lista de las diez personas más ricas del mundo que año tras año publica la plataforma de información Forbes. Sin embargo, la nueva edición de la lista lo coloca en la posición número ocho con una fortuna estimada en $93,000 millones de dólares.
El empresario es el dueño de América Móvil la empresa de telecomunicación más grande de América Latina; además posee el 79% de Grupo Carso que opera, entre otras empresas, Sanborns, Condumex, Inbursa y Marca Claro.
Entre 2010 y 2013 Carlos Slim fue considerada la persona más rica del mundo, incluso por encima de Bill Gates, dueño de Microsoft.
En 2020 Slim Helu dejó de estar en la lista del top 10 para regresar este año a ella.
Según la publicación la fortuna del mexicano pasó de $52,100 a $93,000 millones de dólares entre 2020 y 2023.
Las otras personas más ricas del mundo
Este es el top 10 actualizado de las personas más ricas del mundo según Forbes:
Bernard Arnault con $211,000 millones de dólares.
Elon Musk con $180,000 millones de dólares.
Jeff bezos con $114,000 millones de dólares.
Larry Ellison con $107,000 millones de dólares.
Warren Buffet con $106,000 millones de dólares.
Bill Gates con $104,000 millones de dólares.
Michael Bloomberg con $94,500 millones de dólares.
The dangers of AI, the worst time to buy a car in decades, and the next Elizabeth Holmes?
NYU’s Gary Marcus tells “Nightcap’s” Jon Sarlin why he signed an open letter calling for a six-month pause on AI development. Plus, CNN’s Peter Valdes-Dapena explains why car prices may never go back to where they were pre-Covid. And Forbes’ Alexandra Levine details the arrest of Charlie Javice, the 31-year-old fintech founder who sold her company to JPMorgan and now stands accused of fraud. To get the day’s business headlines sent directly to your inbox, sign up for the Nightcap newsletter.
Destiny 2 has gotten a bunch of hotfixes since the Lightfall expansion launched several weeks ago, but none like yesterday’s update. A fix not mentioned in the patch notes secretly changed the game’s newest Warlock armband armor to make it look less like a vagina.
Bond of Detestation is a class item that drops from Destiny 2‘s new Root of Nightmares raid that went live on March 10 and focuses on Nezarec, an old disciple of the game’s arch antagonist, The Witness. Up until Thursday it could have been mistaken for an alien fleshlight, mostly because of a small horizontal slit across the front of it.
It sort of looks like an eyeball, maybe, not really. Its resemblance to a vulva was especially noticeable when certain shaders were applied. Players suggested all sorts of names for it–Witnussy, Nezussy, Nezzylight–but “Bondussy” was the one that stuck.
Save on smartphones, TVs, appliances, and more The spring Discover Samsung Event has sprung, and that means it’s a great time to save on Samsung Galaxy smartphones, 4K and 8K TVs, monitors, soundbars, home appliances, and more.
As first reported by Forbes’ Paul Tassi, Bungie has now stepped in to take the horny down a notch. This week’s hotfix addressed a number of bugs. The biggest change from the patch notes was a fix for the infamous Thresher gunships that had been murdering players throughout the solar system. Completely unmentioned was the fact that the hotfix also removed the Bondussy’s slit to make it look much less suggestive. It’s sort of now just a giant space pearl.
Stealth content changes and visual adjustments like this are rare, in part because the Destiny 2 community is hyper sensitive to every little shift in its sci-fi universe. Bungie removed a piece of armor back in 2017 because it had an alt-right symbol on it with Nazi origins. Bondussy wasn’t hate speech, though it clearly must have run afoul of Bungie’s broader artistic intentions for the raid armor. Or maybe the studio just didn’t like the nickname “Bondussy.”
10 years ago, The Last of Us’ unexpected and morally divisive ending made history. Choosing to land in a place of uncertainty, the conclusion bucked what many other games chose to do, and often still do: present a straightforward, neat, conventionally satisfying end where the good guys are the good guys and the bad guys have been vanquished. Lines between protagonist and antagonist blur over the course of its 15-hour campaign, and the ending refuses to give us a neat takeaway, to sharpen the focal point on a clear statement or outcome, but instead has its main character arguably doom the world and then lie about it. When I first reached that ending 10 years ago, it left me pacing anxiously back and forth, desperate for someone to talk to about its startling ambiguities and contradictions, and I was hardly the only one. To this day, it remains perhaps the most provocative, talked-about, hotly debated ending in game history.
It should go without saying, but this piece will dive into some spoilery territory, covering the conclusion of the original game and the premise of its sequel.
The Last of Us first arrived on the PlayStation 3 in 2013 as a gritty trial of perseverance in a doomed world, albeit one where perhaps there’s a sliver of hope on the horizon: Maybe Ellie’s immunity can be used to create a cure for a world-ending plague. The game was notable for many things: the traumatic deaths of various characters; a slow grind of gameplay focused on stealth, desperate crafting, and brutal violence; but perhaps most of all for its strikingly ambiguous and challenging ending. Rather than doing the obvious and wrapping everything up with a neat bow, the conclusion throws the player headfirst into a liminal space. The world isn’t restored, yet the heroes live; but at what cost? Told that Ellie will be killed in pursuit of the possible vaccine, Joel intervenes, stopping the surgery and killing everyone who stands in his way, leaving the world to persist in its state of ruin. He then lies to her about what he did with an unconvincing tale. Ellie, clearly in a place of uncertainty about what she’s hearing, presses him to assure her that everything he just said is true. “I swear,” Joel lies. Roll credits.
It’s not a clean resolution. In the last 10 years, the choice to end the game with one character lying to another has left many to arrive at cynical conclusions about Joel as a character or the game’s narrative entirely, with some critics feeling that The Last of Us is ultimately a vacuous display of gore or a tale without much of redeeming value to say.
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A conventional story unconventionally told
For all that The Last of Us did differently, however, observations at the time highlighted just how much the game shared in common with others. Reviewing the game for Polygon at the time, Philip Kollar noted that it was built on “the same post-apocalyptic scenario as dozens of other games.” Kollar adds, however, that “its approach is starkly its own.” That’s likely why the conclusion hits so hard. So much feels similar to what we know from other games, or even works in other mediums. But TLoU took a different approach, one intimately focused on its central relationship, with a fairly conventional, linear narrative structure that might’ve given the impression that it would also resolve itself in a conventional way.
Narrative choice in 2013 was something many came to value in video games, but as Adam Sessler noted in his review of the game, TLoU has a specific story to tell, without your input save for a few moments of choice over just how brutal you can be in the game’s ending. A lack of choice was something Sessler characterized, at the time, as “old-fashioned.” (Indeed, much conversation at the time of release was rooted in how uncomfortable some players were with Joel killing certain characters he arguably didn’t need to kill, the tension between the player wanting to do one thing and the character demanding to do something else. Whether this is a flaw or part of the game’s power is just one more fascinating thing to consider.) And perhaps that “old-fashioned” approach was what led many to expect a more traditional conclusion. There’s a lot that is conventional and old-fashioned in TLoU, but its approach betrays a reliable trust you would ordinarily place in such a rigidly constructed narrative.
Screenshot: Sony / Kotaku
That “approach” Kollar highlighted is felt, perhaps, most saliently at the game’s conclusion, which is especially where it mostly clearly pulls away from “the same post-apocalyptic scenario” as other games. Examples of more conventional endings in this genre would include those in games like Gears of War 3 or the Resistance series of shooters on PlayStation 3, both of which end with near deus-ex-machina solutions to the world’s problems.
In other games with similar high stakes and fallen world scenarios, there is often some gift of sci-fi mumbo jumbo utilized, often right at the end, to set everything right; and if not, like in the more recent zombie drama Days Gone, there’s virtually zero ambiguity as to who did the right thing. iIf the good guys don’t get their way, it’s an unfortunate act of god, but you still have the good guy protagonist to still place your trust in.
The Last of Us wasn’t having any of that. And it also wasn’t concerned with “several plot twists and the bending of all the laws of physics,” as Paul Tassi noted for Forbesin comparison to the conclusion of 2013’s BioShock Infinite. Tassi continues, “the ending of The Last of Us isn’t quite so mind-boggling.” It’s a sad ending to a sad game, one that takes place at a decidedly human scale, not a grand cosmic one.
The ending of The Last of Us didn’t wish to dazzle you with its impressive world-building or wow you with clever fantasy epidemiology. You don’t get the “lore dive” that many games attempt to do, and you don’t get a clear indication that the right things were done. Rather, the game says the opposite. The world isn’t saved, and the good guys were stopped not by the antagonist, but by you, the “protagonist.”
As Tassi notes, that’s not necessarily a surprise revelation at the end. It’s not a sudden plot twist. But, rather, it’s the end point of a game that’s slowly telling you that you’re potentially on the wrong side, and that’s somewhat unexpected, even for games that do flip the script on you at the end by revealing the protagonist’s desires to be suspect. To its depressing end, TLoU’s grind challenges you to think about who you’ve been the whole time. “Just because you’re playing as someone in a game,” Tassi writes, “that doesn’t make you the good guy. In fact, the clues are scattered all over [The Last of Us] that you’re really not a good guy at all.”
Returning to Kollar’s analysis of the game, the sentiment that you’re the bad guy all along was and still is a popular one; and the ending doesn’t change that, it just reinforces it. “By the end,” Kollar writes, “I was pausing because I felt like a bad person doing bad things. It’s a seemingly intentional choice, but the game struggles to justify it with the same ease that Joel justifies murder […] I couldn’t find any deeper meaning in the horrible events in The Last of Us.”
But where others have since criticized Joel, or even the game, for the brutality on display, others have taken different stances. For Kotaku, writer Tina Amini expressed as much when it comes to putting yourself in the shoes of a person who stands to lose the closest thing you have to family in a world that’s already taken it from you:
“Had Ellie been my daughter, or someone who had grown to become my daughter figure, I would never sacrifice her life even to save the lives of millions of others. Sorry, guys. Nothing comes in the way of family.”
Many might be quick to regard that as selfish. But as Amini discussed, there are some critical details in the conclusion that shouldn’t just be swept aside because Joel perhaps acted too swiftly and suddenly. Amini writes:
Let’s recap. The Fireflies hit Joel over the head while he attempts to save Ellie’s life. Then, he wakes up in a hospital and is told that no, you can’t see Ellie and sorry, she’s going to die whether you like that or not. No discussions. No questions. Just shut up and take it. After you went above and beyond the deal you made with Marlene, after you almost get yourself killed spending a year tracking these bastards down, and after they still don’t give you the supply of guns promised in exchange for Ellie’s delivery, the least they could have done was offer the courtesy of a conversation. With Ellie present in the room, prepared to make her own decision. That seems like the fair thing to do. But it’s nowhere near what happened.
With a lack of clear certainty as to what could happen with Ellie’s surgery, and a rapid dissolution of traditional ways of wrapping up a narrative, like Amini, I too looked at the end of TLoU and asked, “what if this were my daughter?” Or in my case, “what if this were me?”
Screenshot: Sony / Kotaku
The sentiment of “no discussions. No questions. Just shut up and take it,” reminds me of my own experience having been hospitalized under a misdiagnosis at roughly the same age that Ellie was in the first game. Forcibly given drugs by people who claimed they knew what they were doing by swiftly locking me up in a series of white halls and keeping me sedated, without conversation or concern for my consent to such a thing, I remember the terror of sitting with the thought that maybe I’d never see home again. And unlike Joel, though I wouldn’t have wanted them to massacre a hospital of people (we’re also not living in a zombie apocalypse), those close to me chose to just let it happen. It would take a week before the doctors realized “whoops, you don’t have what we thought you had, sorry for the childhood trauma, but good on you all for listening to the experts.”
The morally ambiguous nature of The Last of Us’ ending meant that when Marlene tried to assure Joel that everything would be fine, I was free to not buy it—because I remember what it’s like when people in charge of your autonomy and life take bold, restrictive actions and others just stand by and accept it. Joel’s aggression, in many ways, was my own catharsis for how I was wronged in a hospital some 20-plus years ago.
A tough act to follow
But even for those who weren’t as cynical or pessimistic about TLoU’s ending or greater narrative, the impact of the ambiguous ending was so harrowing and had defied so much of what many had expected, that some felt it didn’t warrant a return trip by way of a sequel. Those who found displeasure in TLoU’s story could cease paying attention to it, but even for those who did enjoy where the game went, there was a clear desire for it not to go anywhere else. Lightning rarely strikes twice; and a sequel would be too conventional. Speaking to that very sentiment in 2013, former Kotaku writer Kirk Hamilton said:
I don’t feel like I need to return to this particular post-apocalyptic world. I don’t need to hear any more stories from it. I don’t need to see what Joel and Ellie get up to now that they’re safe at Joel’s brother’s wilderness retreat. I certainly don’t need to fight off another clicker, or make my way through another hunter camp.
Screenshot: Sony / Kotaku
Expressing a lack of desire for a sequel to TLoU wasn’t just about this singular game, but also stems from a paranoia over media, particularly video games, to franchise things to death. What even would a sequel do? Would it just be vignettes of fan service? I guess we’ll see Ellie learn to play guitar? Maybe Joel will finally get his coffee? Or would it just be more of an industrial desire to mine a popular property under the guise of “more stories,” efforts which typically diminish what magic remains of the initial game that caught everyone’s attention?
Those who loved the ending and the game certainly wouldn’t want that; this world deserved better. And those who were turned off by it definitely wouldn’t want that; they had had enough of this place. To perpetuate this story felt like it would cut against what made it so unique, as Hamilton wrote in 2013, there’s “too much resolution in video games these days, and [we] could do with a bit less surety.”
But The Last of Us marched on with an expanded story DLC that explores the death of Ellie’s childhood friend, and then a sequel with even more death. Part II meditates entirely on Joel’s actions, with justice (or baseless revenge, depending on your point of view) served for his reckless damnation of the world by the daughter of a man he killed years ago.
Part II is an incredibly long game. In fact, given that you play half the game as an entirely new character, it’s almost two games in one. Conversation about it upon release was also muddied by childish, aggressive reactions and harassment campaigns from those upset by the presence of queer people, trans people, and women whose bodies were deemed by some insufficiently feminine and desirable; it’s a firestorm that still burns to this day. Outside of conversations about the game with other critics, I often feel like I still need to wade through such nonsense.
Discussing whether or not TLoU Part II makes the most of its opportunity as a sequel to do something worthwhile with the ambiguity of the original’s ending would require a long conversation about a very long game. But I think the fact that the sequel uses Joel’s actions to set the stage for another exploration of how and when violence perpetuates itself makes the case for it as a worthy follow up—even if I, much like others, would’ve been more than happy with a one-and-done trip into this world.
Forbes just released its annual list of “The World’s 10 Highest-Paid Entertainers in 2002” — and they’re not all who you’d think.
Classic English rock band Genesis took the top spot, earning $230 million in a single year. Genesis, which released its first album in 1969, launched the careers of both Peter Gabriel and Phil Collins, releasing such hit songs as “Invisible Touch” and “That’s All.”
But those songs dropped way back in the 1980s, so how did Genesis make so much money last year? One word: Publishing.
According to Forbes, Genesis sold the rights to their music catalog to Concord Music Group in September for $300 million. The deal also included some of Phil Collins’ solo work, including his hit song “In The Air Tonight.”
Genesis weren’t the only greying rockers to kill it in 2022.
Sting was the second highest-paid entertainer. The former Police frontman and solo star of the 80s sold his entire songwriting catalog, including his work with the Police (“Every Breath You Take”) and his solo hits (“If You Love Somebody Set Them Free”), to Universal Music Group for $210 million.
Genesis and Sting were the latest benefactors of major music conglomerates and companies, like JP Morgan and BlackRock, investing in artists’ music catalogs, which they believe are undervalued in the age of streaming.
Not all the big earners last year were in their 70s. Other highly-paid entertainers include Taylor Swift (#9), who earned $92 million from her record sales, streaming, digital downloads, and licensing.
And that was last year.
“Crashing Ticketmaster with insane demand for her Midnights tour in November suggests an even bigger 2023 for her,” wrote Forbes.
Latin rapper Bad Bunny was the 10th highest-paid entertainer of 2022, earning $88 million, thanks to his two tours and endorsements from Corona, Cheetos, and Adidas.