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Solvang, California’s enchanting Danish town, goes full Christmas

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If you’re eager to mark the holidays this year with a Danish flair but Copenhagen seems a tad too far away, you might find the answer in Solvang. An answer that includes gnomes and a troll.

That city, founded in 1911 by Danish immigrants, celebrates its Julefest — the winter holidays — with an emphasis on visitor-friendly Old World traditions. This year’s schedule includes a series of events and activities from Nov. 28 through Jan. 4 — roaming carolers, European-style night markets, candlelight tours and shops transformed into micro winter wonderlands.

If you’re planning a winter road trip, here are some things to know.

The most quaint hotels in town are tiny, so book early

Solvang, about 130 miles northwest of Los Angeles, has about 20 hotels and most are smallish and independent. The largest is the Corque Hotel (122 rooms), which is affiliated with Marriott but owned by the Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians.

The most intimate and affordable hotels — often in a vintage motel sort of way — include the Atterdag Inn (8 rooms), New Haven Inn (10 rooms), Hamlet Inn (13 rooms), Mirabelle Inn (13 rooms), the Viking Inn (13 rooms) and the Winston (14 rooms).

The most luxurious is the Alisal Guest Ranch & Resort, whose 73 rooms and cottages routinely rent for $1,500 nightly or more (the property includes a lake and two golf courses).

A tree will rise, amid carols, craft markets and more

Solvang’s holiday celebrations include a tree lighting, like this one in 2023.

(SolvangUSA)

Tree lighting will happen at 5:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 5, in Solvang Park, followed by a Julefest Parade the next morning at 11 a.m.

Caroling is scheduled on several Saturdays, Nov. 29, Dec. 6, 13 and 20, from 5 to 8 p.m. in Solvang Park (weather permitting). Art and craft markets will materialize on Wednesdays, Dec. 3, 10 and 17, from 3 to 7 p.m.

There will be European-style markets to peruse.

There will be European-style markets to peruse.

(SolvangUSA)

Solvang Park will offer hourlong light and music shows nightly from 5 to 10 p.m. Nov. 28 through Jan. 4. There are also evening trolley rides through the San Ynez Valley and meet-and-greet opportunities with Santa (in Solvang Park) are set for noon to 4 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays, Nov. 29 and 30, then Dec. 6, 7, 13,14, 20 and 21.

On Dec. 31, attention shifts to Julefest’s Copenhagen Countdown in Solvang Park, ringing in the Danish new year at 3 p.m., Pacific Standard Time. This event, from 2 to 4 p.m., will feature live music from an ’80s tribute band known as the Molly Ringwald Project.

Gnomes and a troll are expected

The seasonal offerings also include candlelight tours (featuring LED candles and hosts in costume), Christmas light tours and daily hunting for nisser (gnomes) throughout downtown Solvang.

The troll — nicknamed Lulu Hyggelig — isn’t really a seasonal addition. It (or she, if you prefer) is a permanent resident of the city’s California Nature Art Museum, added in February. Lulu, made of recycled pallets and wine barrels, is one of many trolls created worldwide by Danish artist and recycling activist Thomas Dambo and his team of veteran builders and volunteers.

Christmas trees will burn — and that’s part of the celebration

Solvang's holiday Julefest season often ends with a Christmas tree burn. This one happened in 2023.

Solvang’s holiday Julefest season often ends with a Christmas tree burn. This one happened in 2023.

(Randy De La Pena/SolvangUSA)

The season ends with a Christmas tree burn, billed as a safety demonstration, supervised by the Santa Barbara County Fire Department and scheduled for 5 p.m. Friday, Jan. 9, weather permitting.



This story originally appeared on LA Times

Intel announces leadership overhaul, underscoring long road to recovery – Computerworld

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“Chandrasekaran is a proven leader from Micron, which ramped up multiple DRAM nodes at a rapid pace with solid performance in terms of yields and power,” Kundojjala said. “He has instituted capex discipline at Intel and is driving equipment reuse from node to node. We think, under Chandrasekaran, Intel Foundry will progress at a faster rate than they have been before in terms of node maturity, customer traction and ramp timings.”

It reflects an operations-driven approach to catch up with TSMC and Samsung, where reliability and delivery track record matter as much as process innovation, Rawat added. This also hints at Intel prioritizing credibility with hyperscalers and fabless customers that are wary of past delays.

Data center challenge

The data center and high-performance computing market is the biggest growth area for chipmakers, driven by AI demand and by hyperscalers seeking alternatives to Nvidia, AMD, Broadcom, and Marvell. Despite this potential, Intel has struggled to keep pace.



This story originally appeared on Computerworld

The USB-C Apple Pencil drops to a new all-time low

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It’s still back-to-school season and, regardless of whether you’ve picked up a textbook recently, that will always mean its time to pick up new supplies. Thankfully, there are some great deals currently running, including a new all-time low price for the USB-C Apple Pencil.

Right now, you can pick up the USB-C Apple Pencil for $50, down from $79. The 37 percent discount is available as part of Woot’s warehouse clean out and will run for six more days or until the accessory sells out. Notably, Woot states that it will deliver the new Pencils in non-retail packaging and that they don’t qualify for AppleCare.

Apple

Apple released its USB-C Pencil in 2023 as part of its switchover from Lightning ports. It’s compatible with iPad models including the Pro 11- and 13-inch (M4), Air 11- and 13-inch (M2), mini (A17 Pro and sixth-generation) and 10th-generation iPad. It works really well as a standard option for writing, navigating an iPad and other casual uses. However, it doesn’t offer some of the same perks as its more expensive counterparts, such as handling pressure sensitivity and magnetic charging.

Check out our coverage of the best Apple deals for more discounts, and follow @EngadgetDeals on X for the latest tech deals and buying advice.




This story originally appeared on Engadget

Top 10 Hair Transplant Clinics in Turkey (2025) – Hollywood Life

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Image Credit: Vera Clinic

Reports suggest that Turkey’s hair restoration industry treated a significant number of patients in 2024, with the majority coming from abroad. Leading clinics often highlight high graft survival rates, with some citing figures around one year post-procedure. Innovations such as Oxycure™ oxygen therapy, exosomeenhanced serums, and AIguided incision mapping have set new standards in recovery and precision. This guide highlights ten clinics that combine surgeonled protocols, transparent outcomes, and evidencebased care. 

Vera Clinic (Istanbul) 

Vera Clinic is often highlighted by international patients as one of the leading hair transplant providers in Turkey, introducing their innovations such as Sapphire FUE and Oxycure Therapy. Oxycure™ Therapy is a hyperbaric oxygen–based recovery protocol designed to support healing and improve graft survival following procedures. Its allinclusive package (€2,990) covers up to 5,000 grafts, luxury transfers, and surgeonled followups. Vera Clinic has treated a large number of international patients, who often cite its consistent clinical oversight as a key factor. Patients who adhere to postop guidelines qualify for a complimentary touchup within 1.5 years. 

Asmed (Dr. Koray Erdoğan/ Istanbul) 

Asmed is renowned for highdensity DHI and artistic hairline design under Dr. Erdoğan’s direct supervision. The clinic employs digital scalp mapping to support precise graft placement and help reduce transection rates. Pricing is €3 per graft, with typical sessions of 2,500–3,000 grafts. Independent audits have reported high levels of patient satisfaction along with relatively low revision rates.

HLC – Hairline Clinic (Ankara) 

HLC limits surgeries to one per surgeon per day and uses manual FUE extraction to help reduce transection rates. Sessions cost €3 per graft, averaging 2,000–3,500 grafts. Their telehealth check-ins are designed to encourage consistent adherence to recovery protocols. HLC is often chosen by Western European patients for its focus on natural-looking outcomes and discreet service.

Dr. Muttalip Keser Clinic (Istanbul) 

Dr. Keser personally performs each procedure with custom micro-punch tools, a technique intended to minimize donor trauma and support strong graft retention over time. Packages start at €8,750 for 2,500 grafts, with the clinic capping weekly cases to eight for maximal focus. Quarterly audits are published to maintain transparency. Clients praise the boutique setting’s personalized care.

Armamed (Dr. Erkan Demirsoy / Istanbul) 

Armamed operates on a surgeon-only model, combining motorized FUE with manual implantation to streamline procedures while supporting graft integrity. The €5,000 allinclusive package includes assessment, surgery, and followup. Internal records indicate a relatively low rate of revisions in 2024. Armamed’s conservative approach emphasizes safety and natural aesthetics. 

Transmed Clinic (Istanbul) 

Founded in 1994, Transmed combines FUE with PRP and mesotherapy, an approach intended to support graft survival and patient recovery. Their bilingual portal logs healing biomarkers via weekly photo uploads, helping to improve patient engagement. Grafts are priced at €3 each, and research partnerships enhance clinical credibility. Patient surveys reflect positive feedback on its comprehensive care. 

AHD Clinic (Dr. Hakan Doğanay / Antalya) 

AHD Clinic in Antalya offers LED photobiomodulation sessions, which are intended to support early follicle viability, and provides evening surgery slots to accommodate international travelers. A 3,000graft package costs €4,000, including accommodation and transfers. Digital follow-ups at days 7, 30, and 90 are designed to help monitor recovery and reduce the risk of complications. Its coastal setting supports a restful recovery. 

CapilClinic Turkey (Istanbul & Spain) 

CapilClinic’s M Pack (€2,490 for up to 1,500 grafts) includes lodging, transfers, and two years of teledermatology support. The clinic uses vitamin-infused saline and gender-specific sedation, approaches intended to support patients during the early shedding phase. A unified EHR system is designed to help reduce cross-border errors and improve continuity of care. Their digital aftercare guides drive an 87% adherence to postop regimens. 

Medicana International (Istanbul) 

Medicana’s hospitalbased unit offers €3 per graft transplants alongside full anesthesia and emergency backup. Comprehensive pre-op cardiac and endocrine screenings are intended to help lower perioperative risks. The facility’s interoperable medical records are designed to streamline multidisciplinary care and support strong adherence to safety protocols. This model suits medically complex patients. 

MCAN Health (Istanbul) 

MCAN Health’s allinclusive package starts at €2,290 for 2,000 grafts, covering VRguided scar education, 24/7 multilingual support, and a recovery app that is designed to support patient compliance.

Their digital scheduling portal is designed to help reduce no-show rates. The clinic’s logistical precision makes it a top choice for firsttime medical tourists.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not substitute for professional medical advice. If you are seeking medical advice, diagnosis or treatment, please consult a medical professional or healthcare provider. Prices and availability are accurate as of the time of publication and are subject to change without notice. Please check the retailer’s website for the most up-to-date pricing information.



This story originally appeared on Hollywoodlife

Flight attendant shares unspoken rules passengers should follow | Travel News | Travel

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When it comes to air travel, there’s a set of unspoken rules you’re expected to follow to  make everyone’s’ journey that bit easier.

But flight attendant Barbara ‘Barbie Bac’ Bacilieri, 29, says  not everyone sticks to them – and it not only makes her job more challenging, but it causes unnecessary issues at 30,000 feet.

The YouTube creator urged passengers to keep their so-called witty comments to themselves, with her sharing how a passenger jokingly granted her permission to “eat them” if the plane crashed, just like in Society of the Snow.

In the true story, which has been retold in a movie, an Uruguayan rugby team crashed in a remote part of the Andes and were forced to turn to cannibalism to survive.

When it comes to practicality, she urged passengers to keep their stilettos in the suitcase, saying they’re only going to hurt your feet when walking around the airport, and can cause issues in the event of an emergency on the aircraft.

She said: “I never wear heels… in an evacuation, you would have to take them off so you don’t damage the slide.”

She says passengers seem to have an urgency to make it onto the plane when boarding – but she stresses if you’re sat in the lounge waiting, there’s no need to stand and queue for your seat.

Barbara said: “Why queue to board if you’re going to have to stand around waiting for so long? I prefer to wait until the end for everyone to get on and then I go quietly.”

Speaking about ways to ‘keep clean’ during your flight, she says you should avoid walking into the bathrooms when there’s unknown spillages on the floor.

Not only this but she pointed out how, although the in-flight blankets get washed between flights, they’ve still be used by hundreds of passengers.

In general, she urges passengers to keep themselves to themselves, ask a flight attendant if they encounter any problems, dress appropriately for their journey, and try to keep a good, positive attitude while traveling.

It comes after a flight attendant shared the ‘code words’ cabin crew use to speak about passengers right in front of them.

Cabin crew member Jennie, known as @jeenie.weenie on social media, revealed the true meaning of plane staff’s secret language in the skies – including what words like ‘bob’ and ‘flip flop’ mean.

In her clip, she said: “When you hear flight attendants say Tom Cruise, we use this as a trick to remember where tea and coffee goes. Tom Cruise – T and C. Tea here and coffee here.”



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

A FTSE 100 portfolio of this size could make a £3k monthly second income

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Image source: Getty Images

The stock market has been used for many decades to generate a passive income for investors. From using dividend shares through to growth stocks with potential share price appreciation, a FTSE 100 portfolio can be built for an effective end goal. If the goal was to reach a £3k monthly income, here’s how it could happen.

Figuring out the strategy

Let’s begin with the numbers. £3k a month equates to £36k a year. Realistically, even with a high yield, the investor would need to have a portfolio size worth hundreds of thousands of pounds. Very few of us have this kind of money sitting around. But that doesn’t mean we have to discount the idea altogether. Rather, investing regularly over a period of time in smaller increments can be more effective.

For example, each month an investor could put £250 in dividend shares and a further £250 in growth shares. This could provide an average yield of 9% a year in the long run. This would roughly be split with an 8% dividend yield from income shares, with an estimated 11% compounding share price appreciation from the growth stocks. Of course, these are just projections. Share price gains or future dividends aren’t guaranteed at all, so the actual portfolio yield could be higher but could also be a lot lower than my assumption.

If an investor kept up this strategy successfully, by year 22, the portfolio would pass the £400k mark. From here, it could generate £3k a month. Granted, this requires a long-term vision to be viable, along with the investor likely being younger than 50, to fully enjoy the income in retirement.

The numbers can be tweaked. If an investor can put £400 a month in both income and growth shares, this could shorten the time needed down to 18 years.

Targeting high-yielders

One example of a stock that could be considered for inclusion is Aberdeen (LSE:ABDN). The wealth and investments provider has a dividend yield of 7.94%. The share price is up 26% over the last year.

The business has pivoted back to more fundamental operations recently, rebranding from abrdn back to the more familiar Aberdeen. This is part of a broader strategic repositioning to focus on growth and clarity. This is already translating into better financial performance, with the H1 results showing £137m worth of cost savings. The investing platform Interactive Investor saw record net inflows of customer money, with a 25% increase in profit versus the same period last year.

This helps to give confidence in the dividends, which can be backed by improving cash flow. If we see further cost savings and growth in assets under management, it should support an increase in the dividend per share in the coming years.

The wealth management space is becoming a larger market, which brings opportunities but also risks. More high-street banks are turning their focus to this area, so competition will increase for Aberdeen. Yet even with this, I feel the existing client base puts it in a good position for retention.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool

Woman goes on trial in New Zealand accused of murdering her children whose bodies were found in suitcases | World News

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A woman has gone on trial in New Zealand accused of murdering her two children and leaving their bodies in suitcases for years before they were discovered.

Hakyung Lee – who is representing herself in court – denies the murders of six-year-old boy Minu Jo and eight-year-old girl Yuna Jo in June 2018.

Their remains were found by a couple who bought the contents of an abandoned storage unit in Auckland in August 2022.

She was extradited from South Korea to face the charges.

Stand-by counsel Lorraine Smith, who is assisting Lee in her self-representation, told jurors the mother was driven to insanity after her husband died of cancer in 2017.

Lee, who is a New Zealand citizen, had travelled to South Korea and changed her name in 2018, shortly after the children were believed to have been killed.

She was born in South Korea and previously went by the name Ji Eun Lee.

Lee, who is in her 40s, was arrested in September 2022 in South Korea and extradited to New Zealand two months later.

A jury was chosen on Monday for Lee’s trial at the High Court in Auckland, which is expected to take four weeks.

Prosecutors have been outlining their case on Tuesday and said they would call 40 witnesses.

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Lee did not speak during the hearing on Monday and shook her head, rather than answering through an interpreter, when asked how she pleaded to the charges.

Not guilty pleas were entered by Justice Geoffrey Venning, who is presiding.

Lee had granted consent in writing to be extradited after a formal request from New Zealand to return her to face trial, South Korean officials said at the time.

South Korea’s Justice Ministry said it had provided New Zealand with unspecified “important evidence” in the case.



This story originally appeared on Skynews

Here’s what happens when private equity buys homes in your neighborhood : Planet Money : NPR

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Daniel Erb became a corporate landlord kind of by accident. It started in 2020, when he received his first bonus as an investment banker. It was more money than he was used to. He wanted to invest in real estate, so he called his cousin, a research analyst at BlackRock, for advice.

As they talked over options, his cousin showed him a striking chart of the number of “housing starts” in the U.S. since 1950 (basically the number of new houses and apartments built each year). It showed that the last 10 years had the fewest starts since the 1960s, even though the U.S. population was now much larger.

It was a full decade of underinvestment. They focused on single-family homes — the classic house with a yard, often in the suburbs.

“I’m a millennial,” says Erb. “I’ve always envisioned having a home.” But none of his friends had bought a house yet. Neither had he. Contemplating this lack of new houses and rising demand from millennials like him, he saw “a big opportunity … something that I was willing to spend my career on.”

So Erb and his cousin raised money from investors, bought homes in places like the Chatham-Arch neighborhood in Indianapolis (which was affordable, had a growing population and was benefiting from redevelopment), and rented them out — presumably to people who wanted a house with a yard but couldn’t afford to buy one. Erb says it was a profitable business.

He was not the first New York finance person to profit from single-family rentals across the United States. The private equity firm Blackstone (commonly confused with BlackRock) more or less invented this buy-to-rent strategy in 2012, under the moniker Invitation Homes. It’s now a public company valued at more than $18 billion.

The response to this development — of Wall Street buying Main Street, or at least some of its cul-de-sacs — has been bipartisan, populist and patriotic condemnation. Both JD Vance and Kamala Harris called for bans on these corporate landlords. Since houses tend to rise in value over time, homeownership has been a primary way that middle-class families build wealth. But now private equity was outbidding aspiring homeowners, making it more expensive to buy a home and pocketing the appreciation in home values.

Even some of Erb’s friends told him they thought he was making homes unaffordable. “Nothing that has stuck with me or made me second-guess what I’m doing,” he says. He wasn’t responsible for the decade of underinvestment; he felt they were giving young couples the option to live in a house without breaking their bank account. “But, yeah, very emotional conversations.”

Now that these institutional investors have been buying and renting out houses for more than a decade, researchers have had time to study their impact. And they’ve found a surprising nuance.

These investors can and do make homeownership harder to attain, just as their critics claim. But by providing rentals, they also make neighborhoods more affordable and more diverse. They are diversifying the suburbs.

The big bang of buy-to-rent

When institutional investors first started buying single-family homes, the U.S. government laid out the welcome mat.

Before the Great Recession, major investors hadn’t had much interest in the suburbs. In the early 2000s, a firm called Redbrick Partners tried buy-to-rent. It ultimately abandoned the effort. Unlike in an apartment building, its leadership noted, where corporate management is common, fixing faucets and other maintenance were much less efficient when dealing with geographically dispersed homes.

But during the Great Recession — just before the decline of new starts in Erb’s chart — the U.S. had a glut of single-family homes in foreclosure. Many were auctioned off en masse, including by the federal government, which organized auctions for investors like Blackstone and even provided a $1 billion loan guarantee to encourage Blackstone to buy.

This allowed private equity firms (which raise money from wealthy families, pension funds and other organizations to seek out profits, often by buying private companies) and real estate investors to efficiently and cheaply buy, say, a dozen similar homes located in the same Phoenix suburb.

This solved two big problems for these institutional investors. It reduced the “search costs” of finding suitable homes (often starter homes with three bedrooms), and it allowed them to buy similar homes clustered in one area (which ameliorated the dispersed-faucets problem).

Blackstone then introduced a financial product that supercharged the buy-to-rent sector: the rent-backed security. It was a bond, or IOU. Investors bought them, providing Blackstone with more money to buy and renovate homes. In exchange, investors were entitled to a cut of future rent payments.

Wall Street could now buy homes by paying with the rent they would collect in the future. Per the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, the number of homes owned by Blackstone and similar firms increased from almost nothing in 2010 to around 400,000 by 2021.

This is around when Erb and his cousin started buying homes. The batch auctions were long gone. But Erb says new technology allows companies like his to have a geographically dispersed portfolio of homes. The universality of listing platforms such as Redfin and Zillow keeps search costs down. Products like Ring cameras allow potential tenants to tour properties without being shown around by an agent. And software like Zoom has made it easier for them, like other executives, to manage a remote workforce.

In 2012, many government officials had welcomed firms like Blackstone into the housing market because they worried about abandoned houses and saw rental conversions as a win. Today, though, institutional investors compete with middle-class families for starter homes. Is that why homeownership has gotten more expensive?

The trade-off

As Kamala Harris and JD Vance were calling for bans on corporate landlords, Konhee Chang was a Ph.D. student in economics. Born in Korea, Chang had always rented while living in the U.S. but never the “quintessential house that I think of when I think about an American house,” with a front yard and a backyard. He wanted to know why there were so few rentals in the suburbs and who would live there if renting was an option.

Chang realized these investors’ buy-to-rent strategy provided an ideal case study of what happens when more rentals are available. If someone had built new homes to rent out, that would increase the supply of homes, changing the neighborhood. But since they converted homes into rentals, only one variable had changed, like in an experiment.

So Chang assembled and analyzed data on neighborhoods before and after corporate landlords showed up, including demographic data on the residents. His biggest finding? Institutional investors were reducing segregation. When private equity rented out homes, the new tenants tended to be lower income than the prior owners and more likely to be young and nonwhite.

“I think I was most surprised by the fact that the effect was so sharp and immediate,” says Chang, who has since earned his Ph.D. from UC Berkeley. He took it as a sign that these families really wanted to live in these areas but were prevented by the lack of rentals and their inability to get a mortgage.

This is particularly notable because one of the most important economics findings of the past decade is the impact on children’s development and career prospects of their hometown and neighborhood. (You can listen to a Planet Money episode on moving to opportunity here.) Suburban neighborhoods are not inherently better than rural or urban areas. But another study, for example, showed that single-family rentals in North Carolina served “as a pathway for access to high-performing public schools” for economically disadvantaged children.

These results did not turn Chang into a cheerleader for private equity. He’s too careful a scholar, and his results hold for rentals in general, regardless of whether the landlord is Invitation Homes or a couple down the street. Plus, he did not investigate other criticisms of corporate ownership.

(For example, a Bloomberg investigation in 2013 found that Magnetar Capital LLC became the largest landlord in Huber Heights, Ohio, and then pushed for lower assessments of its properties’ value. If it had succeeded, it would have been the largest property tax cut in county history, reducing the school district’s budget by $800,000 a year.)

Most of all, Chang found that the buy-to-rent strategy was hurting the middle class. Creating rentals aided lower-income families and nudged rents down. But reducing the supply of homes available for sale also pushed home prices up, hurting families on the cusp of homeownership.

Erb says he feels good about the rental service they provide. (In 2024, he and his cousin teamed up with a veteran real estate investor to co-found a larger investment firm, Strand Capital.) But he agrees this trade-off exists.

“There’s always gonna be a cost and a benefit,” he says. But the bigger problem for housing affordability, he adds, is that “we just haven’t built enough [homes] to keep up with the population growth and household formation.”

The boogeyman

“People get really riled up about this idea of private equity coming in and buying the block,” says Daryl Fairweather. “I think they are kind of the boogeyman though.”

That’s because institutional investors own a very small slice of single-family homes in the United States. As the chief economist at the real estate platform Redfin, Fairweather says investors purchase about 17% of homes. But most of those purchases are by mom-and-pop investors, not big firms like Blackstone. Institutional investors just don’t own enough homes to be the main culprit for high home prices.

  • The U.S. homeownership rate is around 65%.
  • As of December 2022, the five largest investors owned about 300,000 homes — just under 2% of single-family rental homes nationally.
  • Institutional investors own roughly 2% to 25% of single-family rentals in major markets.

In fact, Fairweather sees some societal benefits of institutional investors. Unlike with mom-and-pop landlords, it’s easier to regulate large corporate landlords and check whether they are, say, following the Fair Housing Act. Plus, in places like Silicon Valley, where politicians are trying to address housing crises by encouraging the development of duplexes and triplexes, profit-driven institutional investors are a potential boon, since they’re more likely to turn suburban homes into duplexes.

And in areas with more open land, like the suburbs near Denver, institutional investors are building new housing specifically to rent out. Think cookie-cutter homes, perhaps with a dog park or pool.

“I think that we should embrace investors who want to make those kinds of investments,” Fairweather says.

Still, she thinks middle-class families are right to worry about private equity displacing them from the housing market. She worries about fewer families achieving homeownership and gaining control over this intimate part of their lives, which has also been the dominant path to building wealth in America.

But a ban? As an economist, she hates bans. If politicians succeed in banning corporate landlords, perhaps by making it illegal to own more than 300 homes, she suspects we’d see lots of 300-home companies replacing Blackstone — without doing anything to increase homeownership among the middle class.

Instead, she advocates for policies that will incentivize and allow developers to build more housing. The trade-off caused by single-family rentals — that they benefit some low-income renters but hurt some aspiring homebuyers — is “because we are restricting the number of homes that can be built in neighborhoods.”

Many desirable neighborhoods are zoned so that it’s impossible to build the duplexes or apartment buildings that would make them accessible to low-income families. Many prosperous towns block the building of new single-family homes, often at the behest of current homeowners who don’t want to deal with construction or who want to restrict supply and boost their home’s value. The best way to stick it to Blackstone and private equity, to prevent Wall Street firms from profiting off the housing crisis, is to make it easier to build more homes.

As for Daniel Erb, even though he has spent his career responding to the dearth of suburban homes, betting on our collective underinvestment in American dream properties, he might appreciate that too. He says he doesn’t own a home, in part because he often travels to the towns where his company buys homes. And he says he’s not buying for himself at today’s prices.

Alex Mayyasi is the author of The Planet Money Book, due to be published in April 2026. Sign up here to get notified, when presales start, about special offers and presale gifts.



This story originally appeared on NPR

Divisive & Gory James Gunn Superhero Horror Movie Most People Have Forgotten Is Burning Bright on Streaming After 6 Years

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Before becoming the overlord of DC Studios (joint…joint overlord as we must remember it is not all about him) James Gunn brought his own twisted version of Superman to life as the producer of a superhero horror movie that probably didn’t hurt in getting him his current role within Warner Bros. That 2019 movie was Brightburn, and it has just soared back into the streaming charts, this time in the Peacock Top 10.

Dumbed down to the simple premise of “what if Superman was evil?” Gunn’s love of R-rated horror combined with the superhero genre he was by then well integrated with thanks to Guardians of the Galaxy, and created a movie that had a lot of potential but seemed to be buried by its own ambition and lack of execution for both critics and audiences. The plot of Brightburn is as follows:

“After a difficult struggle with fertility, Tori Breyer’s dreams of motherhood come true with the arrival of a mysterious baby boy. Brandon appears to be everything Tori and her husband, Kyle, ever wanted — bright, talented and curious about the world. But as Brandon nears puberty, powerful darkness manifests within him, and Tori becomes consumed by terrible doubts about her son. Once Brandon begins to act on his twisted urges, those closest to him find themselves in grave danger.”

Starring Elizabeth Banks and David Denman as the parents of Brandon, played by Jackson A. Dunn), with a script by Gunn’s brother Brian and cousin Mark, the film doesn’t hang around in setting up its story and bringing it to a conclusion in just over 90 minutes. While superhero movies have become large and bloated with heroes and villains and runtimes that need your bladder to be the real hero, Brightburn’s slim runtime and lack of character development let it down for many, who found the whole thing little more than a movie that played in a toybox of superheroes with the intention of just making it gory.

‘Brightburn’ Is James Gunn’s DC Dream on a Budget

Jackson A. Dunn in Brightburn with glowing red eyes looking straight ahead
Sony Pictures Releasing

While Brightburn became a hugely divisive movie, with Rotten Tomatoes critics giving it a 57% score, while audiences were almost just as conflicted with their 67% rating. While there was praise for Gunn’s use of his small $6 million budget (which was turned into a successful $33 million box office haul) and for his ability to subvert the superhero genre into something different, it was ultimately the missed opportunities that became the biggest gripe. As Clarisse Loughrey of The Independent put it:

“Despite its simplicity, Brightburn’s premise is filled with potential, but it struggles to find anything meaningful to say.”

That being said, Brightburn was still a success. It provided fans of Gunn’s early horror work to see his R-rated potential working in the superhero genre – which he had been unable to do while confined to Marvel Studios’ PG-13 Infinity Saga. The blood and gore of Brightburn is fully realized in practical effects, and the film deftly answers the question of what kind of chaos would ensue if Superman was evil. Just don’t watch it with the idea it spends as much time world-building as Gunn has done in his first DCU projects.

Since the release of Superman, Gunn’s first movie of the DCU has come under similar criticism from a certain group of fans, with some claiming that this summer’s blockbuster doesn’t scratch the surface of any kind of real depth and character development in favor of having multiple heroes, and bright, fractured storylines that all just happen to take place in the same part of Metropolis. Or to put it another way, pretty much like an old school comic book.



This story originally appeared on Movieweb

Batman Becomes a Trillionaire in Immortal Legend Series

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Bruce Wayne is famously one of the richest characters in pop culture, but now Batman‘s personal wealth is more extreme than ever before. The Dark Knight has achieved a new level of wealth, but it took a seismic reboot to make it happen.

In Immortal Legend Batman #1 – from Kyle Higgins, Mat Groom, Dan Mora, Erica D’Urso, Tamra Bonvillain​​​​​​​, Igor Monti​​​​​​​ and Becca Carey – DC confirms that Bruce Wayne is officially “a trillionaire.” While Batman is generally depicted as a billionaire in DC Comics, this makes him richer than any modern real-world person.

BATMAN IS A TRILLIONAIRE NOW

While Batman has always been comparable to Marvel’s Iron Man in terms of wealth, this makes him more like Black Panther – a character who rules an entire country and possesses total control over a unique natural resource. The change is possible because, in the reality of Immortal Legend Batman, humanity’s reach has expanded beyond Earth, with countless planets being mined for their resources.

Batman Will Need Trillions to Take on a Galaxy of Villains

Fighting Another Dimension and Fighting Threats on Other Planets, Batman Is More Ambitious Than Ever

batman with money in background

Immortal Legend Batman takes place in a new reality inspired by Japanese tokusatsu media. In this world, humanity has unlocked new technology powered by Dark Matter. Unfortunately, connecting to the Shadow Realm this energy comes from has invited the attention of extradimensional demons, leading to the emergence of the heroes Immortal Legend Batman, Robin and Nightwing.

In this reality, Batman has a near-magic Batsuit powered by the “binding energy” that connects the normal and shadow realms. He also has his own interstellar ship which he’s using to scour the galaxy for villainy, having seemingly abandoned his role on Earth. As ever, Bruce Wayne’s money is going into fighting crime wherever he finds it, but now his fortune has turned him into a galaxy-scale hero.

immortal legend batman summons his spaceship
immortal legend batman summons his spaceship

Batman’s Money Has Become a Major Issue for the Character

batman and robin holding bindles and trying to thumb a ride-1
batman and robin holding bindles and trying to thumb a ride-1

It’s interesting that DC is presenting this new version of Batman as a trillionaire, given that recent Batman’s comics stripped Bruce Wayne of his fortune, turning him into a millionaire after the events of Joker War. Given public controversy surrounding billionaires, fans speculated that this would be the new status quo for Batman. That’s the case for the recently launched Absolute Batman continu​​​ity, where Bruce is a working engineer and Joker is the character with unbelievable wealth.

While the mainstream Batman is now back to his regular status quo as a billionaire, it’s clear DC is experimenting with the degree to which enormous wealth is an essential part of the character. In the case of Absolute Batman, the Dark Knight is a kid from the Gotham streets who built his reputation with his own two hands. In Immortal Legend Batman, he’s a trillionaire who travels from planet to planet in a personal spaceship. Ultimately, these different versions of Batman show how elastic the property truly is, and why DC’s alt-universe stories are so popular with fans.

Immortal Legend Batman #1 is available now from DC Comics.

Batman Stands in Detective Comic Art by Jason Fabok

Created By

Bob Kane, Bill Finger

Alias

Bruce Wayne

Alliance

Justice League, Outsiders, Batman Family

Race

Human

Franchise

D.C.




This story originally appeared on Screenrant