Saturday, November 22, 2025

 
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Which ‘Bridgerton’ Couple Had the Best First Scene Together?

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Bridgerton‘s next season literally can’t arrive fast enough. Unfortunately, we’ve got a few more months to go until Season 4 drops, which is why we’re filling the Bridgerton-shaped hole in our hearts by reminiscing on seasons past. In fact, we’re winding it back all the way to where it all started, debating which couple has the best first scene together so far.

Simon (Regé-Jean Page) and Daphne’s (Phoebe Dynevor) Season 1 meeting is straight out of a rom-com. The newly-minted Diamond of the Season is hastily trying to escape a creepy suitor — one of many that try to get her attention at Lady Danbury’s ball in Episode 1 — and doesn’t notice Simon in her path. When they collide, the new-to-London Duke cockily assumes that Daphne is one of the marriage-minded debutantes who want him for his title, though she truly has no idea who he is. Daphne sticks it to him once Anthony (Jonathan Bailey), knowing Simon from school, arrives and introduces the two of them. You go, Daphne.




This story originally appeared on TV Insider

Microsoft Ignite 2024 — get the latest news and insights – Computerworld

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As Microsoft embraces AI, it says sayonara to the metaverse

Feb. 23, 2023: It wasn’t just Mark Zuckerberg who led the metaverse charge by changing Facebook’s name to Meta. Microsoft hyped it as well, notably when CEO Satya Nadella said, “I can’t overstate how much of a breakthrough this is,” in his keynote speech at Microsoft Ignite in 2021. Now, tech companies are much wiser, they tell us. It’s AI at heart of the coming transformation. The metaverse may be yesterday’s news, but it’s not yet dead.

Microsoft Ignite in the rear-view mirror: What we learned

Oct. 17, 2022: Microsoft treated its big Ignite event as more of a marketing presentation than a full-fledged conference, offering up a variety of announcements that affect Windows users, as well as large enterprises and their networks. (The show was a hybrid affair, with a small in-person option and online access for those unable to travel.)

Related  Microsoft coverage

Microsoft’s AI research VP joins OpenAI amid fight for top AI talent

Oct. 15, 2024: Microsoft’s former vice president of genAI research, Sebastien Bubeck, left the company to join OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT. Bubeck, a 10-year veteran at Microsoft, played a significant role in driving the company’s genAI strategy with a focus on designing more efficient small language models (SLMs) to rival OpenAI’s GPT systems.



This story originally appeared on Computerworld

MIT researchers and beauty brand Amorepacific made a wearable patch that analyzes skin aging

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Researchers at MIT have been working with the South Korean beauty company Amorepacific for the past few years to develop a wearable “electronic skin” platform that can provide real-time insights about skin aging and make personalized skincare recommendations, and it’s due to debut at CES 2026 as “Skinsight.” Skinsight, which was announced as one of the CES 2026 Innovation Award Honorees this week, is a Bluetooth-equipped sensor patch that sticks to the skin and works with a mobile app, tracking skin tightness, UV exposure, temperature and moisture.

An artist’s rendering of the Skinsight patch showing various sensors and a bluetooth module (Amorepacific)

Based on the readings, the AI-powered app will approximate how the different factors might contribute to or speed up skin aging, and suggest the products best suited for the job so the user can incorporate them into their skincare routine. The patch is designed to be breathable and withstand sweat so it can stay on for long periods of time. The team hasn’t yet shared on Skinsight’s availability and cost.



This story originally appeared on Engadget

COP30: Climate protest in Brazil’s city of Belem aims to hold governments’ feet to the fire | Science, Climate & Tech News

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Hot, humid, loud and proud: the climate protest in the city of Belem was the embodiment of the Amazonian rainforest that surrounds it.

Hawkers brought carts selling bananas, mangoes and coconuts – while demonstrators bore umbrellas, hats and fans to shelter from the scorching tropical sun.

After a week of dreary negotiations at the COP30 climate talks, the streets were alive with the drumming of maracatu music and dancing to local carimbo rhythms on Saturday.

It was a carnival atmosphere designed to elevate sober issues.

Image:
The climate protest in the city of Belem

Among those out on the streets were Kayapo people, an indigenous community living across the states of Para and Mato Grosso – the latter at the frontier of soy expansion in the Brazilian Amazon.

They are fighting local infrastructure projects like the new Ferrograo railway that will transport soy through their homeland.

The soy industry raises much-needed cash for Brazil’s economy – its second biggest export – but the kayapo say they do not get a slice of the benefit.

The climate protest
Image:
The climate protest

Read more:
Cop out: Is net zero dead?

COP30: Are climate summits saving the world – or just hot air?

Uti, a Kayapo community leader, said: “We do not accept the construction of the Ferrograo and some other projects.

“We Kayapo do not accept any of this being built on indigenous land.”

Many Brazilian indigenous and community groups here want legal recognition of the rights to their land – and on Friday, the Brazilian government agreed to designate two more territories to the Mundurucu people.

It’s a Brazilian lens on global issues – indigenous peoples are widely regarded as the best stewards of the land, but rarely rewarded for their efforts.

In fact, it is often a terrible opposite: grandmother Julia Chunil Catricura had been fighting to stay on Mapuche land in southern Chile, but disappeared earlier this year when she went out for a walk.

Lefimilla Catalina, also Mapuche, said she’s travelled two days to be here in Belem to raise the case of Julia, and to forge alliances with other groups.

The protest in the city of Belem
Image:
The protest in the city of Belem

“At least [COP30] makes it visible” to the world that people are “facing conflicts” on their land, she said.

She added: “COP offers a tiny space [for indigenous people], and we want to be more involved.

“We want to have more influence, and that’s why we believe we have to take ownership of these spaces, we can’t stay out of it.”

They are joined by climate protesters from around the world in an effort to hold governments’ feet to the fire.

Louise Hutchins, convener of Make Polluters Pay Coalition International, said: “We’re here to say to governments they need to make the oil and gas companies pay up for the climate destruction – they’ve made billions in profits every day for the last 50 years.”

After three years of COPs with no protests – the UAE, Egypt, and Azerbaijan do not look kindly on people taking to the streets – this year demonstrators have defined the look, the tone and the soundtrack of the COP30 climate talks – and Saturday was no different.

Whether that will translate into anything more ambitious to come out of COP30 remains to be seen, with another week of negotiations still to go.

For now, the protests in Belem reflect the chaos, the mess and the beauty of Brazil, the COP process, and the rest of the world beyond.



This story originally appeared on Skynews

Obituary of disability rights activist Alice Wong dead at 51 : NPR

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Alice Wong, a disabled activist, writer, editor, and community organizer based in San Francisco and the founder and director of the Disability Visibility Project, worked to amplify disabled culture and the voices of disabled people and dismantle ableist systems in the United States.

Allison Busch Photography/Disability Visibility Project


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Allison Busch Photography/Disability Visibility Project

Alice Wong, an author and activist who fought for disability rights and justice, has died. Wong was 51 years old.

The MacArthur “Genius” Award-winner died Friday of an infection at the University of California, San Francisco hospital, according to an email sent to NPR by friend and fellow activist Sandy Ho.

“Alice Wong was a hysterical friend, writer, activist and disability justice luminary whose influence was outsized,” wrote Ho. “Her media empire, the Disability Visibility Project, left an indelible mark on the cultural landscape of our country. The legacy of her work will carry on.”

Wong’s family said in a social media post Saturday that she will be remembered as “being a fierce luminary in disability justice, a brilliant writer, editor and community organizer.”

“As we mourn the incomprehensible loss of Alice, we share the words she gifted us with from her memoir, Year of the Tiger. ‘The real gift any person can give is a web of connective tissue. If we love fiercely, our ancestors live among and speak to us through these incandescent filaments glowing from the warmth of memories,'” her family wrote.

Wong was best known as the founder of the Disability Visibility Project (DVP). The group highlights disabled people and disability culture through storytelling projects, social media and other channels.

DVP launched in 2014 with an oral history project encouraging those with disabilities to share their stories in partnership with StoryCorps, a nonprofit that collects, preserves and shares the personal stories of everyday Americans. StoryCorps narratives are regularly broadcast on NPR.

From immigrant to community leader

Wong was born to immigrant parents from Hong Kong in Indianapolis, Ind. suburbs in 1974. She was diagnosed at birth with muscular dystrophy, a progressive neuromuscular disease that slowly weakened her muscles and doctors told her parents that she wouldn’t live to the age of 18.

“I struggled a lot as a child,” Wong said in a segment recorded earlier this year for NPR member station KQED. “I felt so alone and angry. I was mainstreamed in public schools and was usually the only disabled student in a classroom and or one of a handful of Asian American students.”

She continued, “I had to grow up very fast advocating for myself with adults such as teachers and doctors, even though I didn’t have the language for what I was experiencing.”

Despite her many challenges, Wong earned a bachelor’s degree from Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis followed by a master’s degree from the University of California, San Francisco. After graduating, she worked at her San Francisco alma mater as a staff research associate for more than a decade. Meanwhile, her career in disability advocacy flourished.

Following a series of medical emergencies in 2022, Wong began communicating through digital text-to-speech technology. In her 2022 memoir Year of the Tiger: An Activist’s Life, the author describes herself as a “disabled cyborg” – a person “tethered to equipment, technology and electricity to keep alive.”

In addition to raising the profile of disabled people, Wong strove to dismantle systemic ableism in the U.S. She wrote about her opposition to the ban on drinking straws and the need to enforce the wearing of masks in health care settings. A social media power-user, Wong co-founded #CripTheVote in 2016, a nonpartisan online movement facilitates discussions about disability issues between voters and politicians.

Taking advocacy further

Wong was a prolific writer who received acclaim for Year of the Tiger. NPR described the book as highlighting the author’s passion for “living an unapologetic, unabashed disabled life filled with science-fiction, good food, and cats.” Wong’s literary activities also encompassed editing several works on disability, and contributing a column to Teen Vogue.

“Alice is my comrade in political struggle. She’s my friend. She’s a foodie. She’s an artist,” said disability and social justice organizer Yomi Sachiko Young of Wong in a 2025 segment for KQED. “She’s a bit bougie, which I love.”

Wong also took her advocacy to the nation’s capital. She attended a White House reception for the 25th anniversary of the Americans With Disabilities Act in 2015 through a telepresence robot. She was the first person to visit the White House and a U.S. President – in this case, Barack Obama – via a robot “surrogate,” according to Popular Science. Wong served, at Obama’s behest, on the National Council on Disability from 2013 to 2015.

Speaking with her digital voice on KQED in Feb. 2025, Wong said she was “radically committed to a life of pleasure and joy.” She talked about her enjoyment of cooking for others, including twice-weekly lunches for her elderly parents, and caring for her cats, Bert and Ernie.

“Being able to use my privilege to pass on opportunities to other disabled people and support projects I believe in brings me so much joy,” Wong said. “We live in such bleak times and what keeps me going is living to the maximum without apology.”




This story originally appeared on NPR

50 Cent Shares Hilarious Video Of Friend’s Global Food Adventures

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Instagram/@50cent

The rapper and entrepreneur 50 Cent‘s comical video really got his fans laughing out loud. In this video, a friend, who is full of enthusiasm, describes in a silly way the ridiculous, delicious, and ostentatious 50 Cent’s impact as he goes around the world with his taste buds. The video does not only show the friend and the world through his imagination but also the friendship between the two as comical and friendly. The friend rather dramatically states that he has gone from Morocco to Tokyo when talking of the food he has tasted.

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The video transcript spots the humorous part amid the joke. A man can be heard saying, “So wherever I am in New York, I am already in the Grand Canyon, eating dinosaur Cheerios. And that is the reason why I love 50. He was the one who took me to Morocco, eating chicken strips made of raccoon.” It is a long list and it gets stranger and stranger with each of the places. He describes being ‘in Italy drinking mermaid sweat’ and ‘eating nachos of snails in the heart of Iraq.’ The upset has come of the highest place; ‘I was in heaven eating lemon pepper wings of angels.’ 50 Cent just commented below the video, “LOL, YO, THIS IS SOME FUNNY SHIT!”

The public’s reaction was fast and very positive. The majority of the crowd focused on the particular food combinations which were extremely wild and strange as the ones that were presented. A user commented: ‘In Italy drinking mermaid sweat is outrageously wrong,’ thus aptly portraying the very absurdity that made the video hilarious. Another user referred to a different part and said, ‘Nah son said eating bald eagle burritos lmaoooooo,’ thus emphasizing the spontaneity and unpredictability of the humor.

Besides the laughter, the depth of the friendship was also noticed by some observers. Someone commented on the loyalty that was shown, ‘Yayo will always be 50’s best buddy, he will never ever fail, no matter how long it takes, no matter how much trouble there is, he will always be there and supportive. Hardness is so rare nowadays, especially among celebrities.’ This sentiment conveys that the video not only allowed the viewers to laugh but also gave them a glimpse of a true and enduring personal bond.

The comedian’s acting was also commended. One person mentioned, ‘Yayo sounds just like that… aww man.. s/o to 50,’ meaning that the performance was genuine and was a true reflection of the friend’s character. Another person thought, ‘Yayo needs his podcast; he is a different breed.’ Thus, he was imagining that the individual’s characteristics would be able to hold the audience’s attention for a longer time. The feedback shows that the audience appreciated the humor that was not defined but rather a mixture of boasting and complete nonsense.

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The video has undeniably got the right audience by blending the very usual subjects of friendship with the totally absurd comedy. It also makes one think that 50 Cent will always be the one to engage the audience with content that is both personal and extremely entertaining. The post received such a warm response from the audience that it completely shifted the attention from business and music to pure fun. It also provided people with very light-hearted moments they were thankful for. The laughter the online community shared is a clear sign that a tale of friends that is absurd and ludicrous has a universal appeal. This success follows his recent Emmy victory declaration, and he also surprised fans by sharing Prince’s reaction to his work. Beyond entertainment, he continues to build his massive television empire and recently expanded his merchandise line with new G-Unit sweatsuits.




This story originally appeared on Celebrityinsider

Shakira Twins With Her Sons in High Slit Dress

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Shakira has always known how to command a red carpet. The “Zootopia 2” premiere witnessed the singer in a high slit dress, and fans couldn’t stop buzzing about it. Milan, 12, and Sasha, 10, also stepped onto the red carpet in color-coordinated outfits with their mom. The “Hips Don’t Lie” hitmaker has voiced the famous character Gazelle in the movie.

Shakira makes ‘Zootopia 2’ premiere a family affair in high slit dress

Shakira donned a high slit lavender dress with long sleeves and matching heels at the “Zootopia 2” premiere. The soft purple glow in the lighting made her look stunning. Her little gentlemen, on the other hand, wore matching lavender suits with white sneakers, making the entire scene look like a curated family fashion scene.

What makes the moment even more special is Shakira giving fans a sneak peek into her personal life. After a very public split from her former husband, Gerard Pique, the night out looks like a refreshing moment for the singer and her boys.



This story originally appeared on Realitytea

UK's PM Keir Starmer under pressure after budget rewrite

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On the eve of a visit to London by U.S. President Donald Trump, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer abruptly summoned Labour lawmakers to a meeting to try to reassert his authority over his increasingly fractious party. It was a rare acknowledgement that decisions taken by his Downing Street office had widened a rift with Labour members of parliament. Eight weeks later, those rifts have burst into the open after a briefing to selected media outlets by unnamed allies of Starmer who said the prime minister would fight any leadership challenge – although none had yet materialised. Analysis by FRANCE 24 international affairs editor Rochelle Ferguson Bouyahi.


This story originally appeared on France24

Indictment of ex-Newsom aide hints at feds’ probe into state investigation

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An indictment unveiled this week charging Gov. Gavin Newsom’s former chief of staff with political corruption threw California’s top political circles into chaos — and stirred speculation in the state capital about what triggered the federal investigation.

Authorities have not revealed any targets beyond Dana Williamson and two other influential political operatives associated with the state’s most powerful Democrats, all of whom are accused of fraud and siphoning campaign funds for personal use.

But details contained in the indictment and other public records indicate that the FBI and U.S. Department of Justice had a keen interest in Williamson and other operatives’ involvement in the handling of a legal case involving “Corporation 1.” The facts revealed about “Corporation 1” match details of a controversial sex discrimination investigation that the state of California led into one of the world’s largest video game companies, Santa-Monica based Activision Blizzard Inc.

Williamson — an influential deal-maker and one of the state’s premier Democratic political consultants before and after she ran Newsom’s office — was arrested on corruption charges Wednesday. Two longtime associates, lobbyist Greg Campbell, a former high-level staffer in the California Assembly, and Sean McCluskie, a longtime aide to former state Atty. Gen. and U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra, have agreed to plead guilty to related charges.

After Williamson pleaded not guilty in a tearful court appearance Wednesday, her attorney, McGregor Scott, said that federal authorities had charged his client only after first approaching her to seek help with a probe they were conducting into Newsom, the nature of which remains unclear. Williamson declined to cooperate.

The governor has not been accused of any wrongdoing. Still, Republicans already are using the indictments to attack Newsom, who has openly said he is considering a run for president in 2028.

Williamson’s attorney did not offer any specifics on what federal officials may have been investigating.

But numerous threads in the indictment echo details in the Activision saga.

Williamson and Campbell both worked as advisors to Activision Blizzard, according to financial disclosures on file with the state. Williamson reported receiving income from the company prior to her appointment in Newsom’s office, state records show. According to records first filed earlier this year, Campbell disclosed that his lobbying firm started being paid by Activision around the time Williamson joined the governor’s office. Activision reported paying $240,000 to his firm in 2023 and 2024. The amount Williamson was paid from Activision was not disclosed.

Activision officials did not respond to emails requesting comment. Lawyers for Williamson, Campbell and McCluskie also did not respond or declined to comment.

The state’s Department of Fair Employment and Housing in 2021 sued Activision Blizzard, which distributes video games such as “Call of Duty” and “Candy Crush,” alleging that company officials discriminated against women, paid them less than men and ignored reports of egregious sexual harassment.

The complaint alleges: The company “fostered a pervasive ‘frat boy’ workplace culture that continues to thrive. In the office, women are subjected to ‘cube crawls’ in which male employees drink copious amounts of alcohol as they ‘crawl’ their way through various cubicles in the office and often engage in inappropriate behavior toward female employees. Male employees proudly come into work hungover, play video games for long periods of time during work while delegating their responsibilities to female employees, engage in banter about their sexual encounters, talk openly about female bodies, and joke about rape.”

Activision officials denied the allegations.

The allegations also were investigated by the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Activision Blizzard agreed to a consent decree, approved in March 2022, with the agency that required the company to set up an $18-million fund for employees who experienced sexual harassment or discrimination, pregnancy discrimination or retaliation.

Just weeks later, the case drew national attention again when the lawyer overseeing the case for the state’s Department of Fair Employment and Housing, Janet Wipper, was fired by the Newsom administration, and her chief deputy resigned and alleged that she was doing so to protest alleged interference of Newsom’s office in the investigation.

“The Office of the Governor repeatedly demanded advance notice of litigation strategy and of next steps in the litigation,” the deputy, Melanie Proctor, wrote to her colleagues. “As we continued to win in state court, this interference increased, mimicking the interests of Activision’s counsel.”

A member of Activision’s board of directors contributed $40,200 to Newsom’s 2018 gubernatorial campaign, and an additional $100,000 to a committee opposing the 2021 recall campaign against Newsom — an effort that failed.

Newsom’s office denied it was meddling. “Claims of interference by our office are categorically false,” Erin Mellon, Newsom’s then-communications director, said at the time.

As case continued to grind through Los Angeles Superior Court, the company stepped up its lobbying presence in Sacramento, according to disclosures filed with the state. Documents show Activision began paying Campbell starting in late 2022 to lobby on its behalf.

Around this time, Newsom announced that he was hiring Williamson to be his chief of staff.

In December 2023 the state announced it had reached a settlement agreement with Activision for $54 million, with the bulk of the funds going to compensate women who had been underpaid. The company did not admit any wrongdoing.

The FBI has made inquires about the Activision settlement, though the focus of the inquiry is unclear. When reached last week, Calabasas attorney Alan Goldstein, who handled a sexual harassment suit against Activision, said he received call from an FBI agent looking to investigate California’s settlement — but that he couldn’t recall a “substantive conversation.”

Federal investigators were also looking at how Campbell, Williamson and another Sacramento political consultant, Alexis Podesta, conducted their affairs. In unveiling their charges this week, the U.S. Attorney’s office said the investigation began more than three years ago. All three consultants were members of the Sacramento-based Collaborative, a cooperative of top Democratic political operatives.

Podesta from 2017 to 2020 served as secretary of the California Business, Consumer Services and Housing Agency, which included the state’s Department of Fair Employment and Housing — the agency that launched the investigation of Activision in 2018.

Williamson received a federal subpoena for information about her handling of a government loan her business had received during the COVID-19 pandemic emergency, according to details in the indictment. The indictment accused Williamson of spending vast sums on luxury items — including a Gucci bag, Chanel earrings and a $150,000 Mexican birthday vacation and party, plus yacht rental and private jet travel — and then claimed them as business expenses on her taxes.

She and Campbell had also allegedly conspired with McCluskie to siphon money from Becerra’s dormant campaign account to pay McCuskie’s wife for a fake, “no-show” job working for Williamson. When Williamson went to work for Newsom, the indictment alleges, Podesta took over handling the pass through payments.

By June 2024, someone in the circle was cooperating with federal investigators and wearing a wire, recording Williamson’s private conversations, according to transcripts included in the indictment.

On Nov.14, 2024, according to the indictment, FBI agents interviewed Williamson, questioning her about the Becerra campaign funds and about the pandemic funds.

Investigators also asked her about her actions “while serving in public office to influence the litigation involving the State of California and a former client — Corporation 1,” according to the indictment. The indictment doesn’t identify Corporation 1, but details match the Activision litigation. The indictment notes that Corporation 1 was Williamson’s former client and that it was involved in settlement discussions over a lawsuit with the state in 2023. It also references a state lawyer who had been fired in connection with the litigation.

Williamson, according to the indictment, told the FBI she did not pass any inside information to Campbell or other associates outside the government. But based on their recorded conversations, the indictment said, investigators believed that was not true.

They alleged that in January 2023, shortly after Williamson started as Newsom’s chief of staff, she revealed to Podesta that she had “told a high level government attorney to … get [the case] settled.”

The indictment notes that Corporation 1 was not only Williamson’s former client, but also now Podesta’s current client.

In June 2024, Williamson complained to Podesta that someone had submitted a California Public Records Act request seeking information about meetings and communications between Newsom officials and the company, according to the indictment.

Proctor, the state attorney who resigned in 2022 and had alleged that the Newsom administration was meddling in the Activision case, posted on her Bluesky social media account in July that she had submitted a public records request on May 29, 2024. She also posted the response from Newsom’s office, showing a meeting in January 2024 in the governor’s office among Williamson, Podesta and Robert Kotick, the former chief executive of Activision.

In their June conversation, according to the indictment, Williamson told Podesta, “I just wanted to alert you to the PRAS that we’re starting to get,” the indictment stated. PRAs refer to public records requests.

“Yeah. Ugh. F— her. They really don’t know who they are messing with,” Podesta responded.

“They really don’t,” Williamson said.

Podesta, who is identified in the indictment as “Co-Conspirator 2,” was not charged. On Thursday she sent a message to numerous associates offering her take on the situation.

“While I cannot discuss the details of the ongoing investigation, I want to state plainly that I have always conducted myself — and my business — with integrity.” She also said that she continued to “cooperate fully with federal authorities.”

On Friday afternoon, McCluskie and Campbell appeared in federal court in Sacramento to be arraigned on conspiracy charges in back-to-back proceedings.

Both men had previously reached plea agreements with prosecutors and will be back in court to enter those pleas, McCluskie in late November and Campbell in early December.

Prosecutors did not seek detention for either man, but they were ordered to surrender their passports and avoid associating with other alleged co-conspirators.

In brief remarks to reporters, Campbell’s attorney, Todd Pickles, said that his client “takes full accountability for his actions” and would “in appropriate time further discuss the charges.” But, Pickles noted, those charges “do not include Mr. Campbell engaging in advocacy or lobbying on behalf of any client.”

Times staff writers Katie King and Melody Gutierrez contributed to this report.



This story originally appeared on LA Times

This FTSE 100 star is quietly beating the US titans — and I think it can continue

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Image source: Getty Images

US private equity firms have taken big hits in the last 12 months, but despite falling 15% on Thursday (13 November) shares in FTSE 100 firm 3i Group (LSE:III) are up. This isn’t an accident and I think it’s set to continue. 

The company has a unique business model that involves using its own balance sheet instead of outside capital. And the advantages of this are really showing up this year.

Private equity

Private equity usually involves raising capital from pension funds, insurers, or foundations. This is used to fund investments in companies with the aim of providing a return in 10-12 years.

The first five years is typically spent making investments and the second is spent exiting them and realising gains. But that’s creating a problem at the moment.

Five years ago, interest rates were close to zero due to the Covid-19 pandemic. That meant asset prices were unusually high and investment opportunities were hard to find.

As a result, Apollo Global Management, Blackstone, and KKR have warned that exits are taking longer than expected. And their stocks are down around 20% in the last 12 months as a result.

The 3i difference 

None of this is a problem for 3i. Investing its own capital, rather than raising cash from external sources means it can buy and sell on its own timeline.

In other words, it can sit tight when prices are high and it isn’t under pressure to realise a return when they’re low. That’s a huge advantage and it’s a permanent one.

3i’s most successful investment has been its stake in a European retailer called Action. It first invested in 2011, but the investment has still grown almost 300% in the last four years. 

If the firm operated in the usual way, it would have been hard to keep holding. But not having to return cash to external investors in a set timeframe means it doesn’t have to sell.

Risks and opportunities 

A consequence of 3i’s successful investment in Action is that the firm’s portfolio has become heavily concentrated. The retailer is around 76% of the FTSE 100 firm’s portfolio.

It’s also worth noting that 3i values Action at an EBITDA multiple of 18.5. That’s pretty high for a retailer and the company still trades at 125% of its book value.

The valuation is a risk for investors if the firm can’t find other attractive opportunities to expand its portfolio. But I think the concentration issue is easier to deal with.

3i might not have the most diversified portfolio but investors can achieve this themselves by buying other stocks. So I don’t see this as a major issue.

A UK stock market star

Apollo, Blackstone, and KKR have been terrific investments over the last five years and I expect them to do well in future. But even after this week’s decline, 3i has outperformed them all.

The firm’s unique structure means it can make investments on its own timetable, rather than being forced to buy and sell at the wrong times. And that’s a big long-term advantage.

All things considered, I think 3i is a rare example of a UK company outperforming its US counterparts. My view is that investors looking for quality stocks should take a serious look.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool