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Abilities, Origin, and Everything We Know

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The power system of Masashi Kishimoto’s Naruto world is a fascinating, if odd one, especially regarding its mysterious genetic gifts, known as Kekkei Genkai. While many are undeniably world-shaping canonical abilities like the Sharingan, Rinnegan, or Byakugan Eye, others have emerged due to anime episodes hastily introducing them. One classic example is Boruto Uzumaki’s Jougan Eye.

While this eye is popularly recognized as Boruto’s dōjutsu, namely, ocular jutsu bestowed by a Kekkei Genkai originally labeled by animator Chengxi Huang as the Jougan (written as Jōgan) or “Pure Eye”, its canon status is a bit more complicated. Regardless, the Jougan eye raises important questions for the Boruto fandom, not showing any signs of going away.

Is Boruto’s Jougan Eye Canon?

Boruto Uzumaki Jougan Eye

Easily the biggest burning question about Boruto’s Kekkei Genkai, predominantly in the Western fan base, is whether Masashi Kishimoto or Mikio Ikemoto have confirmed the Jougan as canon in the manga. With people observing the events of Boruto: Naruto Next Generations episodes #15 and #125, they were eager to close the case, but there’s no explicit confirmation yet.

Fans whipped up a frenzy about Kishimoto allegedly confirming the Jougan, citing vague interviews out of France, with them pointing to KONOHA EXPERIENCE in Paris in August 2024. At the event, there’s a full 17-minute video of the pair completing real-time illustrations of Naruto and Boruto while fielding questions. The Jougan doesn’t come up in the transcript.

While there are frequent paraphrased claims of a special eye alluded to by Kishimoto, even then, there doesn’t appear to be a discernible source backing this statement regarding the manga. Even then, however, with Urashiki Ōtsutsuki directly acknowledging it in a non-filler episode of the Boruto anime, it’s anime-canon, which is still a big deal.

Masashi Kishimoto confirmed in a 2014 appearance marking the release of The Last: Naruto the Movie, that he had intended to give each of Naruto and Hinata’s children Byakugan, responding, “I was thinking about doing it, but I forgot (laughs). Once I have three children… But then things would get complicated…” as reported by CinemaCafe.

Instances like Boruto: Naruto Next Generations chapter #44 and #57 show direct mentions of his power, after activating his Kāma, as a Byakugan. While this makes sense given his Hyuga heritage from Hinata, when in use, Boruto’s special eye doesn’t feature the characteristic engorged veins on either side, yet retains the white sclera, unlike the anime. It’s undeniably an inconsistency.

But yet, the latest installment, Boruto: Two Blue Vortex chapter #28, shows Boruto finally resigning himself to Momoshiki’s control. While his injured eye is obscured, as fans know from both episode #1 of the anime and chapter #1 of the manga, it’s noticeably still present. Chapter #29 will perhaps be the first proper glimpse of Boruto’s special eye in years.

What Are the Jougan Eye’s Powers?

Boruto wielding Sasuke's sword in the anime
Boruto wielding Sasuke’s sword in the anime

The Jougan is not yet fully explained, especially since it is never explicitly mentioned in the manga. However, it shares common elements with the Byakugan, namely, the ability to see chakra pathways, but to the point of being able to identify individual chakra signatures. It can even see between dimensions and may even have Time-Space jutsu capabilities.

The Jougan is identified by a noticeably black sclera in Boruto’s eye upon activation, alongside his iris and pupil turning especially bright shades of blue. Given it’s identified by name by an Ōtsutsuki (in the anime, for now) and is seen by Jougan as a “troublesome eye” given its ability to predict his movement, it’s an enormous sensory asset.

While this is handy in the anime, the main instances where a comparable eye appears in the manga are when Boruto’s Kāma activates. In chapter #9 of Boruto: Two Blue Vortex, Boruto’s Kāma resonates with Kawaki’s due to being in close proximity as they briefly clash, prompting Boruto to flee. This could be due to the eye’s ties to Momoshiki.

Everything We Know So Far About Boruto’s Special Eye

Boruto Uzumaki with special eye in Karma mode
Boruto Uzumaki with special eye in Karma mode

While there’s no explicit mention of the Jougan in Boruto: Two Blue Vortex or the Boruto: Naruto Next Generations manga, there’s also not enough convincing evidence debunking it appearing later. The eye’s abilities could be hand-waved as Byakugan but don’t bear the usual characteristics, and it being impervious to harm is another confounding element.

The eye surfaced at different times for the anime versus the manga, however. The anime showed a first non-flashforward instance in episode #15 well before the Momoshiki fight in episode #65, while the manga has shown him using it in select instances after Momoshiki inhabited his body. In Momoshiki’s view, Boruto has “strongly inherited the power of the Ōtsutsuki”.

“Beware. Those blue eyes shall eventually take everything from you.”

-Momoshiki Ōtsutsuki, Boruto: Naruto Next Generations chapter #10

In cases like Boruto: Naruto Next Generations chapter #43, however, these rare appearances of the eye are clearly the result of Momoshiki attempting to take over his body as Boruto’s Kāma activates. The villainous entity taunts Boruto, and the series frequently notes how his eyes are “bluer” than even his father’s.

This lack of clarity allows more enticing theories to take hold among the fandom. One even suggests alternate translations suggesting an exorcism technique for the Jougan eye, which would make a convincing case for a Kekkei Genkai-obsessed character like Orochimaru to return. But standing out from the Byakugan, Tenseigan, and Senrigan, the Jougan remains Boruto’s most mysterious eye.

But with Boruto: Two Blue Vortex’s release of chapter #29, there could be a new chance to explore Boruto’s special eye, and whether Ikemoto and Kishimoto expand on it. After all, Boruto is showing more proficiency with his Kāma’s chakra absorption; surely he’ll have a better understanding of his eye, Jougan or otherwise, with this devilish new Momoshiki deal.

Naruto (2002) TV Show Poster
Naruto (2002) TV Show Poster

First Episode Air Date

October 3, 2002

Cast

Junko Takeuchi, Maile Flanagan, Noriaki Sugiyama, Chie Nakamura, Kazuhiko Inoue, Nana Mizuki, Hideo Ishikawa, Yûko Sanpei


Boruto Two Blue Vortex Volume 1 Cover

Writer

Masashi Kishimoto

Writers

Masashi Kishimoto

Penciler(s)

Mikio Ikemoto

Inker(s)

Mikio Ikemoto

Colorist(s)

Mikio Ikemoto

Publisher(s)

Viz Media




This story originally appeared on Screenrant

Robert Plant shape-shifts, discovering his saving grace

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“I’m an old guy, right? I’m not old, but I’m old,” Robert Plant offers up, recollecting a charmed musical life that began in 1960s England in his early teens. “I remember the excitement that came off the radio waves when you knew that somebody was coming to town who you didn’t know much about. Maybe Creem magazine didn’t like you yet or whatever. The ‘unknown’ was coming. So you could create your own imagination of how it was gonna pan out.”

With the Saving Grace tour lineup and album of the same name (the LP credited to “Robert Plant with [singer] Suzi Dian”), Plant’s players are a relatively unknown crew of talent and depth. By dint of pandemic pauses and far-flung locales around the U.K.’s Cotswolds and on the Welsh Borders, the lineup managed to quietly ferment and realize some of that long-ago unknown magical mystery.

In a dozen songs on “Saving Grace,” ranging from “Gospel Plough” (a reworking of the traditional tune recorded by Bob Dylan as “Gospel Plow”) to “I Never Will Marry” (popularized by everyone from the Carter Family to Linda Ronstadt) to album opener “Chevrolet” — a version of Donovan’s “Hey Gyp (Dig the Slowness),” itself based on a song by Memphis Minnie and Kansas Joe McCoy — songs are lovingly researched, reimagined and dis- and re-assembled.

“I really like just the opportunity to make a difference for myself,” Plant says about the breadth of his creative endeavors. “I mean, it’s a pretty abstract thing. I used to put records out in the ‘80s on Atlantic and was really good friends with Ahmet Ertegun over the years. His prowess and his reputation were magnificent — a magnificent guy — just part of the warp and weft of all good music that came through there. I put out these particularly obscure-ish records,” the singer remembers, a smile in his voice. “I put one out called ‘Shaken and Stirred.’ Probably almost the end of my career. Everybody fled from me, going, ‘Why?!’

“I went up to his office to have a coffee, and Ahmet said, ‘Hey, hey, man, this record. There are no guitar solos,’” Plant recalls.

“I said, ‘well, the guitarist is playing exactly the same notes as Richie Hayward, the drummer. He’s just following the drum rhythm in the fiddle in between verses.’

“He said, ‘This is really fine, man. But why don’t you put the band back together?’

“I said ‘Ahmet, you know, don’t you? You know. You know.’ It was very all those days of, ‘oh my God, look at his hair. He’s got a mullet.’ All that stuff.”

Quietly, Plant says, “See, the thing is, I wasn’t too old at the end. You know, when John [Bonham] passed away, yeah, I wasn’t too old to, you know, to go the wrong way. I was still young enough to keep moving.

“And somehow, in a way, in the memory of he and I, when we were young, before and during Zeppelin, we were what we call in England, ‘Chancers.’ [opportunists]. So I thought, yeah, I’m carrying on. I’m going now. And I take a bit of him with me most places, really.

Plant with his band Saving Grace.

(Todd Oldham)

“Because, you know, the stack heels are long gone. So what was it going to do? I was going to just do what the hell I wanted to do,” Plant says. “And these people came along with me, and that’s what we’ve got. But you know [with ‘Saving Grace’] we’ve stepped over the margin. Now I’ve carried the bride across the threshold.”

Much of the album’s emotional tone is poignant, which makes the collection feel a part of an unending cycle of connection. Timeless but timely, pure and apt for this fraught and divisive time in history.

“Within us all, as this little group of people who come out from an unexpected corner, especially this time in my being … That feeling that you get, not when you look to the West,” Plant says, with a slight chuckle at his own lyrical reference, “but this one; we’ve found this thing together, and we go, ‘wow, this is great.’ So there’s a joy in the melancholia. Basically, it’s just choice of notation, the hanging on notes, which comes across much better when we play live.”

It’s supper time where Plant is phoning from his hotel room, and after a dinner down the road, he’s planning to attend a “general knowledge quiz.” He’s local and low key by design. In conversation the singer is thoughtful, humble and, to use his own lyrics, now he’s reached that age and stage where he “tried to do all those things the best I can.”

He found that residing in Austin, Texas, “I just felt a little bit too much on display. You can’t moan about success, because I don’t think many musicians could claim that they don’t like the fact that people like what they do,” Plant says. “I mean, it’s a conundrum, but it’s very nice.”

The return to his homeland was inspirational, especially the natural world. “I felt the hills and the mountains and the rivers sort of welcomed me back, and it was great. I wrote a song on the last album with the Sensational Space Shifters with the guys in the band. It’s called ‘Embrace Another Fall,’ and it probably really sums up my emotional baby cake. I’m still thrilled. I mean, the fall is upon us right now here, and it’s raining outside. It’s wonderful, damp, dreary, and the pubs are open.”

And the singer’s drink of choice at his local?

“Everything, always,” he quips.

As a child, Plant recalls trundling in his family’s car through interesting, evocative landscapes and, “Misty Mountains that actually were misty mountains,” he says, making another of his not-infrequent Zeppelin asides. “They were [misty] yesterday morning when I woke up on the Welsh coast in a little hotel, and there was a mist over the water, and about 2,000 Canadian Geese landed. That filled me with lyric.

“So when I came back [to the U.K.] and as chance would have it, teamed up with these guys slowly, the bells and the lights started flashing, and I thought, ‘This is too good now to share. This is mine, and this is ours, and let’s just keep it really tiny.’”

Banjo and string player Matt Worley was “Saving Grace’s” musical instigator, approaching Plant at a pub. He brought Dian in as a singer; she recruited husband Oli Jefferson on drums, with guitarist Tony Kelsey and cellist Barney Morse-Brown rounding out the lineup. Worley, despite his relative youth, proved an ideal collaborator for the 77-year-old singer.

The English folk scene grabbed hold of Worley at a young age, and when he approached the Zeppelin legend, he didn’t fanboy. “He was very conversant with the Incredible String Band, with Bert Jansch, with Sandy Denny. So I met somebody in the middle of all this who didn’t need to play in a pub band, playing songs by from the ‘70s or the ‘80s or the ‘90s,” says Plant. “Matt could do that, but he had this other deal. I was impressed because his enthusiasm was really good.”

Plus, Plant adds slyly, “he was mature and comical and had a great capacity for knowledge and alcohol.”

Plant with singer Suzi Dian.

Plant with singer Suzi Dian.

(Todd Oldham)

In “Saving Grace,” Plant is still learning the band’s unspoken musical language. “Even now, I’m kind of in the dark when Matt and Suzi look at each other and their index finger goes up or down, as if to say, ‘you take that part. You go over there with that vocal part there.’ I go, Wow.’”

Fortunately, Plant comes with tutoring from his partner on two albums, bluegrass-country singer/fiddler Alison Krauss. “Alison said to me, ‘Well, I really like the time we have, but do you think we should sing the same song together?’

“I said, ’What are you referring to?’”

“She said, ‘Well, how can we harmonize if you keep changing the melody?’

“I said, ‘Ah, that’s the thing about harmony singing, you lock in!’ And she looked at me, raised her eyebrows, and went, ‘yeah.’ So that was funny.”

Harmonizing for Plant, is “one of the most nerve-racking and evidentially vulnerable parts of anything that I’ve ever done,” he admits. “To take off into a project, not knowing, really, how clean the soul is of the person that you’re with. How you have to have flexibility and wait and be patient. For us with Suzi, I mean, she was a music teacher. She’s locked in stylistically, she can call on any interval in harmony, but for the way that we work at this, she just drops into it in perfectly the right place.” That’s clear on the band’s rendition of the “As I Roved Out,” a traditional folk song with dozens of disparate versions by the likes of the Clancy Brothers, Planxty and Fairport Convention, as well as the 1969 Moby Grape song “It’s a Beautiful Day Today,” Plant’s pure, gently powerful vocals working with Dian’s to create a lovely, gentle ray of positivity.

As for the throughline in songs born from different decades, genders, races and countries, Plant feels that everything lives alongside one another. “We’re all on board the same ship and because of Suzi’s voice, the texture, is beautiful. It’s a good complement and a good juxtaposition. That’s a great thing about these songs,” he says. “They rumble through time. We’re just putting a little bit of paint on some here and there, and maybe a little bit of echo and little bit of that sort of trippy stuff.” A relatively intimate theater tour of 25-plus dates in the U.S. and England suits Saving Grace perfectly, Plant seeing the lineup as having their “own little keys to the kingdom. We have a good time and no great ambition to go anywhere but this,” he says.

The singer returns to the matrimonial analogies to describe the myriad musicality and collabs of his storied solo career. “I think I’ve been on a very long honeymoon, really, since about 1999. I’ve been in great musical company, from Ali Farka Touré in the desert north of Timbuktu to having silly conversations with Buddy Guy at his club, going over here, doing that. And now I have this sort of pass,” he says. “It’s like a kind of global entry, but with a different possibility, considering that a lot of the time I’m not exactly bluffing it, but I’m trying my best to make this work.’”

“Saving Grace” works, and it’s been Plant’s own saving grace, as he notes, “I haven’t written anything original since I wrote one thing with T Bone [Burnett] on the [2021’s] “Raise the Roof.” Really, I think, the vastness of today and what we are looking at as far as the future for all of us is just so twisted in turmoil. I don’t think I have anywhere that I can actually land in song. I know what I write down. But what I write down doesn’t belong in a soundscape.”

Yet bringing his “Saving Grace” songs to life in a new light has been a boon in an era when the world citizen believes that once we “get through this thing, we have to sing on the other side of it. If that’s going to be at all possible.” Despite his obvious care, enthusiasm and potent, eloquent singing, Plant is aware of “the inevitability of my time coming round the corner,” but says, “I just like to think that I can keep rearranging songs and bringing them forward and having the joy of recording them.”



This story originally appeared on LA Times

5 Seconds of Summer, Olivia Dean Rule

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5 Seconds of Summer enjoys the hottest possible start on the ARIA Albums Chart as Everyone’s A Star! (Universal) debuts at No. 1 — and gifts the pop-rock band a chart record.

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With their latest chart crown, confirmed last Friday, Nov. 21, the Sydney four-piece becomes the first act in the history of the ARIA Charts to hit No. 1 with their first six studio albums.

That record dates back to 5 Seconds of Summer (in 2014), and includes Sounds Good Feels Good (2015), Youngblood (2018), Calm (2020) and 5SOS5 (2022). For the record, 5SOS’s live album, LiveSOS, cracked the top 10, peaking at No. 7 in 2014.

It’s the sixth homegrown title to lead the chart in 2025, including 5OS’s Calum Hood, whose solo effort Order Chaos Order led for one cycle in June.

5SOS returned to Australia last month for a brief promo trip, including a fan-led press conference in Melbourne and their induction to the Australian Walk of Fame in Sydney.

It’s an all-Australian 1-2 on the albums survey, as the 40th anniversary edition of Jimmy Barnes’ For The Working Class Man (Mushroom Music) digs in at No. 2. The Scotland-born Australian rock legend boasts more No. 1 albums in Australia than any other artist. A two-time ARIA Hall of Fame inductee, Barnes has 16 chart leaders as a solo act, and another six with Cold Chisel.

Thanks to 5SOS and Barnesy, as he’s affectionately known in these parts, Taylor Swift’s Life of a Showgirl (Republic/Universal) is finally bumped from the throne, down 1-3, ending six consecutive weeks at the top.

Soulful Sydney newcomer Don West opens his account at No. 25 with his debut album Give Me All Your Love, while Byron Bay punk rock quartet Mini Skirt starts at No. 36 with their sophomore effort, All That We Know (Orchard). It’s their first appearance on the chart.

The 2025 ARIA Awards were presented on Wednesday night in Sydney, but the impact is still being felt on the national charts.

Following her performance of “Man I Need” (Universal), rising English singer Olivia Dean scores her first No. 1 on the ARIA Singles Chart, as the song lifts 2-1. Dean followed up her ARIAs performance with an outdoor set at Fleet Steps, and she’ll be back next year for a tour proper.

After winning two ARIAs, Kevin Parker’s Tame Impala bites into the ARIA top 30 with “Dracula” (Columbia/Sony). It’s up 34-28, a new peak position, and is the only homegrown cut in the top 50.

You Am I was inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame, and had the final word on the evening with a two-song performance of “Heavy Heart” and “Berlin Chair,” both of which appear on The Dollop & The Wallop: The Best Of (Sony). The career retrospective is new at No. 15 on the ARIA Albums Chart.  

Finally, RÜFÜS DU SOL collected four nominations at the ARIAs and are currently on the road, in support of their fifth studio album, Inhale/Exhale (Rose Avenue Records/Warner). The tour is breathing new life into the album, lifting 47-39.



This story originally appeared on Billboard

Tynan Threatens Benson’s Job as Squad’s Captain

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What To Know

  • The fall finale of Law & Order: SVU Season 27 sees Captain Olivia Benson and Chief Tynan butting heads over a high-profile kidnapping case.
  • Tensions escalate between Benson and Tynan over handling of the case and squad supervision.
  • The chief’s job offer in 1PP comes up again.

[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for Law & Order: SVU Season 27 Episode 8 “Showdown.”]

Since the beginning of Law & Order: SVU Season 27, Captain Olivia Benson (Mariska Hargitay) has been dealing with Chief Kathryn Tynan (Noma Dumezweni), first wanting her to take on a position at 1PP overseeing special victims across the boroughs, then putting Detective Jake Griffin (Corey Cott) on the squad and orchestrating Sergeant Amanda Rollins’ (Kelli Giddish) return. So, where does the fall finale leave them?

The two women are at a police conference in Albany when the call about the case — a missing woman, Nikki, and her boyfriend Greg’s story is very suspicious — comes in. They’ve barely checked in, but Tynan has shared about her time as partners with Griffin’s dad. “You know how it is, when it just clicks,” she says. “I do,” Benson says, obviously referring to Stabler. Tynan shares that Griffin’s dad dreamed of him becoming a cop, so she appreciates Benson taking him under her wing, even though she didn’t have a choice. Benson acknowledges that she was hesitant but says that Griffin has potential.

It’s right after Benson returns to the city that Greg’s girlfriend shows up at the precinct … and it’s not Nikki. He keeps insisting that Nikki was taken, his other girlfriend had no idea about her, and an architect Greg briefly hired then fired says that Nikki told him about a stalker. Once they realize Nikki has a smart ring, they track it to Coney Island, then a report comes in of a sighting. Benson is the one to approach Nikki in a deli, and Nikki seems dazed, then collapses in Benson’s arms, visibly distraught.

Benson then gets on Tynan’s bad side when she refuses to leave Nikki in the hospital and let one of her detectives do the initial interview to be by her side for a press conference about the case. And then Benson’s not happy when she sees Tynan’s press conference, during which she repeats it’s an ongoing investigation and adds that they’re investigating all possibilities, including a “Gone Girl” scenario.

The squad’s investigation turns to the stalker Nikki had mentioned, Quentin, whom she’d been on one date with after meeting on an app and who had started to blow up her phone recently; she also thought she saw him outside Greg’s. Detective Terry Bruno (Kevin Kane) begins blaming himself for focusing on Greg, but Benson assures him she’s done the same thing. They do bring in Quentin, and the evidence (and lack of an alibi) seems to point in his direction. But then he claims that Nikki orchestrated her fake-kidnapping, even pointing to what Tynan said in the press conference. It gets worse when ADA Sonny Carisi (Peter Scanavino) gets in Griffin’s face for writing that Greg was their prime suspect in his report — Quentin’s lawyer will be all over that during cross when he’s on the stand.

And Carisi’s right. Dan Olin (Glenn Fleshler) first points out Nikki can’t ID her attacker, then the error rate of a partial print match, and pretty much tears Griffin apart when he’s testifying, specifically bringing up what Tynan said during the conference in response to the “Gone Girl” question. Benson insists that Carisi put her on the stand, that she can handle Olin, to defend her squad, and she does push back every time he tries to get the upper hand. But it’s not enough; the jury comes back deadlocked and the judge declares a mistrial. Carisi makes it clear he’s going to retry the case, and Quentin is remanded.

Back at the precinct, Griffin tries to hand in his transfer papers, but Benson refuses to accept them. “We all did our jobs. Obviously, this is not the outcome we wanted, but it’s not over, not by a long shot. Now, these cases are tough, but we will not stop until Nikki gets justice. Obviously, you’re disappointed, so am I, but I am proud of you,” she tells her squad. As she’s sending them home, however, Tynan walks in, to talk to her alone.

Tynan tells the captain that she held the conference because the police commissioner wanted her to conduct it and she understands chain of command, which Benson doesn’t. As Tynan sees it, Benson doesn’t understand what her job actually is. “My job is to help victims, end of story,” Benson argues. But according to Tynan, it’s to teach and oversee the detectives, so she doesn’t have to defend their shortcomings like she did on the stand. “My team is the best in the department,” Benson says. Tynan doesn’t seem so sure. In fact, “I’m starting to question your supervision.”

The chief once again brings up her offer to come to 1PP. “So you can keep an eye on me?” Benson asks. “So this unit can be led by a captain who understands how to supervise,” Tynan counters. (Ouch!) Benson once again stresses that she’s not interested, but Tynan says it’s not her decision to make. Still, Benson’s not going anywhere without a fight. “Chief, I’ve been here a very long time, and I’ve seen administrators like you come and go. I know how to do my job, and I would like very much for us to work together and do something good for this city, but you don’t need to tell me how to do my job. What you need to do is stay out of my way,” Benson warns. But Tynan gets the last word before she leaves: “That is not how this works.” Uh-oh.

What did you think of the fall finale and that Benson-Tynan confrontation? Let us know in the comments section below.

Law & Order: SVU, Thursdays, 9/8c, NBC




This story originally appeared on TV Insider

Singin’ the Agentic Windows blues – Computerworld

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Now, there’s a new twist. Microsoft’s been hinting at it for a while, but on Nov. 10, Pavan Davuluri, Microsoft’s president of Windows, tweeted: “Windows is evolving into an agentic OS, connecting devices, cloud, and AI to unlock intelligent productivity and secure work anywhere.”

What does that even mean? 

It means — as near as I can decipher — that with Microsoft’s Agent Workspace and Copilot Actions notes in this latest and greatest version of Windows 11 (OK, that may be an oxymoron, but bear with me), you’ll run AI agents in isolated, secure workspaces. These agents will have their own user accounts, Agent ID, which are separate from the primary user (you). Mind you, to work, these agents must have access to your account’s permissions via the Windows On-Device Registry (ODR) to manage your files, automate routine tasks, adjust settings, and work with your system tools. 



This story originally appeared on Computerworld

Three months of Audible is only $3 in this Black Friday deal

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Black Friday is a great time to take a look at what subscriptions you may be able to save on. From video streaming services to budgeting apps, many services will have some Black Friday promotion you may be able to take advantage of. One of the best we’re tracking is for Audible. You can sign up and get your first three months for just $3 in total, plus get a $20 Audible credit on top of that.

This breaks down to $1 per month for the first three months, which is a boon for audiobook fans. Just make sure to cancel before the 90 days are up, as the subscription will auto-renew at $15 per month. That’s not the worst deal in the world, given the vast number of titles available on the platform, but still.

Amazon

Just make sure to cancel before it auto-renews. 

$3 at Amazon

Audible has a diverse catalog that goes beyond audiobooks. It also hosts podcasts and Audible Originals. Subscribers get to choose one audiobook each month to keep in their collection for free, including best-sellers or new releases. Users also get unlimited access to the Plus Catalog, which houses thousands of audiobooks. Finally, active members get discounts on many audiobooks when looking to purchase.

Winter is coming and this is a good way to make sure you have plenty to listen to throughout the next three months. This deal does have a time limit. It expires on December 16.



This story originally appeared on Engadget

Hakeem Jeffries Rips Mike Johnson For Not Condemning Trump’s Call To Execute Democrats

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The language that Donald Trump used to describe six Democratic members of Congress as seditionists because they urged members of the military and the intelligence community to put the Constitution first and not obey illegal orders should never be normalized or accepted.

Speaker Mike Johnson initially said, “For a senator like Mark Kelly or any member of the House or Senate to behave in that kind of talk is to me so just beyond the pale.”

As the backlash got worse throughout the day, Johnson said Trump’s words were not the ones that he would use and suggested that Trump likes to use heated rhetoric.

None of what Johnson said condemned Trump.

Republicans have been trying to suggest that the comments of the six Democrats were somehow inflammatory because the Democrats had the nerve to remind members of the military that they work for the American people, not Donald Trump.

Mike Johnson self-identifies as a Christian, so it was telling that when Hakeem Jeffries spoke to reporters on Thursday, he brought one trait that most Christians are taught to embody.

Jeffries said to reporters:

It is extraordinary to me. We had patriotic members of the House and the Senate have their lives threatened by Donald Trump in the most unhinged, unacceptable, unconscionable, and un-American way, disgusting and dangerous what Donald Trump has said in accusing patriotic members of Congress and the Senate who served this country well of treason and suggesting they should be killed.

Story continues below.



This story originally appeared on Politicususa

Apple's F1 streaming partner is excited about the future and benefits for fans

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The CEO of Apple’s streaming partner and F1 owner Liberty Media says that Apple’s partnership is already energizing fans and reshaping how the sport reaches viewers.

Formula 1 on Apple TV

In a new CNBC interview, Liberty Media’s CEO, Derek Chang, sat down to talk about Apple’s role in the F1 broadcast ecosystem. Chang seemed excited to discuss Liberty Media’s nascent partnership with Apple.

“We have a great relationship with Apple,” Chang said enthusiastically. “As you know, they came out with “F1 The Movie” this summer, which did $650 million at the gate… I think it brought in new fans, and … continued the energy for existing fans.”

Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums


This story originally appeared on Appleinsider

Private credit sees rise in ‘Bad PIKs’ showing ‘cracks’ in the market

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The number of private credit deals that are changed after the initial deal is signed to include more risky terms for the lender is on the rise, according to Lincoln International, an investment bank advisory service that monitors that market. That’s a sign that there are potential “cracks” in the $3 trillion private credit market, according to Brian Garfield, Lincoln’s managing director and head of U.S. portfolio valuations.

Garfield told Fortune that the broader private credit market was healthy, and companies borrowing within it are largely growing their revenue and profits. But the number of companies taking on new debt featuring “payments-in-kind,” or PIKs, had increased.

A PIK typically involves allowing a borrower to forgo paying the usual interest payments on their debt in favor of adding that interest to the principal balance of the debt, which becomes due when the debt matures. PIKs usually use a higher interest rate to compensate the lender, who is taking the extra risk. Companies that take PIKs often do so because they are trying to conserve cash in the short-term.

PIKs aren’t always a negative thing, although they tend not to be used by companies with strong balance sheets. If a PIK is built into a deal from the start, then both sides know what to expect, and the lender will be compensated with a richer yield when the PIK matures. That might count as a “good PIK.”

The number of private credit deals featuring PIKs of any kind rose from 7% of deals in Q4 of 2021 to 10.6% in Q3 2025, Lincoln’s data shows. The company looked at 25,000 company valuations this year, using data from over 225 asset managers globally, including investors in venture capital, corporate debt, and private credit. Most of the deals included in the data are private equity-backed, Garfield said.

On top of that, the percentage of PIK deals that Lincoln regards as “bad PIKs” is also on the rise. Lincoln defines a bad PIK as when a PIK is added to a private credit loan after the original deal was signed off—implying that the borrower experienced some sort of negative surprise that added more risk (and consequently more potential reward) to the deal for the lender, requiring the deal to be adjusted.

In Q4 of 2021, only 36.7% of PIKs were bad, Garfield said. But in Q3 of 2025, that portion was 57.2%—meaning that a majority of PIKs in private credit deals reviewed by Lincoln are now “bad PIKs.”

“There’s cracks in the private markets,” Garfield said.

Brian Garfield of Lincoln International.

Courtesy of Lincoln International.

“There are observable cracks because you’re seeing the fact that there’s a lot more PIKS, and that just presents a crack in itself,” Garfield said.

However, because 68% of companies in Lincoln’s database grew their revenue over the preceding 12 months, and because 62% grew their adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization (or EBITDA), Garfield doesn’t think the cracks are a crisis. “We’re not really seeing that it’s breaching the foundation,” he said.

Cracks, but not yet a crisis

Asset managers are seeing the same thing.

“There has been a little bit of an increase in distressed borrowings or distressed loans on the part of private credit lenders,” Guy LeBas, chief fixed income strategist at Janney Capital Management, a wealth manager that advises on about $170 billion in client assets, told Fortune. “It doesn’t seem to be absolutely massive, and I think really the best defense that the private credit markets have for a little bit of an uptick in defaults into stress is the fact that they’re generating between 8% and 12% [interest] coupons. So, as a result, you’re paid pretty well, even if defaults rise somewhat.”

“There’s tons of ‘anecdata’ as well as handfuls of actual numeric data that all point towards deterioration of credit quality among private credit borrowers. Absolutely. There’s really no doubt about that,” LeBas continued. “It’s just that the compensation for that risk is so large that you can afford a material amount of deterioration before you’d see underperformance of private credit relative to a lot of public alternatives.”

Len Tannenbaum, founder of Tannenbaum Capital Group, a group of affiliated asset managers with $1 billion under management, told Fortune that he thought Lincoln’s estimate of PIK prevalence was low. “I think 10% probably is a low number. I don’t have the data to support it, but I’m sure that I’ve heard 12% to 15% is the number,” he said.

Tannenbaum also said he was worried about the widening of private credit spreads over Treasuries—the extra premium in interest yield that investors demand above the risk-free government bond rate—and the amount of leverage that some investors had placed on top of that.

“I think you’re gonna see more leverage in this system than people understand,” he said.



This story originally appeared on Fortune

Inside Luxury Spirits & Fine Wines

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The French have a term for fine dining: l’art de la table. Highly trained, passionate artisans and craftspeople produce the premium wine, spirits, and tableware that make dining something special. In this article, you’ll discover some of the elements that can elevate your next noteworthy dinner party.

Why Louis XIII Cognac Is the Ultimate Luxury at the Dinner Table

Since 1874, Rémy Martin’s Louis XIII Cognac has marked the close of major celebratory dinners hosted by nobility, politicians, celebrities, and connoisseurs. This precious eaux-de-vie—made from grapes in the Grande Champagne region—ages for decades in 100–150-year-old French oak casks before it is bottled in its iconic crystal decanter. Each decanter is handcrafted from Baccarat crystal, inspired by a 16th-century flask.

Louis XIII Art de la Table Limoges porcelain plate held in warm cellar lighting.
Louis XIII Art de la Table Porcelain Plate

Louis XIII “Art de la Table” Porcelain: Inside the Limited-Edition Limoges Collection

Art de la Table is the name of the Louis XIII Cognac collection of Limoges porcelain tableware. There are two collections—Soil is Our Soul and Light of Time—each available as a six-piece set. Produced by 40 porcelain artisans at the House of J.L. Coquet in Limoges, a city long renowned for its porcelain, the pieces are individually numbered, with only 750 sets available.

Fun fact: a Louis XIII tierçon holds exactly 750 liters of liquid.

“The Art de la Table collections mark an exciting new chapter in LOUIS XIII Cognac’s own art de vivre,” explains Anne-Laure Pressat, Executive Director of Louis XIII, “and are an invitation to discover or rediscover LOUIS XIII Cognac through a new elevated experience that takes one through the enjoyment of dining.”

Decoding Bordeaux: Beyond the Grand Crus Classifications

The history and legacy of Bordeaux’s wine classifications continue to be a powerful marketing tool for châteaux across the region. One woman—the third in her family to lead the legendary Saint-Émilion estate Château Angélus—decided it was time for change. 

A Grand Cru Does Not Equal Grand Cru Classé

The 1855 Bordeaux classification, ranking châteaux from first to fifth growth, was created for Emperor Napoleon III’s Exposition Universelle. Remarkably, that system still defines quality perceptions of Bordeaux wines today.

Saint-Émilion introduced its own classification in 1955:

  • Premiers Grands Crus Classés (PGCC): divided into the top-tier “A” and secondary “B.”
  • Grands Crus Classés (GCC): a separate, lower tier.

All producers in the Saint-Émilion region—around 600 châteaux—can label their wines Grand Cru. These wines are not automatically part of the higher-ranking Grands Crus Classés or Premiers Grands Crus Classés categories.

A Legacy Winery that Walked Away from the Rules.

Château Angélus 2015 Premier Grand Cru Classé “A” wine label in gold with signature bell emblem.Château Angélus 2015 Premier Grand Cru Classé “A” wine label in gold with signature bell emblem.
Château Angélus 2015 Grand Cru

Château Angélus: The Rebel of Saint-Émilion

Founded in 1782 on Bordeaux’s right bank, Château Angélus grows its grapes in soils of limestone, gravel, chalky clay, and blue clay. The micro-valleys of the region cool the land, creating ideal conditions for Merlot-dominant blends, which account for 75 percent of Saint-Émilion’s plantings.

Vaulted timber architecture inside Château Angélus winery overlooking vineyard views.Vaulted timber architecture inside Château Angélus winery overlooking vineyard views.
Architectural Interior of Château Angélus Winery

Led by eight generations of the same family, Angélus had long held a coveted Premier Grand Cru Classé A ranking—until it withdrew from the Saint-Émilion classification in 2022, citing concerns about the evaluation process. Château Cheval Blanc and Château Ausone made the same decision.

According to Stéphanie de Boüard-Rivoal, President of Angélus, “Our family’s deep attachment to the region and to the reputation of its wines remains intact. Angélus will continue to actively promote Saint-Émilion and the great growths of Bordeaux across the world.”

Modern Bordeaux winery barrel room with sculpted wooden ceiling and rows of aging wine barrels.Modern Bordeaux winery barrel room with sculpted wooden ceiling and rows of aging wine barrels.
Bordeaux Winery Barrel Room

During a private tasting with her at the Waldorf Astoria Residence Tower’s Empire Club, I sampled the outstanding 2015 vintage—a blend of 62% Merlot and 38% Cabernet Franc. Inky purple in color, the wine opens with aromas of dark fruit and violets, evolving with aeration into notes of black fig, cedar, and rose, all lifted by a lovely minerality. The palate is expressive with a persistent, elegant finish.

Château Montelena 2023 Chardonnay bottle set against rustic winery wood and ivy-covered stone.Château Montelena 2023 Chardonnay bottle set against rustic winery wood and ivy-covered stone.
Château Montelena Chardonnay

Why Château Montelena’s 1973 Chardonnay Changed Wine History

Across the Atlantic, Napa’s French-Inspired Contender

Nearly a century after the founding of Angélus, Alfred L. Tubbs purchased 254 acres in Calistoga in 1882. Enamored with French wine, he planted vines and built an American version of a Bordeaux château—what would become Château Montelena.

After changing ownership several times, the estate released a wine in 1978 made from entirely replanted vines. Its winemaker, Mike Grgich, later founded his own celebrated winery.

Historic Château Montelena stone façade draped in ivy with wine equipment in the courtyard.Historic Château Montelena stone façade draped in ivy with wine equipment in the courtyard.
Château Montelena Exterior With Ivy

Château Montelena’s defining moment came in 1976 at The Judgment of Paris, a blind tasting that pitted top California wines against prestigious French bottles. In the white wine category, the 1973 Château Montelena Chardonnay placed first—beating out Burgundy’s finest.

Château Montelena wine barrels engraved with the estate’s iconic façade in a dimly lit cellar.Château Montelena wine barrels engraved with the estate’s iconic façade in a dimly lit cellar.
Château Montelena Wine Barrels

A World of Wine Awaits

Even Now, There’s Never Been a Better Time for Wine

Even as some consumers drink less, those who enjoy wine have more excellent options than ever. Winemaking is more global, precise, and quality-driven, from vineyard practices to production methods. For anyone who loves a glass—or a pour—there’s never been a better time to explore.



This story originally appeared on Upscalelivingmag