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Tesla sued over crash of Model 3 that ‘exploded into a raging fire,’ killing 1

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Tesla has been hit with another lawsuit over a deadly post-crash inferno, this time from a Washington state man whose wife died after his 2018 Model 3 “exploded into a raging fire” when an abrupt acceleration sent it into a utility pole and left rescuers unable to pry the doors open.

The federal complaint filed Friday claimed Jeffery and Wendy Dennis had no chance to escape because the sedan’s electronic handles died the instant the car lost power.

Wendy Dennis died at the scene while plaintiff Jeff Dennis suffered catastrophic burns.

A Washington State resident died and another was severely injured when their Tesla Model 3 caught fire after hitting a utility pole in Tacoma on Jan. 7, 2023. U.S. District Court

The filing alleges the Model 3 “suddenly and rapidly accelerated out of control,” surging for roughly five seconds before the Jan. 7, 2023 impact in Tacoma.

The crash triggered what the suit calls an “extremely hot fire” that engulfed the cabin and burned for hours.

Several people ran toward the wreck but were driven back by flames described as “increasingly intense.”

With the handles idled, they could only “watch helplessly from a distance as the severely injured Jeff and Wendy burned in the inferno.”

The suit says the blast exposed “the vehicle’s high voltage battery pack [containing] thousands of highly explosive batteries” and produced a “hard-to-extinguish fire” that blocked access to both occupants.

Lawyers say the blaze grew so fast, “it quickly becomes too hot for rescuers to react effectively.”

Tesla didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Jeffery and Wendy Dennis had no chance to escape because the sedan’s electronic handles died the instant the car lost power, according to a lawsuit. U.S. District Court

The complaint also blames defective acceleration and braking systems, alleging the automatic emergency braking never activated despite an unavoidable collision.

The filing lands as regulators probe whether Tesla doors trap occupants when low-voltage power fails — scrutiny fueled by a string of similar fire-entrapment lawsuits.

In Wisconsin, families sued over a Model S fire that killed five people in Verona on Nov. 1, 2024, after they allegedly became trapped as flames tore through the car.

A neighbor who called 911 reported “big flames” and “big bangs” and said she could “hear people screaming from within the vehicle.”

In Wisconsin, families sued over a Model S fire that killed at least three people in Verona on Nov. 1, 2024, after they allegedly became trapped as flames tore through the car. Christopher Sadowski

Emergency crews allegedly found the doors inoperable.

Rear-seat passengers had only a hidden mechanical release buried under carpeting — a mechanism the lawsuit says couldn’t be found in smoke and darkness. None of the five occupants escaped.

The Bauer family claims the victims survived the initial crash but died because Tesla ignored years of warnings that electronic releases fail after power loss.

The Dane County Sheriff’s Office said that “road conditions, excess speed, and impaired driving” all contributed to the collision.

The driver of the car and all of the passengers were legally drunk at the time of the crash, the Wisconsin State Journal reported.

In California, parents of 21-year-old Krysta Michelle Tsukahara say a Cybertruck became a “death trap” when it burst into flames on Nov. 27, 2024, after hitting a tree in Alameda County.

Tsukahara survived the crash but couldn’t escape because the Cybertruck had no exterior handles and relied entirely on low-voltage buttons that went dead as soon as the fire began.

A Good Samaritan also failed to open the doors.

The only emergency option in her seating position was a concealed wire loop hidden inside the map pocket at the bottom of the door — a setup the complaint calls impractical as the cabin filled with fire.

Rescuers couldn’t break through the truck’s “armor glass” or stainless-steel doors in time. Tsukahara died of smoke inhalation and thermal injuries.

All three suits claim Tesla knew for years that its electric door systems routinely fail when power is lost — and ignored repeated warnings from owners, first responders and regulators.

The filings also allege the company understated the fire risks tied to its lithium-ion battery packs.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Blame Biden for rising costs, how to make the FAA fly right and other commentary

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From the right: Blame Biden for Rising Costs

Democrats “blame President Trump” for America’s affordability problem “while ignoring their own responsibility for causing it in the first place,” fumes James Piereson at The New Criterion. “President Biden, with the support of his party in Congress, went on a spending spree when he took office,” causing inflation to hit more than 9% in mid-2022. “During Trump’s first term, food prices were generally stable,” but “Biden’s spending policies caused” them “to surge,” with gasoline skyrocketing to $4.84 per gallon in mid-2022. Electricity costs spiked more than 30% during Biden’s term. “There can be no doubt that rising prices . . . were caused by the blockheaded and incompetent policies of the Biden administration.”

Policy wonk: How To Make the FAA Fly Right

“The FAA is designed for stagnation,” frets Sean Tinney at The Hill, because its “centralized monopoly” holds “American airspace hostage to congressional dysfunction.” As a result, “regulatory capture” turns government shutdowns into “body counts.” The United States should follow the example of Canada, which “once faced similar challenges,” but “privatized air traffic control” in 1996. Air traffic control there is now funded by “user fees, not tax revenue,” while “delivering demonstrably superior performance.” The Canadian system’s “safety metrics show real gains,” and it’s “nearly six times safer” in regard to near-misses. “Privatized systems charge airlines and operators directly, creating clearer incentives and lower prices,” while delivering “what bureaucracy cannot: accountability, innovation, and resilience.”

Foreign desk: BBC’s Christian-Slaughter Blinders

“Not for the first time, the likes of the BBC are running interference for violent Islamist intolerance” by diminishing President Trump’s concern over “the violent persecution” of Nigeria’s “Christian minority by Islamist groups,” thunders Kunwar Khuldune Shahid at Spiked. Per a recent report, “more than 7,000” Nigerian Christians were killed “in the first seven months of this year alone.” Yet “too many outlets” are refusing “to accept that Christians are really being persecuted.” “The BBC is a case in point,” running an article that “concluded that the evidence of the killings was ‘difficult to verify,’” while barely attempting “to check” itself. “Nigerian Christians are not merely ‘collateral damage’ of ‘various security crises’, as the BBC would have it. They are murdered with the intent to purge Nigerian society of Christians.”

Business beat: FTC’s Meta ‘Overreach’

The Federal Trade Commission’s “defeat” in its antitrust suit against Meta is “a blow” to those on the “right and left” who seek to “punish politically disfavored businesses,” cheers The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board. “Progressives who loathe large companies made common cause with conservatives” irate at “online speech policing.” The right “had a point,” but the FTC nonetheless “overreached.” It argued that Meta is monopolistic, but Judge James Boasberg cited evidence showing the company actually “competes vigorously with TikTok and YouTube.” Plus, “artificial intelligence and Elon Musk’s ownership of X.com are reinvigorating competition.” Nor are Meta’s “enormous profits” proof it’s a monopoly: “Breaking up a business merely because it’s big, as progressives including Biden FTC Chair Lina Khan want to do, can harm competition and consumers.”

Education watch: Homeschooling Is Soaring

Homeschooling’s “supercharged” growth during COVID hasn’t abated but is expanding, new research finds — and, marvels Reason’s J.D. Tuccille, at three times the rate. “Estimates put the total homeschooling population at about 6 percent of students” nationwide, twice as much as pre-pandemic. Homeschooling expert Angela Watson notes a “fundamental shift in how American families are thinking about education,” with other researchers citing a growing preference for non-public-school options. COVID closures, argues Tuccille, “gave parents a chance to experience public schools’ competence with remote learning, and many were unimpressed.” They’ve also been “unhappy with the poor quality and often politicized lessons taught to their children that infuriatingly blend declining learning outcomes with indoctrination.” Given such experiences, “the shift appears to be here to stay.”

— Compiled by The Post Editorial Board



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Who Was the Miss Universe 2025 Runner-Up? Meet Veena Praveenar Singh – Hollywood Life

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Image Credit: Getty Images

Although the Miss Universe competition ended in victory for Miss Mexico Fátima Bosch, Miss Thailand Veena Praveenar Singh finished the competition with grace as the runner-up. The Thailand native has competed in multiple pageants and represented her home country this year as it hosted the 2025 event.

“I gave everything I had on that stage, carrying the pride and honor of representing Thailand to the fullest,” Veena captioned an Instagram post in November 2025 following the pageant. “Today, I’m truly grateful to bring home the title of 1st Runner-Up for everyone in Thailand. Even though I didn’t take home the crown I hoped for, I poured my heart and soul into every step of this journey.”

Adding that she will “continue to fulfill the responsibilities that come with this honorable title, especially in creating meaningful impact and inspiring others through my project, SHERO,” Veena made sure to congratulate the new Miss Universe, Fátima, and the other women who made it to the top 5.

“I admire each and every one of them, and the strength, grace, and power they brought to this stage,” Veena concluded. “Thank you, truly, from the bottom of my heart.”

Below, learn everything there is to know about Miss Thailand Veena!

Veena Praveenar Singh Has Competed in Miss Universe Before

The 2025 competition was not Veena’s first rodeo. She previously competed in Miss Universe Saraburi 2025, Miss Universe Thailand 2025, Miss Universe Thailand 2018 finishing as the 2nd runner-up, Miss Universe Thailand 2020 as the 1st runner-up and Miss Universe Thailand 2023 as the 2nd runner-up.

Veena Praveenar Singh Is 29 Years Old

Veena was born on April 16, 1996, which makes her 29 years old as of 2025.

Veena Praveenar Singh Is Fluent in Multiple Languages

Miss Thailand is trilingual! As a graduate of Thammasat University with a degree in Russian from the Faculty of Liberal Arts, Veena is fluent in English, Russian and Thai, according to NationThailand.

Veena Praveenar Singh Is Married

In 2022, Veena married her husband, Harncharoen Singhtakwarl, a businessman in the e-commerce and digital field, per NationThailand. He also founded the agency INSPIRIO.




This story originally appeared on Hollywoodlife

The pretty village in France with hardly any tourists where only the French go on holiday | Europe | Travel

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Claiming the spot as the world’s most popular tourist destination, France is home to numerous incredible towns and cities to explore. From the luxurious streets of Paris and its landmarks like the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre, to the Côte d’Azur, to the wine regions of Bordeaux and Burgundy, it’s no surprise that France attracted over 100 million visitors in 2024. 

But being home to over 68 million people, it’s often wondered where the locals go on holiday to escape the crowds. Well, nestled between Lyon and Grenoble in southeastern France lies a beautiful little village that is virtually unheard of for foreign visitors, but was in fact voted the favourite French village by viewers of the TV show “Le Village Préféré des Français 2025”. Tucked away in the hills of Chambaran in the Isère department sits Saint-Antoine-l’Abbaye, a charming medieval town boasting half-timbered buildings, cobblestone streets and a Gothic abbey that has stood for nearly 730 years. 

A visit to the commune is like stepping back in time, particularly when you catch a glimpse of the incredible medieval abbey with its intricate Gothic façade, decorated with carved religious details that give Saint-Antoine-l’Abbaye its name.

“Saint-Antoine is a tiny little village lost between the mountains and the countryside,” Maryline Longis, mayor of the village, told Travel + Leisure. “The village of Saint-Antoine was a major medical and religious centre, one that truly combined faith, science, and hospitality.

“This history has profoundly shaped the identity of the village, and we have preserved not only the landscapes but that sense of warmth and hospitality. Our guiding principle in the village is really about welcoming visitors well.”

For those seeking even more history, they can enjoy fascinating medieval displays and interactive exhibitions, including a fragrance exhibit, at the Musée de Saint-Antoine-l’Abbaye.

Food lovers can also rejoice in Saint-Antoine-l’Abbaye, where the region is known for a range of products, from Noix de Grenoble (walnuts) to Saint-Marcellin cheese and Chartreuse, a green-yellow herbal liqueur that has been produced by Carthusian Monks since 1737.

Plus, while major French cities like Marseille, Nice and Paris have been putting in measures to tackle its overtourism crises, Mayor Longis called higher visitor numbers in her village as a “great honour”.

“We haven’t got the problem of overtourism and it won’t happen here,” she told The Times. “This is a great honour and we’re perfectly well able to handle more tourism. It will help our restaurants, hotels and shops.’

Saint-Antoine-l’Abbaye is just an hour and a half’s drive from Lyon, with Brits able to easily access the village from Lyon-Saint Exupéry Airport (LYS) or Grenoble Alpes Isère Airport (GNB) and travel to the village by rental car. According to Skyscanner, direct flights to Lyon Airport are as low as £16 in mid-January with Wizz Air.



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

All 5 ‘New Girl’ Christmas Episodes in Order

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Few sitcoms capture the chaos and warmth of the holidays like New Girl. The loft gang turns every seasonal celebration into a perfect storm of awkward moments, over-the-top schemes, and heartfelt surprises. Throughout its run, the series had five Christmas episodes, in which each of the characters’ quirks were highlighted in festive settings: Jess’ (Zooey Deschanel) relentless optimism, Nick’s (Jake Johnson) grumpy charm, Schmidt’s (Max Greenfield) competitiveness, Winston’s (Lamorne Morris) goofiness, Cece’s (Hannah Simone) grounded wit, and Coach’s (Damon Wayans Jr.) softness beneath a hard exterior.

From botched gift exchanges to romantic tension, the show blends comedy and genuine emotion in a way that keeps fans coming back year after year. New Girl Christmas episodes make you wish that Jess and the crew were the family you were spending time with over the Yuletide season. Together, they navigate holiday disasters that feel both absurd and relatable, and bring to life touching moments that stick with viewers.

Here’s every New Girl Christmas episode in chronological order.

5

“The 23rd”

Season 1, Episode 9

Fox

In the first Christmas episode of the series, Paul, played by Justin Long, tells Jess he loves her after she gives him an anatomically correct replica of the heart of a 50-year-old non-smoker, to which Jess replies, “Thank you.” The rest of the episode mostly takes place at Schmidt’s office holiday party, where the whole gang gets to see him dress up as “Sexy Santa,” per the request of his boss Kim (Gillian Vigman). Jess tries to get advice from Nick after she realizes she doesn’t have the same feelings for Paul, but as Nick can hold no secret, he reveals to the poor guy that Jess doesn’t love him back.

Although Cece shows up to the festivities with her new boyfriend, Kyle (Stephen Amell), there are some sweet foreshadowing moments between her and Schmidt. Winston, who has spent the whole season feeling lost and directionless since he stopped playing basketball, finally finds a purpose by becoming Elvin’s nanny (Blake Garrett), the son of Schmidt’s other boss, Gina (Michaela Watkins). The episode ends with Nick purposefully missing his flight and taking Jess, along with the whole group, to Candy Lane, the most festive street in town, and waking up its residents to turn their lights back on. Giving Jess the beautiful, sparkling Christmas she yearned for is his way of making it up to her for spilling the beans. It’s a touching moment that speaks to their deepening bond at that point.

4

“Santa”

Season 2, Episode 11

Jess goes to find Sam at the hospital to get back together in New Girl's "Santa" Fox

“Santa” is probably the most chaotic and action-filled Christmas episode of them all. Wishing to spend as much time together before they all depart for the holidays, the group agrees to hit up multiple parties in one night. Roommates Jess, Nick, and Schmidt are all simultaneously dealing with issues in their love lives. Jess freaks out at the first party they attend, where she runs into Sam (David Walton), who tells her he regrets how things ended and wants her back. Not wanting to see or speak to him, she puts up a pretense that her and Winston are together.

Nick, who’s feeling insecure and intimidated in his relationship with his hot stripper girlfriend Angie (Olivia Munn), tries extremely hard to be daring and adventurous, even though it goes against his inherent nature. When the two try having sex at a party in a Santa sleigh, it’s disastrous, and leads to Nick insulting Angie, causing her to storm off. The two work it out after Jess advises him to be honest about how he’s feeling. After being rejected by her in the previous episode, Schmidt acts cold and indifferent to Cece, but the two end on a good note after talking it out. As for Jess, she decides to take a leap of faith and let her heart lead the way. Surprising Sam at the hospital he works at the end of the episode, the two kiss and get back together.

3

“Clavado en un Bar”

Season 3, Episode 11

Schmidt is shown working at a Christmas tree lot in the past in New Girl's "Clavado en un Bar" Fox

Named after a song by Mexican pop rock band Maná, “Clavado en Un Bar” forgets that it’s a Christmas episode almost entirely. The episode opens in a dramatic fashion with Jess arriving at the bar where everyone is hanging out, with only 21 minutes to make a life-altering choice. She’s been offered a job at a children’s museum where she’s been volunteering – and a significant salary raise. But taking it would mean untethering herself from her identity as a teacher. As she gets guidance from the group, they all share stories about times they made professional changes in their own lives.

Throughout the episode, viewers get a glimpse into the characters’ past, from Winston’s time in Latvia to Schmidt’s journey into marketing to Nick’s days as a law student. To top it all off, there’s a fun and heartwarming scene that portrays how Jess and Cece first met. It may not be a rich Christmas-themed episode, with only a few string lights in the background and a holiday reference involving a Christmas tree lot in one of the backstories, but it’s a great entry. Audiences get to explore more of the character’s origins, learning how they became who they are in the present.

2

“LAXmas”

Season 4, Episode 11

Jess in New Girl's Christmas episode "LAXmas" Fox

“LAXmas” takes the whole gang to Los Angeles International Airport. They have all decided to celebrate the holidays in various places: Jess is headed to London to see Ryan’s (Julian Morris) family, Nick and Winston are headed to Chicago, Coach is having a solo vacation in Hawaii, and Cece and Schmidt are headed to New York (Long Island and Manhattan, respectively). When their flights are delayed, they all get stuck at LAX. While there, Ryan texts her a picture of his family’s home. Seeing their mansion, she feels intimidated and starts spiraling about meeting the wealthy bunch, and lies to Ryan about her flight being canceled.

The episode has some pretty great moments. In the luxe first class lounge, Schmidt hilariously and dramatically puts a man in his place who tries to barter Cece for sex. It’s tender seeing Coach struggle with the guilt of ditching his family and cute little nieces in Detroit for his beach holiday. Nick and Winston, who are on standby, go to great lengths to get seats on the next available flight. Naturally, Jess makes friends with the snarky and disgruntled flight attendant, played by Billy Eichner, and secures them seats. But as everyone is getting ready to board their flights, they realize Jess is staying in town. Nick and Winston risk everything to encourage her to go to England. She makes it on board without knowing Ryan bought a ticket to LA to be with her.

1

“Christmas Eve Eve”

Season 6, Episode 10

The whole New Girl gang in Season 6, Episode 10, "Christmas Eve Eve" Fox

In the last Christmas episode of the series, everyone but Jess is over Christmas, and they want to forego doing anything big or going through the annual hassle of picking out presents. Compromising, they agree to do a Secret Santa. When Jess gets Nick, she thinks of the perfect gift for him: flying his long-distance girlfriend, Reagan (Megan Fox), into Los Angles to spend the holiday with him. But when Nick decides to fly to Seattle to be with her, Jess tries hard to get him to stay, leading to a fight and forcing Jess to reveal the surprise. The moment also hints at a spark still existing between them.

Jess spends the whole episode trying her hardest to get everyone in the festive spirit. It’s a little bit sad to watch, and things only get sadder at the gift exchange, when Jess realizes she forgot to write her own name down when they drew names. Working together as a team and with Robby (Nelson Franklin), the group surprises Jess with a magical and festive display outside the loft. There’s fake snow, elves, lights, a Christmas tree, a choir, and Darlene Love herself performs “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home).” The whole thing is a recreation of Jess’ childhood Christmas, and viewers couldn’t help but to feel as moved as she did at that moment.


0384543_poster_w780.jpg


Release Date

2011 – 2018

Network

FOX

Showrunner

Elizabeth Meriwether

Directors

Trent O’Donnell, Jay Chandrasekhar, Max Winkler, Fred Goss, Jesse Peretz, Steve Welch, Lynn Shelton, Josh Greenbaum, Russ T. Alsobrook, Bill Purple, Christine Gernon, Lorene Scafaria, Michael Schultz, Peyton Reed, Tristram Shapeero, Eric Appel, Alec Berg, Jason Winer, Michael Spiller, Steve Pink, Alex Hardcastle, Andrew Fleming, Craig Zisk, Daniel Attias

Writers

Berkley Johnson, Kim Rosenstock, Rob Rosell, Matt Fusfeld, Alex Cuthbertson, David Feeney, Nina Pedrad, Rebecca Addelman, Kay Cannon, Sarah Tapscott, Joe Wengert, Ethan Sandler, Adrian Wenner, David Iserson, Nick Adams, David Walpert, Lamar Woods, Veronica McCarthy, David Quandt, Joni Lefkowitz, Lamorne Morris, Rachel Axler, Christian Magalhaes, Robert Snow





This story originally appeared on Movieweb

PlayStation Plus Free Games Lineup For December Off To A Rough Start

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The lineup of PlayStation Plus games for December 2025 looks set to be off to a pretty rough start, with a hefty batch of seriously great games poised to leave the service. That’s not very Christmassy, is it?

It’s a funny old time for PlayStation Plus over the next few months. As you’ve probably heard already, January 2026 will see a major change to the subscription service with the phasing out of PlayStation 4 titles offered as part of the Essential tier. Before that, however, December will see another blow.

PlayStation Plus’ December 2025 Lineup Is Looking Bleak

More games are set to leave

Games leave PlayStation Plus every month, obviously, and December is no different. No less than nine games are leaving the PlayStation Plus Extra/Premium tiers next month on December 16.

Those games are:

  • Battlefield 2042
  • Firefighting Simulator: The Squad
  • Forspoken
  • Grand Theft Auto 3
  • Sonic Frontiers
  • Star Trek: Bridge Crew
  • Surviving Mars
  • Arcade Paradise VR
  • Star Wars: Tales From The Galaxy’s Edge

Obviously you won’t be able to play and finish all of these games before December 16, so you might want to choose wisely. Or you could attempt to prove me wrong and beat all nine, I guess. That’s really your call.

PlayStation Plus Subscribers Are Less Than Thrilled

Especially those with PSVR 2 headsets

One of the more notable aspects of this month is that a huge number of PSVR 2 titles are being pulled from the service, which doesn’t bode well for gamers who invested in the struggling virtual reality headset.

“So they are just taking every PSVR 2 game off of Plus?” one Reddit user asked on the PlayStation Plus subreddit.

“I am hoping the explanation is so that PSVR 2 games will start being added to Extra instead,” another gamer reasoned. “It always seemed dumb to lock them behind Premium because, if all their Extra subscribers saw that they had access to a bunch of VR games, they might actually be pushed into buying PSVR 2. I have to imagine that the Premium user base is much smaller than the Extra base.”

The PlayStation Plus Essential games for December 2025 will be officially announced next week, but hopefully we get some solid additions to take the sting out of losing the above nine games.

PlayStation Plus Game Poster

Brand

Sony

Original Release Date

June 29, 2010

Original MSRP (USD)

$59.99 (Essential), $99.99 (Extra), $119.99 (Premium) – Per Year

App Store

PlayStation Store




This story originally appeared on Screenrant

10 must-see concerts in Los Angeles this holiday season

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This year, the holidays in L.A. offer the gift of live music that will allow us all to excite or escape our out-of-town relatives when they come to the West Coast. We’ve dug up a little something for everyone — from K-pop fans to alt-rock lovers and R&B/hip-hop nerds. Enjoy our guide to 10 must-see concerts to enjoy from post-Thanksgiving through the top of 2026.

The only guide you need for holiday entertainment.

Iluka, Moroccan Lounge, Dec. 4
This Aussie expat to L.A. has found a sweet spot of desert-country twang, exuberantly melodic songwriting and rock sass that pairs well with her witchy, suffer-no-fools feminism ( “Crucify Me” has this banger of a chorus: “You love to crucify me / But I’m way too hot to die”). Her new piano-brooder of a single, “Hard to Love Me,” hits right in the Adele-shaped hole in pop balladry right now. This release show for her album “The Wild, the Innocent and the Raging” — funny Springsteen riff, that — could be the start of something much bigger. — August Brown

KIIS-FM Jingle Ball, Intuit Dome, Dec. 5
The Top 40 radio station’s annual holiday concert features plenty of the year’s big hitmakers, including Alex Warren, Audrey Hobert, Jessie Murph, Reneé Rapp, Leon Thomas and Zara Larsson. But the real draw is probably a rare appearance by Ejae, Audrey Nuna and Rei Ami — better known as the voices behind “Golden,” the chart-topping pop smash from Netflix’s “KPop Demon Hunters” that was just nominated for a Grammy Award for song of the year. Also on the bill: Conan Gray, Feid, Jackson Wang, the Kid Laroi and Sean Paul. — Mikael Wood

Ben Folds, Blue Note, Dec. 11
Fresh off his resignation from the Kennedy Center after, well, all of that, Folds is returning to a more hospitable venue in the new L.A. outpost of the jazz club Blue Note. Folds released the delightfully titled Christmas album “Sleigher” last year, and this holiday-themed set will likely pull from it and his vast pop catalog as well. It’s hard to image a cozier seasonal vibe after the awful year we’ve all had in L.A. — A.B.

The six Katseye members pose together.

The Katseye members. From left to right: Megan Skiendiel, Sophia Laforteza, Daniela Avanzini, Lara Raj, Yoonchae Jeung, Manon Bannerman.

(Andy Jackson / For The Times)

Katseye, Hollywood Palladium, Dec. 13
It’s a long shot for new artist at next year’s Grammys, but even making it to the nominations was a big step for Katseye, the globe-spanning girl group that’s nominally K-pop in its structure, training and Hybe affiliation, but one more overtly geared to American tastes and sensibilities. Alongside “Golden” and Rosé and Bruno Mars’ “Apt.,” this is a watershed moment for K-pop being taken as pop music like any other within the Recording Academy. Katseye has never put on less than a killer performance in its brief life as a band. — A.B.

KROQ Almost Acoustic Christmas, Kia Forum, Dec. 13
Reading the top of the bill here — Evanescence, Papa Roach, Social Distortion, Rise Against, the All-American Rejects, Third Eye Blind, Yellowcard — you’d be forgiven for thinking KROQ got trapped in a time loop doomed to endlessly repeat the late ‘90s and early ‘00s. But come early for the incongruously booked but supremely exciting U.K. post-punk of Wet Leg and the ferocious Atlanta pop-punk combo the Paradox, who opened for Green Day and Jack White on the strength of just a few viral videos. — A.B.

Cameron Winter, Palace Theatre, Dec. 13 & 14
He was just in Los Angeles for an extremely buzzed-about gig with his New York-based band Geese at the Fonda Theatre, where the crowd reportedly included Bono, Beck and Chappell Roan along with a bunch of record execs eager to start an old-fashioned indie-rock bidding war. After Geese’s tour wraps — and before the band’s appearance at next year’s Coachella festival — the group’s slacker-dreamboat frontman will return to L.A. for a pair of shows behind his acclaimed 2024 solo album, “Heavy Metal.” — M.W.

4 Non Blondes, Roxy, Dec. 15
Though 4 Non Blondes broke up in 1994, pop music never seems to go long without finding some new use for the group’s early-’90s alt-rock hit “What’s Up?” This year it was Cardi B and Lizzo’s sampling the song for their track “What’s Goin On,” which then seemed to lead to a viral TikTok mash-up of “What’s Up?” with “Beez in the Trap” by Cardi’s nemesis Nicki Minaj. Before all that happened, the group’s frontwoman, Linda Perry — who went on to establish a successful career as a songwriter and producer for stars like Pink and Christina Aguilera — got 4 Non Blondes back together for a handful of festival dates over the summer. Now the band is set to play the Roxy ahead of a reunion album that Perry says is due in 2026. — M.W.

Allman Betts Family Revival, Orpheum Theater, Dec. 20
These scions of Southern rock have done right by their formidable legacy in this supergroup, where Devon Allman, Duane Betts, Alex Orbison and others need no introduction to anyone who still longs for swampy three-part guitar harmonies. (The double album “Bless Your Heart” could have been in rotation for the late Jimmy Carter). They’re calling in every admirer and collaborator for this holiday show with Robert Randolph, Jimmy Hall, Dweezil Zappa, Sierra Green, Cody & Luther Dickinson and more. — A.B.

 Leon Thomas performs onstage during the blond sessions Presents Leon Thomas on June 3, 2024, in New York City.

Leon Thomas performs onstage during a Blond Sessions concert June 3, 2024, in New York City.

(Jason Mendez/Getty Images for the blond)

Leon Thomas, The Wiltern, Dec. 22 & 23
Fresh from half a dozen high-profile Grammy nominations — including nods for album of the year and best new artist — Thomas will spend two nights at the Wiltern on tour behind his acclaimed 2024 LP, “Mutt.” It’s a crafty retro-R&B disc that shows off the years of studio expertise he accrued behind the scenes as a writer and producer for the likes of Ariana Grande and SZA; it also reveals a bit of the ham who got his start as a child actor on Broadway and Nickelodeon. — M.W.

The Roots, Walt Disney Concert Hall, Dec. 31
Three decades after they broke out of the Philadelphia hip-hop scene, Questlove and Black Thought’s hard-working hip-hop outfit is one the most reliable live acts in music: a crowd-pleasing soul-funk groove machine equally at home at a music festival, a supper club or on the set of “The Tonight Show,” where the Roots somehow still seem to be having fun as Jimmy Fallon’s house band. Given the group’s ample catalog and Questlove’s countless A-list pals, it’s anyone’s guess what they’ll play — or who might put in a surprise appearance — as they ring in the new year at Disney Hall with two shows, one at 7 p.m. and one at 10:30 p.m. — M.W.



This story originally appeared on LA Times

Olivia Dean Calls Out Ticketing Companies Over High Resale Prices

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Olivia Dean has criticized major ticketing companies after fans flagged steep resale prices for seats on her newly announced Art of Loving Live tour.

The British singer addressed the issue directly on Instagram soon after general on-sale opened. In her first post, she told fans her team was “looking into” unexpected resale activity and warned followers to be cautious of comment-section sellers, calling many of them potential scams.

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“I’m sorry that there seems to be an issue with ticket re-selling and pricing,” she wrote. “My team are currently looking into it. It is extremely frustrating as the last thing I want is for anyone to be scammed or overcharged for our sho. Please be wary of buying tickets in the comment sections as it is most likely a scam.”

She continued, “@ticketmaster @livenation @aegpresents you are providing a disgusting service. The prices at which you’re allowing tickets to be re-sold is vile and completely against our wishes. Live music should be affordable and accessible and we need to find a new way of making that possible. BE BETTER.”

Fans on social media reported long virtual queues and verified tickets appearing at significantly higher prices on secondary-market sites shortly after on-sale. Listings varied by city, with some resale amounts reaching several hundred dollars above face value.

Ticketmaster acknowledged Dean’s comments by reposting her Instagram story and stating it would cap resale on its platform at face value. “We support artists’ ability to set the terms of how their tickets are sold and resold. @oliviadeano, we will cap resale prices on our site at face value and hope other resale sites will follow,” they added.

The U.K. singer-songwriter and BRIT School alum currently holds four songs on the Billboard Hot 100 — her first four career entries — including the breakout “Man I Need,” which reached the top five on the chart dated Nov. 8. Her sophomore album The Art of Loving debuted at No. 8 on the Billboard 200 earlier this month, marking her highest entry on the tally to date.

Dean announced her 2026 tour last week, celebrating a major career milestone that includes her first headlining date at Madison Square Garden, as well as performing at Australia’s 2025 ARIA Awards. The North American leg begins in July in San Francisco before continuing through major U.S. markets and wrapping in Austin.

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This story originally appeared on Billboard

Are Danny and Baez Breaking Up?

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What To Know

  • Danny and Baez struggle with the challenges of maintaining a long-distance relationship, questioning their future together.
  • Sean begins a new romance with Penny, a former felon.
  • District Attorney Mae Silver faces a major ethical dilemma after discovering a leak in her office could jeopardize her late husband’s murderer’s conviction.

[Warning: The following contains MAJOR spoilers for Boston Blue Season 1 Episode 6, “Code of Ethics.”]

Blue Bloods fans have long wanted Danny (Donnie Wahlberg) and Baez (Marisa Ramirez) to get together. The 2024 Blue Bloods series finale hinted at that possibility, and then Boston Blue made it happen in the series premiere. The work-turned-romantic partners have been making a long-distance relationship work since Danny moved to Boston to help his son, Sean (Mika Amonsen), but Boston Blue Episode 6 showed that the distance is becoming difficult. Danny and Baez questioned if their relationship can “make it.” Is this a hint at trouble to come?

The episode was all about relationships. One was forming between Sean and Penelope (Penny) Bravo (Dancing With the Stars winner and Marvel star Xochitl Gomez). Penny is a former felon whom Sean met while out on the job. He mistook her for a criminal while she was out on a run, and then sparks went flying. Her criminal record (one crime committed years prior) was a red flag, and Sean spent the episode worried about what his dad would think if he were to accept Penny’s offer to go out on a date. The Silvers encouraged Sean to follow his heart.

Another romantic relationship was struggling to find time to thrive. Baez came to visit Boston, and viewers nearly saw Danny and Baez kiss before duty called. Lena (Sonequa Martin-Green) needed Danny’s help on a high-priority case, which took Danny away from date night. He made up for it the next day with lunch, but that was cut short, too. They finished their meal at the police station, where Baez and Lena finally met and hit it off right away. Baez had brought Lena a coffee earlier, and she let Lena finish Danny’s food during their first meeting, so they were fast friends.

At lunch, Danny asked Baez if she’d consider moving to Boston with her daughter, Elena. Danny said he could decorate a room in his apartment (that Sean recently moved out of — he’s living with Jonah now) for Elena to make her feel welcome. Baez was hesitant to leave New York behind. She struggled to understand why Danny wanted to stay in Boston, but eventually she understood that it was a move inspired by his own father, Frank Reagan (Tom Selleck). Danny wanted to be there for his son in Boston, just like his dad was always there at the NYPD whenever his kids needed him.

Michael Gibson / CBS

Danny and Baez’s third attempt at a date was cut short by Baez getting called back to New York to follow a lead on a homicide. They barely had any time to share any intimacy while Baez was visiting, but they had time for one last dance before she left. With Baez wanting to stay in New York and Danny feeling a need to stay in Boston, Baez asked, “Are we gonna make it?” as they danced. Danny assured, “We’re gonna make it.” But the looks on both of their faces were ones of real concern. Despite being in love (they said “I love you” multiple times in this episode), the couple is clearly worried about how long they can withstand a long-distance relationship, especially when it’s becoming increasingly probable that that distance has no end in sight, if neither of them is willing to move to the same city.

There was some hope at the end. Sean came to the station to tell his dad that he’s serious about Penny, saying that he doesn’t think she should be judged for making one mistake when she was younger — a mistake she did her time for. He also noted that the Boston Police Department, unlike the NYPD, only barred its officers from fraternizing with “recent” felons, not any felon.

“Do you really like this girl?” Danny asked his son. Sean said yes.

“Then don’t let anyone stop you from going after her. Not even me,” Danny replied. Baez was clearly on his mind when passing on this wisdom. Will he follow his own advice and make sure nothing stops his relationship with the woman he loves?

Meanwhile, Lena was confronted with a difficult case involving an old friend whose little brother got involved in a gang. She thought Lena and her mom would be able to get him out of prison, but Lena had to make the tough call to keep the boy in prison. He was more affiliated with the gang than his sister realized, and Lena felt she couldn’t ethically let him off the hook for the criminal activity he got involved in. Lena’s romantic interest, Detective Brian Rodgers (Ryan Broussard), was there to comfort her after the difficult conversation.

The episode ended on a dramatic cliffhanger for District Attorney Mae Silver (Gloria Reuben). Mae and her office had been investigating who in her office was leaking information to criminals, which prevented them from facing arrest. Sarah (Maggie Lawson), Mae’s stepdaughter and the BPD superintendent, and Mae’s chief of staff, Charlie Price (Kenric Green, Martin-Green’s husband), were helping with the search. They discovered that it was the Assistant District Attorney Philip Beakman, who leaked the intel. If they continue this investigation, it could result in all of his previous cases getting thrown out. The visibly shaken Mae said that he’s a “low-level ADA” and that his past cases shouldn’t be that big.

“He worked dad’s murder trial,” Sarah revealed. Sarah’s father is Mae’s late husband, Ben Silver, who was murdered one year prior.

“No, the Attorney General handled your father’s case,” Mae said.

“Yes, before you recused yourself,” Sarah replied. “ADA Philip Beakman indicted dad’s killer. Just end the investigation right now. You have the power to do that.”

Mae said it would be unethical to end the investigation for personal gain.

“Who cares?!” Sarah urged. “Dad’s killer could be set free!”

The episode ended with Sarah asking what she’s going to do, and Mae having no answer. This case has the potential to create public scandal for Mae’s entire career and family.

Boston Blue, Fridays, 10/9c, CBS




This story originally appeared on TV Insider

How IT leaders can build successful AI strategies — the VC view – Computerworld

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The AI gold rush these days is littered with abandoned enterprise projects, with humans — not the technology itself — being blamed for high failure rates of AI projects.

Recent data indicates that stagnant AI projects were often the result of poor vision, mismanagement, and a lack of resources.

Eagerness from the top to become “AI-first” companies is also putting pressure on C-suite execs and other IT decision-makers who might not have the budgets, systems, or tools for success.

Though IT leaders will get better at dealing with AI as they gain experience, the learning curve is steep, said Jack Gold, an analyst at J. Gold Associates. “It’s not really all that different from past new technologies and the challenges they posed, such as early databases, the move to web and browser-based apps and more,” he said.

Early-stage venture capital (VC) firms act as validators of AI technologies. Partners are usually as engaged as the founders of AI startups, attending meetings with tech leaders, prototyping, and guiding portfolio companies.

But VCs and CIOs have different risk profiles and priorities when it comes to AI. “When the CIOs are involved, it’s in a very different way…. That CIO is thinking about whether or not they’re going to get fired,” said Julia Moore, managing partner at Breakout Ventures.

With that in mind, Computerworld talked to venture capitalists about how companies could deliver on successful AI projects.

1. Look at how AI will change business

It’s clear now that AI is transforming existing business structures, operational layers, organizational charts, and processes. “As a CIO, if you look at long term, you get better visibility of the outcomes of AI,” said Sandhya Venkatachalam, founder and partner at Axiom Partners.

“Today, a lot of these net new capabilities are taking the form of AI performing the work or producing the outcomes that humans do, versus emulating or automating software tools,” Venkatachalam said.

The shift will inevitably displace legacy systems and processes. She cited customer support as an early area ripe for upheaval.

“Who is going to disrupt Salesforce from an AI perspective?” Venkatachalam said. “Because [at] call centers…, people [used to be] answering calls; 1763803683 AI is answering calls…and you just saved a bunch of money.”

2. Focus on outcomes, not just AI technology

IT leaders should frame AI projects around results, not technology, said Moore.  “Founders look at impact as opposed to the technology in a way — is this going to change this particular industry, as opposed to what is the AI technology behind it?” Moore said.

Tech chiefs can focus on high-leverage work that creates value by automating time-consuming tasks, said Brad Harrison, founder and managing partner at Scout Ventures.

“For CIOs…, think big term, prototype, understand, worry less about the technology and worry about the outcomes — and think about big picture,” Harrison said.

3. Think about what you need tomorrow, not today

VCs typically don’t look at what buyers need right now; they look ahead. Similarly, IT leaders should look at how AI can transform their industry in the future.

The real value of AI is in displacing legacy stacks and processes, and short wins or scattered AI initiatives mean nothing, Venkatachalam said.

Adding AI to existing workflows — like building an internal large language model (LLM) — is often a waste. Enterprises are also wasting time building proprietary tools and infrastructures, which duplicates work already commoditized by big research labs, Venkatachalam said.

AI tools change every six months, and the focus should be on big-picture outcomes, not technology. “We don’t fund the 17th AI coding co-pilot, or yet another attempt to change search. Again, all good, useful stuff, completely covered, completely valued, but not the next big thing,” Venkatachalam said.

Axiom Partners’ investments include HR firms such as Circle8 and the fintech company Cannock-EDR.

4. Partner to move faster

Enterprise organizations cannot move at the speed of transformation required by AI. That’s why IT leaders should partner with AI-native startups, which typically move faster. Most companies “are not designed for the speed of transformation that’s happening right now with compute and AI,” Harrison said.

Harrison’s Scout Ventures has invested in companies building AI tools in the defense industry. His annual gatherings connect portfolio firms with enterprise partners such as Lockheed Martin, L3Harris, IBM, and Red Hat.

Enterprise IT leaders also get access to a larger community of founders working on solving AI problems. “They’re getting really, really good at layering AI into solving these different pieces of the value chain in the right way and they’re getting really good efficiency out of that,” Harrison said.

Partnering with AI-native companies saves time and money and affects success rates, especially for first-time implementers, the VCs said.

5. Align your AI strategy to verticals

AI strategies link IT directly to core products, which dictates market survival. IT decision-makers should align AI strategies to their verticals markets. 

Physical AI is considered the next big AI technology after agents in some areas. And Harrison’s investments are in verticals such as defense and law enforcement, where AI manifests in the physical world. 

The defense industry demands real-world accountability, and AI technology can’t be experimental, Harrison said. “Where it meets the physical world is where I think we can have the most impact on humanity,” he said.

Moore’s Breakout Ventures invests in early-stage AI companies building datasets and tools that ultimately affect human health. In markets such as pharma and biotech, the science business is turning into a data business, she said.

“If you look at the life sciences…, you’re dealing with physics, chemistry, biology…, a much more complex data set. And so naturally pharma has to stay ahead of the game, because the competition is all digital, it’s all data,” Moore said.

6. Create an AI-first culture

Perhaps the biggest hurdle isn’t technical, but cultural. Younger “digital natives,” especially Gen-Z workers, view AI tools differently than senior leadership.

“There is a generational difference in how people are connected… digital natives versus digital immigrants,” Harrison said.

IT leaders should step out of the corner office and engage directly with team members and AI projects, which will bring useful insights. “I’m like… use your big brain, take one hour a week and put it towards that project,” Harrison said. “I think a lot of things would be much, much better.”

7. Get your hands dirty

IT leaders need to encourage internal prototyping and experimentation to stay ahead of the fast-moving AI curve.

John Mannes, a partner at Basis Set Ventures, said his team includes machine-learning engineers and data scientists that are brainstorming, prototyping, and building tools.

Mannes said it’s much more fun for CTOs and founders when his team can say, “Yeah, we tried those seven tools for databases, too, and don’t even waste your time with these six because holy hell, right?

“You’re in the trenches,” Mannes said. “It earns trust and it makes us much smarter as well, in terms of the people we surround ourselves with and how we support them.”



This story originally appeared on Computerworld