Saturday, November 22
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Warner Music settles copyright lawsuit with AI startup Udio, inking deal to collaborate on song creation service set to launch in 2026 (More)
> The Weeknd's After Hours ‘Til Dawn tour grosses over $1B, a feat first achieved by Taylor Swift's Eras tour in 2023 (More) | Lainey Wilson wins Country Music Association Awards' entertainer of the year title (More)
> National Book Awards presents lifetime achievement awards to Roxane Gay and George Saunders and recognizes five literary works—three by authors of Middle Eastern origin whose writings explore the region (More)
Science & Technology
> Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin reveals designs for larger, more powerful rocket, positioning the space exploration company to compete more directly with Elon Musk's SpaceX for NASA contracts (More)
> Scientists identify cells responsible for building facial features, shedding light on how genetic information from both parents combines to shape appearance and the origins of certain facial abnormalities (More)
> Researchers map ancient mammal and reptile species' transition from land back to water using machine-learning algorithms and World War II-era naval statistics, filling a gap in evolutionary history (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close down (S&P 500 -1.6%, Dow -0.8%, Nasdaq -2.2%); bitcoin falls to lowest value since April (More)
> US employers added 119,000 nonfarm jobs in September, more than the 50,000 jobs economists had forecast, per delayed jobs report; unemployment rate rose to 4.4%, the highest level since October 2021 (More)
> SoftBank to invest $3B in Ohio factory for OpenAI data centers as part of $500B Stargate project, for which SoftBank pledged a total of $18B (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> President Donald Trump criticizes Democratic lawmakers for video urging US military personnel to defy any illegal orders; calls video an act of sedition punishable "by death" (More)
> Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy receives the US' proposed plan to end war with Russia; plan reportedly calls on Ukraine to abandon territory and shrink its military force, weapons arsenal (More)
> Fire erupts at UN climate summit in Brazil; officials say 13 people were hospitalized for smoke inhalation as of this writing (More) | See video (More)
Novel Writing
My thoughts are always revolving around a scene or the plot like what might happen down the road, because of this happening previously.
I keep notes on each chapter, writing down what I think I may need to reflect back upon; however, no matter what I write down, I am always looking for something that I did not write down.
One of the nice features about MS Office 365 Online is that it comes with COPILOT; I can ask COPILOT questions or I can use its features like FIND...
Using FIND, I can type in a name, instantly have how many places where that name is used, enabling me to go back to the first instance, and check out what I wrote.
That feature has kept me from having to write down so much about each chapter.
COPILOT also lets me test out plot ideas and various scenarios to see if they make sense or if I have left something out. COPILOT also helps me lay out my thoughts and I can return to the library and reread what was discussed two weeks ago.
COPILOT is great for research, mapping out trips, and accuracy when it comes to details. If I use any of its replies, I always put it into my own words to stay consistent with the rest of what I have written.
It is a great secretarial assistant.
Two Six Centuries-Old Shipwrecks
Here’s what you’ll learn when you read this story:
- Crews working on the Varberg Tunnel railway project in Sweden recently uncovered six shipwrecks near the historic city.
- The wrecks ranged from the Middle Ages to the 17th century, and exemplified multiple ship designs and construction styles.
- The most intriguing ship was from the 1530s, as it remained the most intact for further study.
Construction on the Varberg Tunnel in Sweden—part of a modern railway project—has resulted in an unexpected bounty of historical underwater finds: six shipwrecks spanning the Middle Ages to the 17th century, all maritime remnants of what was once a bustling harbor.
Of the six separate wrecks found, four are from the Middle Ages (or Late Middle Ages), one is from the 17th century, and one couldn’t be dated, according to a translated report from archaeology consultant group Arkeologerna.
Friday, November 21
Headlines
Leandro Lozada/Getty Images
At A Glance
The joy of doing nothing in retirement.
The US' most and least expensive airports.
... and the best and worst days to travel for Thanksgiving.
Where federal benefits go. (via Instagram)
Belgian carbonara sparks outrage in Italy.
First-edition copy of "Superman" comic sells for record $9M.
Ranking 2025 Christmas movies.
Transportation Department cracks down on flight manners.
In partnership: Cooking for the holidays made easier.*
Clickbait: The case for dogs.
Historybook: French philosopher Voltaire born (1694); Thomas Edison announces phonograph invention (1877); Icelandic singer-songwriter Björk born (1965); Baseball great Ken Griffey Jr. born (1969); Robert Mugabe resigns as president of Zimbabwe after 37 years in office (2017).
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Retired Swiss tennis star Roger Federer—first man to win 20 Grand Slam singles titles—elected to International Tennis Hall of Fame in first year of eligibility (More)
> Women's Pro Baseball League inaugural draft kicks off tonight at 8 pm ET; season starts August 2026 and will be played at Illinois' Robin Roberts Stadium (More)
> At least two Miss Universe judges resign days before pageant, with one accusing organizers of rigged selection process (More) | Singer D4vd identified as suspect in death of 15-year-old girl found dead in vehicle he owned (More)
Science & Technology
> OpenAI rolls out ChatGPT built for K-12 educators, offering it to teachers and schools for free through June 2027 (More)
> Researchers identify rapidly growing supermassive black hole in galaxy that formed relatively soon after the Big Bang, suggesting black holes expanded at accelerated pace in the early universe (More)
> Scientists develop topical ointment capable of delivering insulin through skin, a potential alternative to invasive insulin injections for people with diabetes (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close up (S&P 500 +0.4%, Dow +0.1%, Nasdaq +0.6%), snapping losing streak ahead of Nvidia earnings (More) | Nvidia shares rise in after-hours trading on stronger-than-expected Q3 revenue and Q4 guidance (More)
> Labor Department confirms canceled October jobs report due to government shutdown; September jobs report to be released today (More) | Federal Reserve's October meeting minutes sow doubt over December rate cut (More)
> US trade deficit drops nearly 24% month-over-month in August as Trump administration's global tariffs reduce imports by 5% month-over-month (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> Larry Summers resigns from the board of OpenAI, leaves Harvard University instructor role following the release of email exchanges between him and late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein (More) | President Donald Trump signs bill compelling the Justice Department to release unclassified Epstein records within 30 days (More)
> Justice Department charges Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (D, FL-20) for allegedly stealing $5M in Federal Emergency Management Agency funds, funneling the money to support her congressional campaign (More)
> Japan's largest urban fire in nearly 50 years burns through the city of Oita on the southwestern island of Kyushu, damaging at least 170 buildings (More)
Imagine Part II
So...
yesterday, I imagined a guaranteed income because of all the jobs that will be lost due to advanced technology. Imagined or not, I believe IT WILL HAPPEN.
Yesterday, I also stated that I believed we would NEVER be able to imagine a world WITHOUT wars and religion.
BUT TODAY, I am going to imagine a world without DISEASE...
- like all cancers
- Heart disease
- Alzheimer's
- Diabetes
- Dementias
- Infections
This list would also include:
- hereditary
- deficiency
- psychological
- Artificial Intelligence
- Humanoid Robots
- and our willingness to let them grow!!!
The solar system may be racing through space 3 times faster than expected

Astronomers have discovered that the solar system may be moving through the cosmos over three times faster than was previously theorized. The discovery could have implications for the standard model of cosmology, our current best model to explain the structure, composition and evolution of the universe.
The team behind this research reached its conclusions using the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) radio telescope network and two other radio telescopes to map the distribution of radio galaxies, which they then used to measure the motion of the solar system. Radio galaxies are galaxies that emit unusually strong radio waves from "lobes" that extend well beyond their visible structure of stars.


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