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Saturday, February 25, 2023

How to Ask for a Promotion



S50

How to Ask for a Promotion

First, reflect on what you want. Is there a job you covet or do you wish to create a new role? Do you want to move up — or might a lateral move interest you? Answering these questions helps you position your request. Second, build a case. Prepare a memo that outlines your strengths, recent successes, and impact. Next, talk to your boss and make your intentions clear. Beware that asking for a promotion is rarely a “one and done” discussion; rather, it’s a series of ongoing conversations. Your objective is to plant the seed and then nurture that seed over time. Finally, don’t get discouraged if you don’t get what you want right away. Continue to do good work and look for ways to elevate the level at which you operate.



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S1
United Airlines Just Made a Big Announcement, and Passengers Will Be Very Happy

What's your marketing message? Who is your target audience? What's your real product?

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S2
Mark Zuckerberg Can't Stop Copying the Competition. This Time It Could Be the End of Facebook

Meta's most recent 'innovations' are just the latest examples the company is headed in the wrong direction.

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S3
I Transformed a Shed Into the Perfect Home Office for Working Remotely

Three principles everyone who works from home should think about when designing their space.

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S4
My Business Had Its Worst Month In Years. It Was The Best

How do you bounce back from a bad month of business? Stretch out of your
comfort zone.

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S5
3 Questions Leaders Must Ask

New research reveals three reflective questions for leaders struggling with employee retention and turnover.

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S6
New Research Shows This Simple Habit Will Make You Happy and You Can Do It in 10 Minutes a Day

In a study with 900 participants, those who did this were measurably happier than those who didn't.

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S7






S8
Why Digital Ability Trumps IQ

In 2013, as fast-emerging digital technologies and channels were creating a sea change in consumer product marketing, A.G. Lafley, then CEO of Procter & Gamble, acted to ensure that the consumer packaged goods giant would not be left behind. He appointed F.D. Wilder, one of this article’s coauthors, as global head of e-business and tasked him with driving digital transformation across P&G’s many brands. The goal of this initiative was to develop and integrate P&G’s digital marketing abilities, e-commerce channels, and IT platforms — driving up sales, profit margins, and cash flow in the process.

As the e-business team considered this challenging mandate, it focused on the digital marketing ability of P&G’s brand and business managers as a key enabler of the transformation. Unfortunately, the team found that the literature regarding digital transformation tends to give short shrift to the capability of leaders: It focuses mainly on raising the “digital IQ” of the workforce — that is, the measurement of how much an organization can profit from digital and technological solutions.

Digital IQ has its limitations as an effective measure of ability, not the least of which is its strong emphasis on teaching and testing for generic vocabulary and knowledge. Yet digital and other transformational efforts nearly always require employees to work in new and unfamiliar ways. To ensure that they can do this new work, leaders must be able to assess employee ability by connecting it not only to knowledge and skills but also to targeted actions and performance outcomes. Only then can they identify and activate pockets of strength in the digital ability of employees and isolate and remediate pockets of weakness.



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S9
Five comfort foods to celebrate Ukraine

While Ukraine and its people have been forever changed by Russia's full-scale invasion over the past year, one thing that has remained constant is Ukrainians' drive to not only fight for their country but also for their culture and identity. One way they are preserving their heritage is through their cuisine. 

As chef Ievgen Klopotenko from 100 Rokiv Tomu Vpered restaurant in Kyiv said, "I'm not on the front line, I'm on the food line. That's why I have to fight here."





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S10
Buttery Nalysnyky (Ukrainian crepes) with Sweet Syr Filling

The rich black soil of southern Ukraine yields some of the best produce in Europe, with fresh, juicy tomatoes and watermelons harvested from local farmlands. That's what comes to mind when Ukrainian cookbook author, Anna Voloshyna, thinks of her hometown of Snihurivka – an otherwise "ordinary town" just 35 miles north of Kherson.

"I was lucky to be born and raised there, because I learned how to choose my produce, where my meat was coming from and I just learned to love my cuisine so much," she said.





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S11
Nudli: Ukrainian dumpling stew

Nudli is a celebratory dish, if you ask Olia Hercules – an award-winning Ukrainian cookbook author. Traditionally, it's a hearty, comforting dumpling stew traditionally made with meat, onions and potatoes, perfect for a cold winter's day.

Hercules' take on it is an adaptation of an adaptation that tells a piece of her family's story. Her grandmother would make the dumplings with bicarbonate of soda and serve them with meat, usually slow-cooked duck or pork ribs. But her husband is a vegetarian, so Hercules' mother swapped the meat for mushrooms. Then Hercules herself ditched the bicarbonate of soda for a yeasted dough to make the dumplings. This, she said, creates a lighter dough that's easier for first-timers to make and more enjoyable to eat throughout the year.





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S12
Sour cherry varenyky (dumplings)

Sour cherry varenyky were a staple of Lena Sutherland's childhood home in the Ukrainian port city of Odesa in the 1950s. They're a sweet spin on Ukrainian dumplings that more commonly run savoury with potato and other fillings. But Sutherland, owner of the recently opened Lena's Ukrainian Kitchen in the northern English city of Hull, sings the praises of fruity fillings.

"In Ukraine, we use a lot of fruits and berries to make pies, piroshki, varenyky and pancakes," she said. "That's my memory of home."





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S13
Holubtsi: Ukrainian cabbage rolls

An array of vegetables and starches were laid out on a metal kitchen counter: a plate of blanched Savoy cabbage leaves, a bowl of creamy mashed potatoes, a side of fried onions and a cup of boiled buckwheat groats. 

"Ukrainian cuisine is comfort food," said Yurii Kovryzhenko, the chef and mastermind behind Mriya Neo Bistro, a new Ukrainian eatery in the West London neighbourhood of Chelsea. "We enjoy fresh ingredients with simple flavours."





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S14
The UK's four-day working week pilot was a success - here's what should happen next

The world’s largest four-day working week trial has just ended and almost all of the companies that participated have decided to continue with a reduced working hours model.

Participants in the trial agreed to produce the same output for the same pay, while reducing their hours to a four-day week. Revenues stayed largely the same across the 61 organisations (and 2,900 employees) that took part in the UK pilot, while employee wellbeing improved significantly, according to a report on the scheme.



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S15
South Africa's intelligence agency needs speedy reform - or it must be shut down

South Africa’s civilian intelligence service, the State Security Agency, is a broken institution. It is meant to provide intelligence to forewarn the country about national security threats.

Powerful individuals aligned to former president Jacob Zuma, presumably at his behest, repurposed the institution to help him maintain his grip on power. It was one of many institutions that were repurposed for improper personal or political gain during his tenure (May 2009 to February 2018): a process that has become known as state capture.



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S16
China: why Beijing has decided this is the year to 'unify' with Taiwan

Senior Economist, IMD World Competitiveness Center, International Institute for Management Development (IMD)

Some believe the Chinese government could use military action to distract its population from troubles at home after China’s economic growth fell to its second lowest level for decades in 2022.



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S17
Dystopian games: how contemporary stories critique capitalism through deadly competition

If our nightmares change, what does that tell us about our waking lives? Dystopian stories, from novels and films to games, have often been considered a pessimistic reflection on the direction society is going in.

Classic dystopias usually offer a vision of a totalitarian state, equipped with an apparatus of repression and propaganda, for instance, 1984 by George Orwell or The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood. Beyond the external threat of authoritarian and violent control, these fictions also offer dystopian visions of how individuals can be corrupted, indoctrinated and transformed.



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S18
How a digital pound could work alongside cryptocurrencies

Like many other countries, the UK has developed a plan for a central bank digital currency (CBDC). A digital pound would essentially act like an online form of cash suitable for everyday payments. It would not earn any interest like a standard savings account (or even some current accounts), but it could increase access to financial services in the UK.

The Bank of England recently proposed a general framework for how a digital pound would work. It has suggested an ambitious timeline for introducing one by 2025. You have until June 7 2023 to tell the bank what you think of its plan.



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S19
Why are so many Gen Z-ers drawn to old digital cameras?

The latest digital cameras boast ever-higher resolutions, better performance in low light, smart focusing and shake reduction – and they’re built right into your smartphone.

Even so, some Gen Z-ers are now opting for point-and-shoot digital cameras from the early 2000s, before many of them were born.



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S20
Project Veritas fired James O'Keefe over fear of losing its nonprofit status - 5 questions answered

James O'Keefe, the founder of Project Veritas, says he has been fired. He is no longer leading the conservative nonprofit organization, which is known for its use of hidden cameras and false identities to try to catch members of the media and progressive leaders saying embarrassing things and to expose their supposed liberal biases.

To learn more about the accusations against O'Keefe and what the legal consequences might be for the tax-exempt organization, The Conversation asked nonprofit law scholar Samuel Brunson five questions to explain the situation and the issues it raises.



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S21
Historic UAW election is bringing profound changes to the autoworker union's leadership - and chances of better pay, more strikes and higher car prices

A fight for control of the United Auto Workers union is coming to a head in a historic election that’s expected to give rank-and-file workers a greater voice and could ultimately end decades of declining blue-collar compensation in this key sector of the economy.

Ballot counting starts March 1, 2023, in a runoff that will decide whether an incumbent or challenger will be the next UAW president and determine the balance of power within the union.



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S22
I assisted Carter's work encouraging democracy - and saw how his experience, persistence and engineer's mindset helped build a freer Latin America over decades

Jennifer Lynn McCoy is professor of political science at Georgia State University and a nonresident scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. She was Associate Director and Senior Associate from 1987-1998 and Director of the Carter Center's Americas Program from 1998-2015.

When former President Jimmy Carter and his wife Rosalynn Carter founded the nonprofit Carter Center in 1982, one of their goals was to help Latin American countries – many of which were emerging from decades of military dictatorship – transition to democracies.



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S23
The looming stalemate in Ukraine one year after the Russian invasion

Founding Director, Modern War Institute, United States Military Academy West Point

Most military analysts expected Ukraine to fall within days when Russia launched its invasion on Feb. 24, 2022.



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S24
All wars eventually end - here are 3 situations that will lead Russia and Ukraine to make peace

It’s been a year since Russia first launched a full invasion of Ukraine, and, right now, peace seems impossible.

In February 2023, a senior Ukrainian official said that peace talks are “out of the question” – without Ukraine’s reclaiming its territory that Russia overtook 2022.



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S25
Ukraine: Beijing's peace initiative offers glimpse at how China plans to win the war

Beijing’s “Position on the Political Settlement of the Ukraine Crisis” has now been officially released by the country’s foreign ministry, after being foreshadowed by China’s top diplomat, Wang Yi, at the recent Munich Security Conference.

Short on detail and rich in generalities, the peace plan confirms what Beijing sees as China’s “balanced position”. This, to date, has avoided directly pointing the finger of blame at anyone and continues to leave ample room for interpretation. It may not offer a clearly charted path out of the crisis, but it is an important statement of China’s vision for global, Eurasian and European security.



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S26
Ireland has lost almost all of its native forests - here's how to bring them back

Despite its green image, Ireland has surprisingly little forest. Across Europe, nations average around 35% forest cover but in Ireland the figure is just 11%, one of the lowest on the continent.

This hasn’t always been the case. Thousands of years ago, more than 80% of the island of Ireland was covered in trees. Over many centuries they were then almost entirely chopped down to make way for fields and pastureand by 1925, only 1% was forested. The only trees that remained were on land that was unsuitable for any type of agriculture.



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S27
Omagh police shooting: why attack comes at a difficult time in Northern Ireland

The shooting of a police officer in Omagh on Thursday evening is another horrific reminder that Northern Ireland remains a deeply and dangerously divided society. Though it has not been confirmed that the assailants were paramilitaries, the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) has stated that it is investigating links to dissident republicanism.

Detective Chief Inspector John Caldwell was shot multiple times, and is currently in a stable but critical condition, with what are described as “life-changing injuries”. A senior police officer, Caldwell has played a leading role in investigations of non-political criminality, but also high profile cases involving dissidents, including the killing of fellow PSNI officer Ronan Kerr in 2011, and that of journalist Lyra McKee in 2019 – the latter also resulting from an attempted attack on the police.



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S28
How to avoid falling victim to an online scam -- research says slow down

Keeping up with the latest digital cons is exhausting. Fraudsters always seem to be one step ahead. But our study found there is one simple thing you can do to drastically reduce your chances of losing money to web scams: slow down.

In fact, among the various techniques used by scammers, creating a sense of urgency or the need to act or respond quickly is probably the most damaging. As with many legitimate sales, acting fast reduces your ability to think carefully, evaluate information and make a careful decision.



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S29
Driverless cars: what we've learned from experiments in San Francisco and Phoenix

Residents of San Francisco and Phoenix have grown used to witnessing something that, a decade ago, would have seemed magical. In some parts of these cities, at certain times, cars drive by with nobody behind the wheel.

Driverless “robotaxi” services pick up customers and ferry them to their destinations with the help of cameras, sensors and software that uses artificial intelligence. Tests of fully driverless vehicles have been under way in Phoenix since 2017 and in San Francisco since 2020.



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S30
The art of balding: a brief history of hairless men

Balding is really common, affecting more than 50% of men. It’s also physically inconsequential (bald men live just as long as haired men). So why, in his memoir Spare, does Prince Harry refer to his brother’s baldness as “alarming”?

As a social psychologist with a special interest in balding (and author of an upcoming book entitled Branding Baldness), I know this didn’t used to be the case – as the presence of balding men in art history demonstrates.



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S31
Doctors are leaving Ireland and heading for Australia in droves - here's why

In 2022, 442 Irish doctors were issued with temporary work visas for Australia. This is a significant number of doctors compared with the total that Ireland trains each year (725 graduated in 2021).

Disinterest in doctor emigration stems from the belief that emigrant doctors will return and that doctor emigration will benefit Ireland.



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S32
The American right has gone to war with 'woke capitalism' -

Ron DeSantis, Florida’s Republican governor and likely future presidential contender, has opened up a new front in his party’s war on “woke capitalism”. He is proposing to change the rules around how public bodies within Florida borrow from the markets by issuing bonds.

The proposal is that they would no longer be able to work with ratings agencies that value the bonds using the ESG (environmental, social and governance) sustainability criteria that have become commonplace in the world of finance in the past few years. Public bodies and companies with lower ESG scores can see this reflected in their borrowing costs, and some politicians on the right object to this “interference” with market valuations.



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S33
“Cocaine Bear” and the Problem of High-Concept Plots

Darkness falls. Out in the woods, under the pelting of a pitiless storm, a middle-aged American male, stripped to the waist, fights a furious bear. This elemental sequence comes from a 1977 film, scarily titled "Day of the Animals," and the joy of it is that the battling man is played by Leslie Nielsen, and that the movie is not—repeat, not—intended as a comedy. What, you may ask, could top that?

One answer is "Cocaine Bear," a new film written by Jimmy Warden and directed by Elizabeth Banks. Allegedly, it's based on true events, in much the same way that "Pinocchio" is based on string theory. Our story begins with duffelbags of cocaine being tossed out of a plane over the Chattahoochee National Forest, in 1985. The bags belong to a drug dealer, Syd (Ray Liotta), and he wants them safely gathered in. To that end, his son, Eddie (Alden Ehrenreich), and a henchman, Daveed (O'Shea Jackson, Jr.), are dispatched to the great green wilds of Georgia. Also in attendance, and innocent of any crime, is a nurse named Sari (Keri Russell). She, too, is desperately seeking what is lost—her thirteen-year-old daughter, Deirdre, or Dee Dee (Brooklynn Prince), who has skipped school and gone hiking with her friend Henry (Christian Convery). Law enforcement is represented by a cop from out of state, Bob (Isiah Whitlock, Jr.), and a local ranger, Liz (Margo Martindale). The animal kingdom is represented by a butterfly, a deer, and a black bear. Only one of these is on cocaine, although with butterflies you can never really tell.



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S34
The Supreme Court Probably Won’t Break the Internet—At Least for Now

This week, the nine Justices of the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in two cases that could change the Internet. "These are not the nine greatest experts on the Internet," Justice Elena Kagan joked, on Tuesday, and was met with laughter in the courtroom. Nonetheless, in five hours of arguments throughout two days, the Justices interrogated the inner workings of online platforms. The first case, Gonzalez v. Google, focusses on the recommendation algorithms that steer users to specific pieces of content. Is suggesting an article, image, or video the same as supporting it? The second, Twitter v. Taamneh, considers whether platforms are responsible for the content that their users share online. If the answer to either question is yes, then many tech companies would need a fundamental overhaul.

In 1996, Congress passed a sprawling telecommunications law, which included a provision, Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, that had the effect of shielding early Internet-service providers—companies such as CompuServe and Prodigy—from legal liability for users' actions. "No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider," the section reads, in part. Whereas traditional publishers take legal responsibility for what they publish—they can be sued for libel if they knowingly print falsehoods—Section 230 framed the tech companies differently. It protected them from civil claims like libel lawsuits, while also granting them the freedom to moderate objectionable content. (The section's full name is "Protection for private blocking and screening of offensive material.") To this day, platforms, including Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and TikTok, are not usually held responsible for content that they did not directly create. In theory, Gonzalez v. Google and Twitter v. Taamneh could change that.



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S35
The Pandemic at Three: Who Got It Right?

As the COVID-19 pandemic approaches its fourth year, the physician and contributing writer Dhruv Khullar examines which strategies worked to control the virus, and talks with the C.D.C.’s director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, about the problem of misinformation. Can we fix the pandemic response in a country that seems broken? The staff writer Jia Tolentino talks with Stephanie Hsu, whose performance in “Everything Everywhere All at Once” received one of the film’s eleven Oscar nominations; the film is considered a front-runner for the coveted Best Picture award. And the film critic Richard Brody hands out the awards that matter to people who really care about film: the Brody Awards.

The contributing writer Dhruv Khullar examines which strategies worked to control the virus, and talks with the C.D.C.’s director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, about the problem of misinformation.



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S36
Is Ukraine the Next Battle in American Politics?

This week, Joe Biden visited Kyiv to mark the first anniversary of Russia’s invasion, and promised more American support for Ukraine. Although the United States has approved tens of billions of dollars of aid for Ukraine, largely with bipartisan support, the war is increasingly a focus in U.S. domestic politics, with some congressional Republicans and the Florida governor, Ron DeSantis, raising objections. The staff writers Susan B. Glasser, Jane Mayer, and Evan Osnos gather for their weekly conversation, discussing how the war has upended expectations and may also upend American politics, as the far right and far left appear to be coming together in opposition to U.S. support for Ukraine.

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S37
What a Sixty-Five-Year-Old Book Teaches Us About A.I.

Neural networks have become shockingly good at generating natural-sounding text, on almost any subject. If I were a student, I’d be thrilled—let a chatbot write that five-page paper on Hamlet’s indecision!—but if I were a teacher I’d have mixed feelings. On the one hand, the quality of student essays is about to go through the roof. On the other, what’s the point of asking anyone to write anything anymore? Luckily for us, thoughtful people long ago anticipated the rise of artificial intelligence and wrestled with some of the thornier issues. I’m thinking in particular of Jay Williams and Raymond Abrashkin, two farseeing writers, both now deceased, who, in 1958, published an early examination of this topic. Their book—the third in what was eventually a fifteen-part series—is “Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine.” I first read it in third or fourth grade, very possibly as a homework assignment.

Danny Dunn, you may recall, is a “stocky and red-haired” elementary schooler. His father is dead, and he and his mother live with Professor Euclid Bullfinch, “a short, plump man with a round bald head,” who teaches at Midston University. Bullfinch “took the place of the father Danny had never known,” the book explains, and Mrs. Dunn supports herself and her son by working as his cook and housekeeper. We aren’t told how Danny’s father died—heart attack? car accident? murder?—and we know next to nothing about sleeping arrangements in the house. (“Now take your fingers out of my cake, Professor Bullfinch,” Mrs. Dunn says in the first book in the series.) But we do know that Bullfinch encourages Danny’s interest in science and lets him fool around in his private laboratory, which occupies “a long, low structure at the rear of the house.”



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S38
Disney Wants You to Blame 'Black Panther 2' for Why 'Ant-Man 3' Looks so Bad

Superhero fatigue has officially crept in, but it’s not just former fans shrugging off the near-constant onslaught of media starring A-list celebrities as beloved comic book crusaders.

Visual effects workers, the magicians that render the impossible possible on-screen, are losing steam. It’s not their fault that they can’t make the supes look super anymore— they’re exhausted. In the specific case of Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, third in the Ant-Man trilogy and the second-ever title in the sprawling 31-movie Marvel Cinematic Universe to go “rotten” on the Tomatometer, it isn’t just burnout (or, at least, that’s Disney’s deflection).



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S39
You Need to Watch the Most Chilling Wall Street Thriller Before it Leaves Netflix Next Week

2011 brought us new installments of Scream, Final Destination, and Paranormal Activity, remakes of ‘80s classics Fright Night and The Thing, and Adam Wingard’s calling card, You’re Next. But for a significant percentage of cinemagoers, the film most likely to induce sweaty palms, racing hearts, and an overwhelming sense of dread was a wordy Wall Street drama whose only kill was a euthanized dog.

J.C. Chandor’s remarkably self-assured directorial debut, Margin Call, takes place over a specific 24-hour period in 2008 in which the terror is provided not by a crazed killer, but the imminent collapse of the global stock market. Within the first 10 minutes, more than 40 percent of its unnamed bank’s workforce has been picked off in a manner more ruthless than Jason Voorhees.



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S40
Rhea Seehorn Wants You to Find "Hope" in Science Fiction

The Better Call Saul star reflects on her new indie sci-fi Linoleum and gives a status update on her mysterious next project with Vince Gilligan.

After six seasons on one of TV’s buzziest hits, Better Call Saul fan-favorite Rhea Seehorn would love to see her new sci-fi dramedy, Linoleum, receive some of that same attention.



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S41
'Company of Heroes 3' Review: The Best RTS Game of the Last Decade

The Italian countryside is a smattering of burned-out buildings and craters as I desperately command my troops to reinforce a break in my defenses, but it only takes moments before everything comes crashing down.

The first Company of Heroes is one of the most important real-time strategy games of all time. It completely redefined how cover systems and squad mechanics could work in the genre. While Company of Heroes 2 wasn’t bad, per se, it made some serious missteps in terms of gameplay design, map size, and overall tone. 17 years later, there’s finally a sequel that lives up to the promise of the first game: Company of Heroes 3 is one of the most tactically satisfying RTS games of the last decade. The change in setting to the Mediterranean Front (Italy and Africa) versus the usual European and Pacific fronts works absolute wonders, and while Company of Heroes 3 doesn’t have any truly revolutionary mechanical changes, this strategic gameplay is the most expansive and chaotic it's ever been, in a good way.



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S42
'Succession' is Ending -- But There's Still Hope For More

Succession is unlike any other show on HBO, yet very similar to many. It has the politics of The West Wing, the behind-the-scenes action of The Newsroom, the satire of Veep, the scheming of The Sopranos, and the dynastic politics of Game of Thrones. Because of that, it’s been one of the cable channel’s most lauded shows in recent years.

But ahead of the premiere of Season 4 next month, showrunner Jesse Armstrong revealed that this season would be the show’s last, per The Hollywood Reporter. However, it may not be the end of the Roy-verse as a whole. There’s still one glimmer of light.



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S43
ChatGPT Clones Are Flooding App Stores With Scams

They say imitation is the highest form of flattery, and in some cases that may be true. But when it comes to ChatGPT, OpenAI’s buzzy new chatbot, I’m not sure “flattery” is the word that fits.

Like any buzzy new piece of technology ChatGPT is now dealing with the inevitable dark side of its popularity: dozens of shoddy (and potentially dangerous) app clones.



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S44
'Quantumania' Writer Says Kang's Biggest Threat Wasn't a Bluff: "He's Not Lying"

Screenwriter Jeff Loveness breaks down Scott Lang’s hilarious, and ominous, internal crisis.

Over 30 movies compose the epic Marvel Cinematic Universe. But the latest, Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania directed by Peyton Reed, does something pretty unusual for the genre in how it ends.



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S45
How to Complete the Search and Seizure Contract in 'Warzone 2.0'

As part of Call of Duty: Warzone 2.0 Season 2, Activision has added a brand new contract to battle royale. This all-new contract is called Search and Seizure, and it can be a bit of a pain, at least at first. Search and Seizure is available on Ashika Island, the new small-scale Resurgence map, and is tied to the Path of the Ronin event, which rewards you with the Crossbow upon completion. In this guide, we’ll show you how the new Search and Seizure contract works and the best strategies to complete it with ease.

To find Search and Seizure on Ashika Island, you need to look out for the contract indicated by a lock icon. Typically, each match will have a handful of them, so try and pick one that’s out of the way to ensure safety.



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S46
'Mortal Kombat 12' Release Date, Trailer, and Platforms

The bloodiest fighting game franchise of all-time finally has a new game in the works. Mortal Kombat 12, which hadn’t been mentioned before in any State of Plays or similar showcases, popped up in the Warner Bros. 2022 Q4 Earnings Call. The company spokesperson casually mentioned it when talking about games that would be releasing this year, including Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League. It was due for another game since Mortal Kombat 11, but it was still a surprise to quietly hear it during an earnings call rather than revealed through a glorious gameplay trailer.

Here’s everything we know about Mortal Kombat 12, which might be coming sooner than you think.



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S47
'Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League' Release Date, Trailer, and Gameplay

After countless leaks, rumors, fan-prodding, and false starts, Rocksteady Studios has confirmed that its next video game is Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League. Initially, a photo of Superman in the Suicide Squad's crosshairs was tweeted by Rocksteady on August 7, 2020. But beyond that, multiple trailers and images have been shown off, so we know a fair bit about the heroic reasons why the Suicide Squad comes to target the Justice League. Here's everything we know about Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League.

Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League was originally supposed to launch in 2022, but Creative Director Sefton Hill announced on Twitter in March 2022 that the game was delayed until spring 2023. He didn’t offer much in the way of explanation, but a good delayed game is always better than a flawed rushed game.



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S48
The Best Perk of PSVR 2? It Actually Fits My Glasses

We appreciated its focus on just being fun to play. We think its signature launch game might be the best case for virtual reality yet. And while I agree on both counts, I’m mainly happy the PSVR 2 fits over my glasses.

Comfort is something every VR hardware maker worth their salt pays attention to, but in the pursuit of offering higher fidelity experiences at lighter and lighter weights, some compromises have been made that frequently exclude the glasses-wearers among us. After giving the PSVR 2 a spin, one of the most exciting parts of the headset is how it bucks that trend.



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S49
Guillermo del Toro Has Another Fantastical Stop-motion Movie in the Works

The Nobel Prize-winning Kazuo Ishiguro's The Buried Giant is getting the Pinocchio treatment.

After scoring a Best Animated Feature Oscar nomination for the stop-motion masterpiece Pinocchio, Guillermo del Toro will continue to breathe new life into the beleaguered animation industry with another dark fairytale.



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S51
9 Trends That Will Shape Work in 2023 and Beyond

Last year was another tumultuous year in the workplace, with continued high employee turnover rates, evolving return-to-office policies, inflation, and more. In 2023, amid a looming economic downturn, organizations will continue to face significant challenges — and how they respond could determine whether they are an employer of choice. Several authors from Gartner’s HR practice predict nine trends that organizations will have to confront this year.



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S52
The 20 Most Common Things That Come Up During Reference Checks

Along with job applications, resumes, and interviews, a reference check is one of the most common parts of the hiring process. It remains the one piece of information that is not provided by the applicant him or herself, alleviating some of the problems with information that is provided by the applicant — faking, embellishment, and omissions of previous work or other related experience.



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S53
9 Trends That Will Shape Work in 2023 and Beyond

Last year was another tumultuous year in the workplace, with continued high employee turnover rates, evolving return-to-office policies, inflation, and more. In 2023, amid a looming economic downturn, organizations will continue to face significant challenges — and how they respond could determine whether they are an employer of choice. Several authors from Gartner’s HR practice predict nine trends that organizations will have to confront this year.



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S54
Planning Doesn't Have to Be the Enemy of Agile

Planning was one of the cornerstones of management, but it’s now fallen out of fashion. It seems rigid, bureaucratic, and ill-suited to a volatile, unpredictable world. However, organizations still need some form of planning. And so, universally valuable, but desperately unfashionable, planning waits like a spinster in a Jane Austen novel for someone to recognize her worth. The answer is agile planning, a process that can coordinate and align with today’s agile-based teams. Agile planning also helps to resolve the tension between traditional planning’s focus on hard numbers, and the need for “soft data,” or human judgment.



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S55
Why Daydreaming Is So Good For You

Often derided and the topic of many a teacher’s report card comment daydreaming, or mind-wandering, is generally seen as an undesirable activity, especially among school-age children from whom the education system demands unrelenting focus. “Monica likes to daydream,” notes home to my Mom would read. “I do wonder what she is thinking about.” And yet, on average, we daydream nearly 47% of our waking hours. If our brain spends nearly half of our awake time doing it, there is probably a good reason why.

The term “daydreaming” was coined by Julien Varendonck in 1921 in his book The Psychology of Day-Dreams (with a foreword by Sigmund Freud, so sort-of a big deal). While Varendonck and Freud saw benefits to daydreaming, the past 20 years have yielded research that portrays daydreaming as “a cognitive control failure,” with some researchers out of Harvard recently declaring “a wandering mind is not a happy mind.” An exception to that opinion was one held by the late eminent psychologist Jerome Singer, who spent most of his professional life researching daydreaming (he preferred the term to “mind-wandering”). Singer identified three types of daydreaming, and while two can have negative impacts, one is quite beneficial.



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S56
Do Rewards Really Create Loyalty?

Customer rewards have been reviled in the business press as cheap promotional devices, short-term fads, giving something for nothing. Yet they’ve been around for more than a decade, and more companies, not fewer, are jumping on the bandwagon. From airlines offering frequent flier deals to telecommunications companies lowering their fees to get more volume, organizations are spending millions of dollars developing and implementing rewards programs.



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S57
Management Time: Who's Got the Monkey?

Editor’s note: This article was originally published in the November–December 1974 issue of HBR and has been one of the publication’s two best-selling reprints ever. For its reissue as a Classic, HBR asked Stephen R. Covey to provide a commentary (see the sidebar “Making Time for Gorillas”).



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S58
Setting Goals with Self-Compassion: Our Favorite Reads

If you’re like me, the resolutions you set for yourself at the beginning of the year are far-away thoughts. Those new sneakers you got to jumpstart your workout routine haven’t seen much action. That journal you bought to help track your new habits is still blank. The pile of books on your shelf that you promised to read this year continues to collect dust.



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S59
3 Areas in Which to Partner With Black Entrepreneurs in 2023

A new survey of Black small-business owners lays out their challenges for the year.

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