Estate-approved biopics are basically a subgenre at this point. You get the music, you get the performance, you get a version of the life story that has been pre-approved for palatability. Michael is just the most expensive example so far.
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Estate-approved biopics are basically a subgenre at this point. You get the music, you get the performance, you get a version of the life story that has been pre-approved for palatability. Michael is just the most expensive example so far.
The technology sector is experiencing a paradox. While headlines scream about mass layoffs at major tech companies, a critical shortage is quietly building in one of the most essential areas of digital infrastructure. Datacenters, the physical backbone of our digital world, are facing an unprecedented demand surge, and there simply are not enough skilled professionals to build and maintain them. Countries across the globe are rushing to establish their own datacenter infrastructure. From India's ambitious plans to become a datacenter hub to the European Union's push for data sovereignty, and emerging markets in Southeast Asia and Latin America building their first large scale facilities, the construction boom is just beginning.
The Michael movie review verdict is in, and it is more complicated than the 26% Rotten Tomatoes score suggests. Antoine Fuqua's long-delayed Michael Jackson biopic, simply titled Michael, hit theaters this weekend with Jaafar Jackson playing his late uncle, and the critical response has been brutal. The BBC gave it one star. Roger Ebert's site called it a filmed playlist in search of a story. Yet early audience reactions on social media have been warmer, ticket pre-sales suggest an $80 million opening, and Variety thought it worked as an engrossing middle-of-the-road biopic. After tracking coverage across more than a dozen outlets over the past 48 hours, I think the honest answer to "should you watch this?" depends almost entirely on what you want from a music biopic, and this guide breaks down exactly what the film delivers, what it skips, and who will actually enjoy sitting through its two-hour-and-nine-minute runtime.
What the article calls typical BL visual conventions I would describe as genre literacy. Readers of BL manhwa recognize those conventions and the emotional shorthand they carry. The familiarity is not laziness. It is communication.
Reading this made me want to go start from the very first chapter again. The setup is so deceptively simple and then slowly reveals itself to be something much bigger and stranger.
Wait, where is Doom Breaker on this list? Zephyr regressing from having fought until the absolute last moment and then getting a second chance is one of the most emotionally loaded regression setups in the genre right now.
Word of mouth has been the whole engine for this series from the start. No massive marketing push, just people reading it and immediately wanting to tell someone.
In a manhwa landscape dominated by dungeon crawling, regression narratives, and power fantasies, The Greatest Estate Developer stands out by asking a simple question: what if the protagonist's greatest weapon wasn't a sword or magic system, but civil engineering knowledge? This bizarre premise transforms into one of the most entertaining, genuinely funny, and surprisingly heartfelt series currently running, proving that innovation in storytelling comes from unexpected places. The series takes the familiar isekai setup where a modern person finds themselves in a fantasy world and completely subverts expectations. Instead of becoming an adventurer or hero, protagonist Kim Suho uses his engineering knowledge to revolutionize construction, infrastructure, and economic development. What sounds like it should be boring becomes absolutely captivating through sharp writing, excellent comedic timing, and genuine passion for showing how infrastructure improves lives.
The manhwa world exploded when Solo Leveling first introduced us to Sung Jinwoo's journey from the weakest hunter to humanity's strongest defender. Now, Solo Leveling Ragnarok brings a fresh perspective to this beloved universe, and fans everywhere are asking the same questions. Can the sequel live up to the original? Do you need to read Solo Leveling first? What makes this continuation worth your time? This guide covers everything you need to know about Solo Leveling Ragnarok, whether you're a longtime fan or someone curious about jumping into the series Solo Leveling Ragnarok is not a reboot or alternate timeline. This is a direct sequel that continues the story years after the original series concluded. The protagonist shifts from Sung Jinwoo to his son, Sung Suho, who must forge his own path in a world still recovering from the catastrophic events his father prevented.
Building software is hard because thinking clearly about what you want is hard. The AI did not solve that problem. It just made the execution part cheaper. The hard part was always the thinking.
Competition is making both products better faster than either would improve alone. That is the actual headline here.
Every time I think I understand what drives crypto prices, something like Iran considering Bitcoin for oil payments happens and I realize I have no idea about anything.
TikTok is betting that most users will never read this article and will just keep scrolling. And they are probably right about that.
She has been so visible through controversy and so private through personal difficulty. A Paris fashion show feels like a calibration toward something that just brings her joy.
Anyone else think this would be amazing for a first date? Sophisticated but not trying too hard
Do you think this skirt would work for a summer wedding if dressed up with heels and fancier jewelry?
Love how the makeup adds glamour without overpowering the outfit. Those lashes are everything!
Would you wear this to a job interview? I'm thinking yes but maybe with a blazer added?
Has anyone tried styling those fringe pants with sneakers? I want to make them work for daytime
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