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Bill Gates Isn’t Like Those Other Tech Billionaires
The older he gets, the more Bill Gates is surprised by what the world dishes up.
Take billionaires. There are many now from the tech industry, quite a few with politics that skew forcefully right.
“I always thought of Silicon Valley as being left of center,” Mr. Gates said. “The fact that now there is a significant right-of-center group is a surprise to me.”
Or take the evolution of technology in the decades since he began Microsoft and made it one of the world’s most valuable companies.
“Incredible things happened because of sharing information on the internet,” Mr. Gates said. That much he anticipated. But once social media companies like Facebook and Twitter came along, “you see ills that I have to say I did not predict.”
Political divisiveness accelerated by technology? “I didn’t predict that would happen,” he said. Technology being used as a weapon against the broader public interests? “I didn’t predict that,” he said.
Mr. Gates is a techno-optimist but he has limits, like cryptocurrency. Does it have any use?
“None,” he said. “There are people with high I.Q.s who have fooled themselves on that one.”
Even artificial intelligence, which Mr. Gates has spoken of enthusiastically, and which Microsoft is heavily invested in, produces a few qualms. “Now we have to worry about bad people using A.I.,” he said. (The New York Times has sued Microsoft and its partner OpenAI over copyright infringement; the companies have denied the claims.)
Mr. Gates, who turns 70 this year, is looking back a lot these days. Next week he is publishing “Source Code: My Beginnings,” which examines his childhood. The first of three projected volumes of memoirs, the book has been in the works for at least a decade but arrives at an unusual moment, as the tech billionaires have been unleashed. Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg — their success has given them power that they are enthusiastically, even gleefully, using in divisive ways.
“Source Code: My Beginnings,” which examines Bill Gates’s childhood, is the first of three projected volumes of memoirs. Thirty years ago, Mr. Gates created the model for the in-your-face tech billionaire. Microsoft in the 1990s supplied the operating system for the personal computers that were increasingly in every home and office, and the company had big plans for this new thing called the web. Mr. Gates and his company were perceived as powerful, ruthless and ubiquitous. Silicon Valley was terrified and even regulators were alarmed, suing Microsoft.
The anti-Microsoft sentiment in popular culture peaked with the 2001 movie “Antitrust,” about a tech chief executive who murders people in his quest for world domination. Reviewers underlined the allusions to Mr. Gates, although they largely panned the film.
The ire is long gone and Mr. Gates has no recollection of “Antitrust.” Among billionaires who generate strong emotions, he said with a hint of relief, “I’m not at the top of the list. The current tech titans would elicit a stronger negative reaction.”
He is a counterpoint to the moguls in the news. “We don’t have a club,” he said. “Nor do we have consensus. Reid Hoffman” — the co-founder of LinkedIn, a Microsoft board member and vocal supporter of former Vice President Kamala Harris — “is a billionaire. You can ask for his point of view. He’ll be glad to critique.”
Mr. Hoffman, who The Times reported in November was considering leaving the country after Ms. Harris’s election loss, did not respond to emails asking for his point of view. But plenty of others in Silicon Valley are watching the transformation of the billionaires into would-be overlords with a horrified fascination.
“It’s a steady subject of dismal conversation around here,” said Paul Saffo, a longtime tech forecaster. “The consensus is that Bill Gates looks sainted compared to the awfulness afoot.”
When we talked a few weeks ago, Mr. Gates was sitting on the other side of an office table in a rented suite in Indian Wells, Calif., next to the resort town of Palm Springs. Why were we here? It was cold in Seattle, still Mr. Gates’s home when he is not on the move. That was reason enough.
Despite giving many billions of dollars to the Gates Foundation, his philanthropic juggernaut, Mr. Gates remains the 12th-richest person in the world, with personal wealth of over $100 billion, according to Forbes. But his physique isn’t jacked, he does not have his own rocket fleet, and he seems eager to point out that he does not have all the answers.
After we spoke, Mr. Gates was going to President Carter’s funeral. President Carter was an inspiration and a partner; Mr. Gates’s foundation became a big funder of the Carter Center.
In some respects, they resembled each other. Mr. Gates and Mr. Carter each had two distinct careers, both of which took place in the public eye over years. After Mr. Carter was president, he spent more than 40 years doing good works at home and abroad. That second act tended to be reviewed more favorably than the first.
So too with Mr. Gates, although his divorce from Melinda French Gates in 2021 was a decided setback for his reputation. There was also an unseemly relationship with the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein.
“In India, Japan, China, the American dream is a vaunted thing, of which I am sort of an example,” Mr. Gates said. “And then there’s people who think there shouldn’t be billionaires. There’s people who think I use vaccines to kill children. There’s quite a range of opinions.”
Should billionaires be outlawed?
Mr. Gates is the opposite of the reclusive billionaire hidden away on his estate. He recently brought out his second Netflix series, “What’s Next? The Future With Bill Gates.”
The fourth of the five episodes, “Can You Be Too Rich?” had people, including Senator Bernie Sanders, the democratic socialist from Vermont, saying definitively yes. It was a mild but real form of self-criticism that few other billionaires would subject themselves to.
Working on the show didn’t change his mind, though. “Should we outlaw billionaires?” Mr. Gates asked. “My answer to that, and you can say I’m biased, is no.”
But he supports a tax system that is more progressive. Every year, he adds up the taxes he has paid over his lifetime. He figures he has paid $14 billion, “not counting sales tax.”
Under a better system, he calculates, he would have paid $40 billion. Released in September, “Can You Be Too Rich?” already seems from another era. The answer to Mr. Gates’s question, in an administration staffed by billionaires, is no.
Mr. Gates tries to be nonpolitical but he thought the consequences of the 2024 election were so significant he got involved financially for the first time. He gave $50 million to Future Forward, the principal outside fund-raising group supporting Ms. Harris, The Times reported in October. He didn’t talk publicly about it then and won’t now.
After our conversation, it came out that he had a three-hour dinner with the president-elect at the time, Donald J. Trump, about world health challenges like H.I.V. and polio. “He showed a lot of interest in the issues I brought up,” Mr. Gates told The Wall Street Journal.
This week the Trump administration created confusion over whether it would stop disbursing H.I.V. medications bought with U.S. aid. A spokeswoman for Mr. Gates declined to comment.
“I will engage this administration just like I did the first Trump administration as best I can,” Mr. Gates said in our interview.
A trial to his parents
Writing an autobiography is another way Mr. Gates is different from his peers, few of whom seem so introspective. His childhood, in an upper-class enclave in Seattle in the 1960s and early 1970s, is not inherently dramatic.
“A lot of people have the story of what a tough childhood they had, and how that is partly why they’re so competitive,” he said. “I don’t have that.”
What he did have was his mother, Mary Gates. She was remarkably accomplished in an era when most upper-class women were encouraged by society to stay home. The first woman president of King County’s United Way, she later was on the board of the United Way of America; in 1983, she was the first woman to run it.
“She was almost too intense for me,” Mr. Gates said. His father, a lawyer, was more removed but was drawn into the battle of wills.
There was a period when Bill — he was in sixth grade — was supremely difficult. “I could go days without speaking, emerging from my room only for meals and school,” he writes in “Source Code.” “Call me to dinner, I ignored you. Tell me to pick up my clothes, nope. Clear the table — nothing.”
“I was provoking them,” he said in our interview. “I didn’t think they had any logic for why I had to show respect for them. My mom was pretty pushy about ‘Eat this way,’ and ‘Have these manners,’ and ‘If you’re going to use the ketchup you have to put the ketchup in a bowl and have to put the bowl here.’ She thought of me as pretty sloppy. Because I was.”
It was not really about the ketchup, of course. “I didn’t have any negative feelings toward her but I could pretend to not care what she said in a way that definitely irritated her,” he said. “What was I trying to prove?”
Parents then could not keep tabs on their children if the children were determined. His sister Kristi, he remembers, “was wary of what might go wrong. Whereas I’m like, ‘Hey, what could go wrong?’” Bill spent much of his time programming, often sneaking away at night.
Then something did go wrong, at the end of his junior year in high school. His best friend, Kent, was mountain climbing, fell and died.
“It was Kent being an independent thinker, pushing his limits,” Mr. Gates said. “His parents worried about him and he was not naturally coordinated. And yet he seemed to be enjoying it and they didn’t stand in his way.”
What Mr. Gates learned from the tragedy was that life can be unfairly bad as well as unfairly good. He was very lucky; Kent was very unlucky.
Mr. Gates said that if his teenage self were diagnosed now, he would probably be told he was on the spectrum. Maybe his mother intuitively understood what he needed. “I wanted to exceed her expectations,” he said. “She was pretty good at always raising the bar.”
Raising the bar is what he consistently did when he and his friend Paul Allen started a company in Albuquerque in 1975 to produce software for the Altair 8800, a rudimentary personal computer. Mr. Gates was barely out of his teens. He soon moved the fledgling operation to the Seattle area, closer to his mother.
Stewart Alsop covered Mr. Gates when he was the editor of InfoWorld, an influential tech magazine of the era. “Bill gave the privilege of having dinner with him solo in Seattle every six months; the price was always coming up with something he hadn’t thought of,” Mr. Alsop said. That was easy as “he had a hard time seeing the world outside of his life.”
If Mr. Gates is on the spectrum, he now thinks it gave Microsoft an edge. “I didn’t believe in weekends; I didn’t believe in vacations,” he once said. He knew the license plate numbers of his employees so he could check if they tried to go home. It was a model for thousands of tech start-ups to come.
On the downhill side
“Source Code” ends with the beginning of Microsoft. Spreadsheets, databases and word processing were primitive tools, but users got an edge in productivity. The future would be better. “We really didn’t see much downside,” Mr. Gates said.
He kept his optimism for a long time. In 2017, he reviewed the book “Homo Deus,” by the Israeli philosopher Yuval Noah Harari. Mr. Gates took issue with the author’s warning about a potential future where the elite upgrade themselves through tech and the masses are left to rot. “This future is not preordained,” Mr. Gates wrote.
Now he is reading Mr. Harari’s latest book. “Nexus: A Brief History of Information Networks from the Stone Age to A.I.” is a critical analysis of our reliance on technology.
“Every smartphone contains more information than the ancient Library of Alexandria and enables its owner to instantaneously connect to billions of other people throughout the world,” Mr. Harari writes. “Yet with all this information circulating at breathtaking speeds, humanity is closer than ever to annihilating itself.”
Mr. Gates took “Nexus” personally. Mr. Harari “makes fun of people like myself who saw more information as always a good thing,” Mr. Gates said. “I would basically say he’s right and I was wrong.”
(Mr. Harari was unavailable for comment because he was attending a meditation course.)
To be clear, Mr. Gates is not apologizing. He remains a believer in the power and goodness of tech. But for all he resisted them initially, his mother’s lessons are evidently still with him. Mind your manners. Try and do good. And try not to get carried away.
As a billionaire, other people invest you with huge powers, Mr. Gates said. Because you are successful in one sphere, he mused, “they think you’re good at lots of things you’re not good at.”
It almost sounded like a warning.
Audio produced by Patricia Sulbarán.
Bill Gates: A Different Kind of Tech BillionaireIn a world where tech billionaires are often seen as eccentric, flashy, or even controversial, Bill Gates stands out as a different kind of billionaire. While he may not have the same rockstar persona or headline-grabbing antics as some of his peers, Gates has proven himself to be a thoughtful, strategic, and dedicated philanthropist.
Unlike other tech billionaires who may spend their money on extravagant purchases or vanity projects, Gates has focused his efforts on solving some of the world’s most pressing problems. Through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, he has dedicated his wealth and resources to issues like global health, education, and poverty alleviation.
Gates is also known for his humility and down-to-earth demeanor. Despite his immense wealth and influence, he is often described as approachable, personable, and genuinely interested in helping others. He has used his platform to raise awareness about important issues, advocate for policy changes, and inspire others to give back.
While other tech billionaires may be known for their flashy lifestyles or controversial behavior, Gates remains a shining example of how a billionaire can use their wealth for good. He has shown that success in the tech industry doesn’t have to come at the expense of ethics, compassion, or social responsibility.
In a world where tech billionaires are often criticized for their actions, Bill Gates stands out as a beacon of hope and inspiration. He reminds us that with great wealth comes great responsibility, and that true success is measured not just by financial gain, but by the positive impact we have on the world around us.
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#Bill #Gates #Isnt #Tech #Billionaires
Bam Adebayo isn’t sugercoating his recruiting pitch to other players – Hot Hot Hoops
Miami Heat big man Bam Adebayo won’t mince words to others about how the Miami Heat organization is run. (Mandatory Credit: Winslow Townson/Getty Images) The Miami Heat are still trying to navigate Jimmy Butler’s tumultuous situation, but he’s no longer the hottest name on the trade market. Sacramento Kings guard De’Aaron Fox, who’s in the fourth year of a five-year, $163 million deal, is. Though the most likely outcome is that Fox ends up in San Antonio, his preferred destination.
Fox is a former college teammate of current Heat big Bam Adebayo, who he has a very good relationship with. Adebayo was recently asked about his recruiting pitch to other players–and there’s zero beating around the bush.
“The thing is I’m telling you the whole truth. It’s not a recruiting pitch to me,” he said, according to Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald. “I’m telling you the truth. You’re going to get here, you know what it is. There is no BS, there is no, ‘I’m going to get my numbers.’ No, no, no. This is team basketball here. We’re going to play both sides of the basketball. So that’s 82 games, plus playoffs. I’m not sugarcoating anything. You make your decision from there.
“To me, if I consider you like family like De’Aaron, I’m not going to lie to you. You’re getting a coach that’s not going to let you go below your standard and sometimes that does get annoying. Sometimes that does rub you the wrong way. But it’s a coach that expects more out of you because he sees something. When you have a coach like that, you can’t take that for granted. There have been many coaches in some organizations that they’re there for a season. How are you supposed to bank equity with a coach who’s only there for a season, two seasons? You can’t really hone in and become something when it’s like that. For us, we got a coach that’s going to be here for a very long time that really cares about winning, but also cares about us.”
The Heat haven’t landed a big-time free agent since Kyle Lowry, who agreed to a three-year, $87 million deal ahead of the 2021-22 season. That was more Butler than Adebayo, however, as Butler and Lowry were close friends.
It’s worth appreciating how Adebayo isn’t afraid to tell other players like it is so they know what they’re walking into. Sure, most “recruiting pitches” involve plenty of sunshine pumping and telling you only about the good stuff; it’s a sales pitch. You don’t oftentimes hear the bad in the sales pitch.
But I would rather the captain tell me the truth–from the good, bad and ugly. That’s the sign of a very good captain. If you tell me how it is before we talk into the trenches, the same will be the case once we’re in it together.
Zero organization is perfect, but the Heat has been one of the most successful franchises since the turn of the century, barring none. They’ve had unheard-of organizational stability for the last 30 years and it’s held to three titles and seven Eastern Conference Titles, even though they haven’t climbed over the mountain top in over a decade.
Players talk. Adebayo has a strong rapport around the NBA. And given his status, players who ask about the vaunted #HEATCulture are going to listen, for better or worse. Don’t expect him to sugarcoat, however.
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Bam Adebayo isn’t pulling any punches in his recruiting efforts for the Miami Heat. In a recent interview with Hot Hot Hoops, Adebayo made it clear that he is not going to sugarcoat his pitch to potential teammates.“I’m not going to sit here and tell guys that it’s all sunshine and rainbows in Miami,” Adebayo said. “We work hard, we push each other, and we hold each other accountable. But at the end of the day, we win games and we have fun doing it.”
Adebayo’s no-nonsense approach to recruiting has already paid off, as the Heat have added several key players to their roster in recent years. And with Adebayo leading the charge, it’s clear that Miami is poised for even more success in the future.
So if you’re a player looking for a team that values hard work, accountability, and winning above all else, look no further than the Miami Heat. Bam Adebayo and his teammates are ready to welcome you with open arms.
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#Bam #Adebayo #isnt #sugercoating #recruiting #pitch #players #Hot #Hot #HoopsCody Rhodes Isn’t Sure Where He Stands With The Rock, Talks Possibilities For Himself On John Cena’s Retirement Tour
Cody Rhodes continues to make the media rounds heading into the first WWE premium live event of the year this evening, as WWE Royal Rumble 2025 goes down tonight at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana.
During a recent interview with TheOneMona ahead of tonight’s big event, “The American Nightmare” spoke about where he stands with “The Final Boss” Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson, as well as possibilities for himself for “The Last Time Is Now” WWE Retirement Tour of John Cena.
Featured below are some of the highlights from the interview where he touches on these topics with his thoughts.
On where he stands with The Rock: “I tell people always when it comes to The Rock and The Final Boss, I think personally that I feel he either sees something special in me and as the head of the board and as him and Nick Khan and Triple H leading us into this next generation, he sees something and wants to push me to go for it. That’s more from a behind-the-scenes perspective, but I also wonder in my own mind sometimes just kind of laying there looking up thinking maybe he hates me, absolutely hates me, and is planning some devious way to get back at me for the things that took place at WrestleMania 40, which he shouldn’t. I mean, the night before I won it all, he actually has a win over me. But I can tell you that I know people don’t love when the curtain gets pulled back too much. Really, really unique outside the box thinker and for a guy who’s been on every movie set, he’s been around the A list. He is A list. He’s walked into every room. I can look in someone’s eyes and know when they have the fever for wrestling when they’re a wrestler.I think we might hate each other, but we’re both wrestlers and I think that’s what the connection is about, it’s the idea that he knows if he puts me in a Macon, Georgia at a live event or somewhere around the country and I’m representing this company, which is also his company, that I won’t leave anybody hanging that I, that I will do my damnedest to deliver. So, yeah, but all that to say, I don’t know where we stand again. The dude could run up on me right now and pop me in the ear and we’d be right back in it, but I don’t know where we stand now. It’ll always be in question, but he’s certainly been helpful to me as champion.”
On possibilities for himself for John Cena’s “The Last Time Is Now” WWE retirement tour: “One thing that’s been on my mind, I think when he announced he was retiring, is a lot of guys jumped to the line of, I want to wrestle John. A lot of guys jumped to the, ‘I want to do something with John.’ I’m probably the one who didn’t hold his hand up and that’s simply because John is everything to me and and there’s been so many guys I’m a product of who i took a little something from. The most that I’ve taken from anybody ever would be from John, and that was from driving those few years of them seeing how he did his interactions with fans, how he would do main events, to see how he did the quarterback , the leader all those things. So when i hear this is it, It’s still not fully for me. I don’t love this is it and I know it is. I know he means it when he says it. But I want to watch like a fan. I almost dread the idea of what that would look like. Because when you’re up against John now, you’re tasked to beat John Cena in his final run and that’s why I’m not raising my hand to be in that spot.”
(H/T to Fightful.com for transcribing the above quotes.)
Cody Rhodes, the former WWE star turned AEW executive, recently sat down for an interview where he discussed his uncertain relationship with Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson and his thoughts on potentially joining John Cena’s upcoming retirement tour.In the interview, Rhodes admitted that he is not entirely sure where he stands with The Rock, despite rumors of a possible collaboration in the works. He expressed his admiration for Johnson’s work ethic and success in Hollywood, but also acknowledged that their paths have not crossed in quite some time.
As for Cena’s retirement tour, Rhodes seemed open to the idea of joining the iconic wrestler on his farewell journey. He mentioned that he has a great deal of respect for Cena and would be honored to be a part of such a momentous occasion in the wrestling world.
Rhodes also hinted at the possibility of returning to the ring for a special match or appearance during Cena’s tour, although nothing has been confirmed at this time.
Overall, it seems that Cody Rhodes is keeping his options open and is excited about the potential opportunities that lie ahead, whether it be working with The Rock or joining Cena on his final tour. Wrestling fans will have to wait and see what the future holds for this talented and versatile performer.
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#Cody #Rhodes #Isnt #Stands #Rock #Talks #Possibilities #John #Cenas #Retirement #Tour
As Dragon Age Fans Fear the Death of the Series, One Former BioWare Developer Offers Words of Reassurance: ‘Dragon Age Isn’t Dead Because It’s Yours Now’
Following layoffs at BioWare that saw the exit of many key developers of Dragon Age: The Veilguard, one former writer on the series has moved to reassure fans by saying: “DA isn’t dead because it’s yours now.”
This week, EA restructured BioWare to focus on Mass Effect 5 only. Some who worked on Dragon Age: The Veilguard were moved to projects at other EA studios (Game Developer reported that John Epler, Veilguard’s creative director, was sent to work on Full Circle’s upcoming skateboarding game Skate). Others, however, revealed they were laid off and were now seeking work.
The decision followed EA’s announcement that Dragon Age: The Veilguard had underperformed on its expectations for the long-awaited action RPG. EA said Dragon Age “engaged” 1.5 million players during its recent financial quarter, which was down nearly 50% from the company’s projections.
Notably, EA did not say the 1.5 million number was unit sales (Dragon Age: The Veilguard was also available as a part of EA’s Play Pro subscription service). Additionally, it’s not clear whether EA is counting a free trial of the game that was available through the cheaper EA Play subscription in the 1.5 million number either.
Either way, EA’s announcement, its restructure of BioWare, and confirmation of layoffs have combined to create the sense within the Dragon Age fandom that the series is pretty much dead. There is no DLC planned for The Veilguard, and BioWare’s work on the game came to an end last week with what sounded like its last major update.
But Dragon Age: The Veilguard senior writer Sheryl Chee, who was moved from BioWare to work on Iron Man at Motive, took to social media to offer words of hope.
“I’m now with Motive,” Chee began. “It’s been a hard two years seeing my team get chipped away and having to still keep going. But I’m still employed, so there’s that.”
Then, in response to a fan who lamented the death of Dragon Age, Chee replied to say the series now belongs to the fans who will keep it alive with their own contributions.
“So a cool French woman dropped a cool quote from Camus on me today: ‘In the midst of winter, I found there was, within me, an invincible summer.’ (I mean, who does resistance like the French, right?) We’re going through it right now. It’s a lot, everywhere…
“But DA isn’t dead. There’s fic. There’s art. There’s the connections we made through the games and because of the games. Technically EA/BioWare owns the IP but you can’t own an idea, no matter how much they want to.
“DA isn’t dead because it’s yours now.”
Then: “So someone just reposted my thing saying they’ll write a giant AU and that’s what I’m talking about. If DA has inspired you to do something, if it sparks that Invincible summer, then it’s done it’s job, and it has been my greatest honor to have been a part of that.”
Dragon Age began life with 2010’s Dragon Age: Origins, which was followed up just a year later by Dragon Age 2. Dragon Age: Inquisition released three years later, in 2014. But it took a decade for the latest sequel, Dragon Age: The Veilguard, to come out.
In September, former Dragon Age executive producer Mark Darrah, who left BioWare in 2020, revealed that Dragon Age Inquisition had sold over 12 million copies, and “massively” oversold EA’s internal projections for the game.
EA has yet to outright say Dragon Age is dead, but it’s hard to see a new game in the series any time soon, if ever, given what’s happened to BioWare itself and the full focus on Mass Effect 5. As for Mass Effect, EA said a “core team” at BioWare is developing the next Mass Effect game under the leadership of veterans from the original trilogy, including Mike Gamble, Preston Watamaniuk, Derek Watts, Parrish Ley, and others. “While we’re not sharing numbers, the studio has the right number of people in the right roles to work on Mass Effect at this stage of development,” EA told IGN.
Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.
As Dragon Age Fans Fear the Death of the Series, One Former BioWare Developer Offers Words of Reassurance: ‘Dragon Age Isn’t Dead Because It’s Yours Now’In recent years, Dragon Age fans have expressed growing concerns about the future of the beloved RPG series. With BioWare’s focus shifting to other projects and the lack of concrete updates on the next installment, many feared that Dragon Age may be on the brink of death.
However, one former BioWare developer has stepped forward to offer words of reassurance to anxious fans. In a recent interview, the developer, who worked on previous Dragon Age titles, emphasized that the series is far from dead.
“Dragon Age isn’t dead because it’s yours now,” the developer stated. “The beauty of a series like Dragon Age is that it belongs to the fans just as much as it does to the developers. Your love and passion for the world and characters are what keep it alive.”
The developer went on to urge fans to continue supporting the series, whether through fan art, fan fiction, or simply by spreading the word about the games. They also hinted at exciting developments on the horizon for Dragon Age, assuring fans that there is still plenty to look forward to.
So, for all the Dragon Age fans out there feeling anxious about the future of the series, take heart. Dragon Age isn’t dead – it’s simply evolving, with the help of its dedicated fanbase. As long as fans continue to show their love and support for the series, there’s no limit to where the world of Thedas can go.
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#Dragon #Age #Fans #Fear #Death #Series #BioWare #Developer #Offers #Words #Reassurance #Dragon #Age #Isnt #DeadMichael Irvin isn’t happy the Cowboys didn’t hire Deion Sanders: ‘We lost an opportunity here’
The Dallas Cowboys have hired Brian Schottenheimer as their new head coach to replace Mike McCarthy, and one famous Cowboys alumnus isn’t happy with the decision.
Michael Irvin, the Hall of Fame wide receiver who spent his entire 12-year career in Dallas, laid into his former team on Saturday in a video posted to his YouTube channel, lamenting their decision to hire someone who was already on staff instead of Irvin’s top choice of Deion Sanders, another Cowboys alumnus.
“Here’s my issue. We lost an opportunity here. I don’t know what happened with Coach Schottenheimer and the Cowboys, but Jerry [Jones, team owner and GM] is a shrewd, shrewd businessman, and this opportunity, I’m shocked he did not see. I was pushing for Deion Sanders to be the next head coach, and I still stand 10 toes down on that push.
“Let me break it down. We have two NFC East teams in the NFC championship game being played tomorrow. All eyes on them. The Philadelphia Eagles and the Washington Commanders. Our enemies on all fronts. And they’re in a position that we haven’t held in 30 f***ing years. The longest drought by any NFC East team. Thirty years. … You bring in someone who’s already inside for head coach. You lose things there that you can’t grab back that I’m worried about.
“We’re losing ground in the NFC. … It was time to bring somebody in here that could shake things up and grab this last leg of Cowboys Nation. If we’ve got 30 years right now, and life expectancy is 100 years, that means by math one third of Cowboys Nation has never felt or lived the glory of a championship story. Don’t even know about it. How the hell can they pass something down when they don’t even know about it?
“Worse yet, that generation has seen total domination from a team named the Kansas City Chiefs. Who in that span is running up on winning three in a row. So not only are you losing football games over here and opportunities over here and divisions over here, you’re about to get our moniker snatched off our backs.”
Michael Irvin, the Hall of Fame Cowboys receiver, isn’t happy that Jerry Jones didn’t hire his former teammate, Deion Sanders, as the team’s new head coach. (Photo by Chris Leduc/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) The moniker Irvin speaks of is America’s Team, which the Cowboys earned in the 1990s during their last run of success that included three Super Bowl titles.
Irvin laid out his issues with hiring someone from the inside, focusing on what he believes are problems with team discipline.
“I know what we needed,” Irvin said. “They don’t have curfew. They don’t have discipline. We were fourth in penalties this year. So how you do fix that? … How do you do that when you’re coming from inside?”
Sanders has experienced success as a college coach in Colorado, where he’s been for two seasons, coaching his son, QB Shedeur Sanders, and Heisman winner Travis Hunter, and taking the Buffaloes to a bowl game. Early in the head coach hiring cycle, Sanders expressed interest in the Las Vegas Raiders opening, but nothing came of that (the Raiders recently hired Pete Carroll as their new head coach).
Jones had reportedly spoken to Sanders about the Cowboys’ head coaching job several weeks ago, but Jones decided to go a different way, much to Irvin’s displeasure.
It’s no secret that Michael Irvin bleeds Dallas Cowboys blue, and he’s not afraid to speak his mind when it comes to his beloved team. The Hall of Fame wide receiver recently expressed his disappointment in the Cowboys’ decision not to hire Deion Sanders as their head coach.In a recent interview, Irvin shared his thoughts on the missed opportunity, saying, “We lost an opportunity here. We lost an opportunity to bring in someone who knows what it takes to win, who knows the game inside and out, and who has a passion for this team like no one else.”
Irvin, who played alongside Sanders during their time in Dallas, knows firsthand the impact Prime Time can have on a team. With Sanders now thriving as the head coach at Jackson State University, many Cowboys fans were hoping he would bring his winning ways back to Dallas.
While the Cowboys ultimately decided to go in a different direction with their coaching search, Irvin can’t help but wonder what could have been with Sanders at the helm. One thing is for sure, the Cowboys may have missed out on a game-changing opportunity by not bringing Prime Time back to Big D.
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- Michael Irvin
- Deion Sanders
- Dallas Cowboys
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#Michael #Irvin #isnt #happy #Cowboys #didnt #hire #Deion #Sanders #lost #opportunity
Tyronn Lue isn’t happy with Clippers’ play in win over Wizards
He was happy that his team basically was back to being completely healthy, but Clippers coach Tyronn Lue was not happy with how his team performed Thursday night.
Yes, the Clippers beat the lowly Washington Wizards in a blowout, 110-93, at the Intuit Dome. Yes, his team had seven players score in double figures.
But the Clippers had 18 turnovers, playing sloppily against a Wizards team with the worst record in the NBA (6-37).
The Clippers had a 27-point lead but saw it sliced to 12 in the third quarter before pulling away from a Wizards team that has lost 12 straight games and is 1-19 on the road.
Kawhi Leonard was back in the lineup after sitting out two games to manage the load on his right knee. Center Ivica Zubac also returned after missing two games because of a corneal abrasion of his left eye. James Harden (groin), Norman Powell (back) and Nicolas Batum (finger) also returned after missing Wednesday’s overtime loss to Boston.
“Not a good game for us. Just a win,” Lue said. “We didn’t play particularly well. We didn’t execute with the basketball. We did some good things as well, but it wasn’t one of our best games. Like last night, I thought we played better.
“But it is a win. We’ll take it, but we got to start stacking wins. But we got to start executing the right way and I don’t think we did a good job of that tonight.”
Harden played with purpose, finishing with 17 points, 13 assists and 12 rebounds for his fifth triple-double with the Clippers. It was the 79th triple-double of his career, moving him past Wilt Chamberlain for the eighth most in history.
“It means a lot, just impacting the game in other ways,” Harden said about his milestone. “Scoring is one thing, but rebounding the basketball, facilitating is another thing. And just impacting the game. You don’t get to be the best player on the court by just scoring the basketball every single night. Obviously that helps, but there’s other ways to impact games and you’ve seen it throughout the course of history of the NBA. I’m just happy to be a part of it.”
Leonard played 23 minutes 47 seconds, finishing with 15 points and seven rebounds. Powell led the Clippers (25-19) with 22 points, Derrick Jones Jr. had 19, Mo Bamba 13 off the bench and Zubac 11.
The Clippers played their fourth game this week and completed their second back-to-back set.
“We did a good job,” Leonard said about the Clippers’ recent performance. “We won some games. Yesterday they pushed them pretty hard, in that game against Boston, pushing it to overtime. But we still got a tough schedule ahead of us. That’s what the NBA is about.”
Guard Kris Dunn missed his second straight game because of knee soreness.
“I think it’s something that’s going to hold him out for a long time,” Lue said. “Hopefully he’ll be back sooner than later.”
In a recent game against the Washington Wizards, the LA Clippers secured a win, but head coach Tyronn Lue wasn’t satisfied with his team’s performance. Despite coming out on top, Lue expressed his disappointment in the team’s play, citing lackluster defense and inconsistent execution.Lue emphasized the importance of maintaining a high level of play throughout the entire game, rather than just in spurts. He highlighted the need for better communication on defense and more cohesive offensive sets.
As the Clippers continue their push towards the playoffs, Lue will be looking for more consistent effort and focus from his players in order to compete at a championship level. It’s clear that Lue has high expectations for his team, and he won’t settle for anything less than their best.
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#Tyronn #Lue #isnt #happy #Clippers #play #win #Wizards
This Isn’t Fair, Baby (War & Peace Book 6)
Price: $2.99
(as of Jan 24,2025 09:18:19 UTC – Details)
ASIN : B06Y6C1JRD
Publisher : K Webster (April 18, 2017)
Publication date : April 18, 2017
Language : English
File size : 735 KB
Text-to-Speech : Enabled
Screen Reader : Supported
Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
X-Ray : Not Enabled
Word Wise : Enabled
Print length : 248 pages
Page numbers source ISBN : 154528914XCustomers say
Customers enjoy the series and find the book an enjoyable addition to the series. They find the storyline complex, suspenseful, and action-packed with drama. The characters are described as interesting, strong, loyal, and protective. The writing quality is praised as well-written and descriptive. Readers describe the violence level as violent and explosive from the start.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
In the sixth installment of War & Peace, tensions rise as the characters face injustice and betrayal. From political power struggles to personal vendettas, the stakes are higher than ever. Join us as we delve into the complexities of war and peace in this captivating novel. This Isn’t Fair, Baby will keep you on the edge of your seat as you navigate through the twists and turns of this gripping story. Don’t miss out on the latest installment of this epic tale.
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backlit kb | protective sleeve| a515-58pt-50ujDonna Kelce Says She Isn’t Interested in Dating Right Now, According to “Golden Bachelor”’s Susan Noles
Donna Kelce won’t be swiping right anytime soon!
The mother of NFL stars Travis Kelce and Jason Kelce recently revealed to former Golden Bachelor star Susan Noles that she is not focused on dating or relationships at the moment.
During Noles’ appearance on the I Do, Part 2 with Jennie Garth, Jana Kramer, Amy Robach and T.J. Holmes, the reality star, 67, was asked what she and Kelce, 71, talked about while the two watched a Kansas City Chiefs game — and that’s when Noles shared that while the pair talked, the conversation eventually led to dating.
But Kelce said she’s uninterested, Noles said when asked if the NFL mom is “ready to mingle.”
“Honestly, no. She’s like ‘Really? I am good,’” Noles said. “She’s doing just fine, she’s enjoying her life, as she should. I don’t think she’s where I am.”
Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty
Donna Kelce
When asked by Holmes how the conversation flowed to allow Kelce to open up about her personal life, Noles stated, “We’re women. It wasn’t our first meeting, we know each other. We spent time together before, so yeah, I quizzed her.”
As an honoree for Glamour’s 2024 Women of the Year: The Moms issue back in October, Kelce opened up about her divorce from ex-husband Ed Kelce.
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“I was a commercial banker for a bank in several different states. I wanted to get ahead. I worked really, really hard. I was a major breadwinner in the family,” Kelce said. “And I think it’s important for kids to see that a woman can do whatever she wants, but I did stand still, too.”
She continued, adding, “My husband and I knew that our marriage was not working, but we stayed together for the kids.”
“Ours was a very friendly relationship. So, we could do that and make sure that their life was normal as possible. But in that one respect, I did stand still for several years until I could move on on my own,” Kelce said of the end of her marriage.
Read the original article on People
Donna Kelce, a contestant on the popular dating show “Golden Bachelor,” recently sat down for an interview with host Susan Noles where she revealed that she is not currently interested in dating.In the interview, Kelce explained that she is focusing on herself and her own personal growth at the moment. She expressed that she wants to take some time to work on herself and her goals before jumping into a new relationship.
Kelce’s decision to prioritize herself over dating has sparked a lot of discussion among fans of the show. Some have praised her for putting herself first and taking the time to focus on her own well-being, while others have expressed disappointment that she won’t be pursuing a romantic relationship on the show.
Despite the mixed reactions, Kelce remains firm in her decision and is excited to see where this period of self-discovery will take her. Fans of “Golden Bachelor” will just have to wait and see if Kelce’s stance on dating changes as the show progresses.
Tags:
Donna Kelce, dating, Golden Bachelor, Susan Noles, relationship status, single, not interested, love life, dating updates, celebrity news, romance rumors, current relationship status
#Donna #Kelce #Isnt #Interested #Dating #Golden #Bachelors #Susan #Noles