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Andrew Lloyd Webber’s music to be managed by The Other Songs and The Orchard following viral success of ‘Phantom of the Opera’

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London-headquartered indie music and entertainment company The Other Songs has struck a deal to manage Andrew Lloyd Webber’s catalog in partnership with Sony Music’s The Orchard.

The deal with Webber’s company LW Entertainment covers the legendary musical theatre impresario and composer’s back catalog as well as future releases. The Orchard will oversee distribution.

“I am thrilled that we will now have an exclusive long term relationship,” Webber said in a statement.

“The Other Songs’ mission to doggedly champion songwriters, at a time when they have and are being treated as second class citizens in the music industry, has hugely resonated with me. I am really looking forward to working with the new artists the collaboration will bring me at a time when I am writing as much if not more than I ever have.”

Webber is arguably the world’s most famous contemporary composer of Broadway plays, with a catalog that includes The Phantom of the Opera, Cats, Jesus Christ Superstar, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, Evita, Sunset Boulevard and Starlight Express.

His catalog hit an all-time single-day streaming peak last month, driven by a Halloween season Phantom of the Opera viral trend on TikTok that saw over 200,000 fan creations and hundreds of millions of impressions across social platforms.

“The Other Songs’ mission to doggedly champion songwriters, at a time when they have and are being treated as second class citizens in the music industry, has hugely resonated with me.”

Andrew Lloyd Webber

The Other Songs and The Orchard have already been working with LW Entertainment on recent releases, including a UK No. 1 single of Don’t Cry For Me Argentina from Evita, featuring Rachel Zegler, and a UK No. 1 cast album of Sunset Boulevard, featuring Nicole Scherzinger.

The Other Songs recently released the cast album of Evita, which clocked 1 million streams in 24 hours.

“Andrew is experiencing a remarkable renaissance with the success of SUNSET BLVD, EVITA, and Masquerade, among many other projects,” said Brad Navin, CEO, The Orchard.

“The Orchard is committed to maximizing this momentum, leveraging our global infrastructure to bring both his iconic, era-defining works and new creative endeavors to an even wider and more diverse audience worldwide, ensuring his legacy continues to thrive across all media and territories.”

Founded in 2018 by Webber’s sons Alastair and Billy Webber, The Other Songs is a record label and publisher, as well as a management, live events and animation company.

Its label’s roster includes SUPER-Hi’s Following the Sun (500 million+ streams) and Ren’s UK No.1 album Sick Boi. Its dance imprint, Another Rhythm, is behind breakout records like Raffa FL’s Platinum-certified Ritmo (250 million streams).

In 2024, The Other Songs entered into a global publishing partnership with Universal Music Publishing Group, which includes singer-songwriter Bruno Major (2 billion streams), Ren (1 billion streams) hip-hop/jazz producer CXSPER (TKANZ’s Now Or Never) and indie-dance-pop songwriter Julia Church (500 billion streams).

“Over the past year, over 4.5 million people have seen an Andrew Lloyd Webber musical, reflecting the sheer scale and global cultural impact of his work.”

Alastair Webber, The Other Songs

“Over the past year, over 4.5 million people have seen an Andrew Lloyd Webber musical, reflecting the sheer scale and global cultural impact of his work,” Alastair Webber said.

“Our focus now is to ensure Andrew’s recording catalog connects with new generations, while also giving him the tools to collaborate with today’s leading songwriters, producers and artists.”

“Musical theater’s reach is broader than it’s often given credit for, and the opportunity to unlock its full potential is significant,” Billy Webber added.

“Our focus is careful guardianship and bold growth, bringing these works to new audiences with the innovative teams at LW Entertainment and The Orchard.”


LW Entertainment, which is owned by Andrew Lloyd Webber, rebranded from The Really Useful Group earlier this year. The company has been managing Webber’s works since 1977.

“Building on decades of strong record sales all over the world, we have reshaped our relationships with our music partners,” LW Entertainment CEO James McKnight said.

“With one of the largest and most engaged fan bases in the world, we know the opportunities are limitless and we are excited to work with these innovative organizations to realize our shared, global ambitions.”Music Business Worldwide

Violence in Nigeria Persists, Targeting Both Christians and Muslims

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new video loaded: Violence Continues in Nigeria Against Christians and Muslims

transcript

transcript

Violence Continues in Nigeria Against Christians and Muslims

An attack on a church in central Nigeria happened as U.S. officials and celebrities criticized the country for attacks on Christians, who make up about 45 percent of the population in Nigeria. But there is no evidence to suggest that widespread violence in the country affects Christians more than any other groups.

“In Nigeria, Christians are being targeted, driven from their homes and killed.”

An attack on a church in central Nigeria happened as U.S. officials and celebrities criticized the country for attacks on Christians, who make up about 45 percent of the population in Nigeria. But there is no evidence to suggest that widespread violence in the country affects Christians more than any other groups.

By McKinnon de Kuyper

November 19, 2025

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Russia-Ukraine war: A Timeline of Major Events on Day 1,365 | Latest News on the Russia-Ukraine Conflict

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Here are the key events from day 1,365 of Russia’s war on Ukraine.

Here is how things stand on Thursday, November 20:

Fighting

  • At least 26 people were confirmed killed and trapped under the rubble of a destroyed building in the western Ukrainian city of Ternopil after it was hit in a Russian strike, Ukrainian Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said in a post on Telegram, adding that searches to recover the bodies continued.
  • Almost 100 people were reportedly injured in the attack on Ternopil, which Klymenko said covered the apartment building in a “wave of fire”.
  • The Ukrainian air force reported that Russian forces used a Kh-101 cruise missile to attack the apartment building, noting that the weapon “contains components and accessories manufactured by companies in particular from the USA, China, Taiwan, Germany and others”.
  • Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said Ukraine will bring “Russia’s horrific murder” in Ternopil to the UN Security Council on Thursday, calling for “condemnation, justice, and strong responses”.
  • Russian shelling injured at least 46 people, including two children, in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv over the past day, Oleh Syniehubov, the head of the Kharkiv Regional Military Administration, wrote in a post on Telegram.
  • A Ukrainian attack killed a civilian in a Russian-occupied part of the Kherson region in southern Ukraine, Russian-installed Governor Vladimir Saldo said, according to TASS, Russia’s state news agency.
  • The Ukrainian air force reported that it shot down 476 Russian drones and 48 missiles on Tuesday night into Wednesday morning.
  • Russian forces shot down 93 Ukrainian drones and four missiles in a 24-hour period, Russia’s Ministry of Defence said, according to TASS.

Ceasefire

  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy met with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara, where previous mediated talks on a ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia have been hosted by Turkish officials.
  • Speaking alongside Erdogan, Zelenskyy said Ukraine hopes to revive prisoner of war exchanges with Russia by the end of the year.
  • The Ukrainian president also said Erdogan proposed different formats for the potential resumption of talks with Russia “and it is important for us that [Turkiye] is ready to provide the necessary platform.”
  • “The main thing for stopping the bloodshed and achieving lasting peace is that we work in coordination with all our partners and that American leadership remains effective, strong,” Zelenskyy added.
  • Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters that there has been nothing new to announce on peace negotiations with Ukraine since the August summit between Russian President Vladimir Putin and United States President Donald Trump.

Regional security

  • British Defence Minister John Healey said “military options” are ready should a Russian spy ship, the Yantar, become a threat after it directed lasers at British pilots sent to monitor its location north of Scotland.
  • Rene Obermann, the chairman of the European aerospace company Airbus, told the Berlin Security Conference that some European countries should buy “tactical” nuclear weapons as a “sign of deterrence” after Russia’s positioning of Iskander missiles in the Russian city of Kaliningrad.

Sanctions

  • Russian oil company Rosneft has reduced its stake in the Kurdistan Pipeline Company to less than 50 percent after talks aimed at protecting the subsidiary from US sanctions, an official in the government of the semiautonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq told the Reuters news agency.

Military aid

  • German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said ongoing talks to provide long-range missiles to Ukraine would eventually lead to an agreement, including some domestic production, but no details would be communicated.

Trump contemplating executive order to pre-empt state laws on artificial intelligence

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Trump considering executive order to preempt state AI laws

Mike Breen cautions NBA about potential negative impact on fans if Regional Sports Networks are lost – Basketball Insiders

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A Shift That Worries One of the League’s Iconic Voices

New York Knicks play-by-play announcer Mike Breen believes the NBA is taking a risky turn with its media strategy. In an interview with BALLISLIFE.com, he said the league is moving too quickly away from regional sports networks (RSNs) and toward national and streaming platforms. Breen called the change a “mistake” and warned that the NBA may weaken one of the strongest emotional ties fans have to their teams.

“Some of the changes are not for the better for the RSNs,” Breen said. “We have to be careful not to lose the RSNs because, for fans, that’s your connection to the team. Usually the local announcers, whether it’s TV or radio, they become part of the family.”

Local Voices Build Lifelong Fans

Breen explained that RSNs do more than broadcast games. They shape how fans grow up with their teams. He pointed to his own childhood, when he listened to Marv Albert call Knicks games with Cal Ramsey or John Andariese. Those familiar voices helped build his identity as a fan.

“It’s something that I think is a staple to becoming a fan of a team. We can’t lose that,” he said.

Breen noted that this connection exists across all major sports. Local broadcasts offer consistency and familiarity. National platforms rarely provide that kind of long-term bond.

Mike Breen Warns NBA: Losing RSNs Would Hurt the FansMike Breen Warns NBA: Losing RSNs Would Hurt the Fans

No Playoff Games on RSNs for the First Time

Breen’s biggest concern is the NBA’s new policy for the postseason. For the first time, no playoff games will air on local networks. Fans who grew up hearing their own announcers call the biggest moments will now only have national broadcasts.

“With all the new national media rights to different broadcast outlets, the emphasis on the regional sports networks seems to be less and less,” he said. “For example, this year, there are no playoff games that will be on regional networks for the first time, and I think that’s a mistake.”

A Push for Balance

Breen understands why national partners want exclusivity. He works for ESPN during the playoffs and the NBA Finals. Still, he believes the league could allow RSNs to call select postseason games without hurting national ratings.

“Having a little side for the original broadcasters just to do some of the important games, I don’t think that there’s that much of a factor ratings-wise to impact them,” he said.

As the NBA moves deeper into streaming and national windows, Breen urged the league to protect the role of local broadcasts.

“I just think that we can’t lose sight of the fact that the regional networks are important to the fans,” he said.

Italy to send suspect in pipeline explosion to Germany for extradition

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Sarah RainsfordSouthern and Eastern Europe correspondent, Rome

Danish Defence Handout The Nord Stream pipeline running between Russia and Germany was attacked in 2022 Danish Defence Handout

The Nord Stream pipeline, which runs between Russia and Germany under the Baltic Sea, was attacked in 2022

Italy’s top appeals court has ruled that a Ukrainian man suspected of involvement in blowing up the Nord Stream gas pipelines between Russia and Germany should be extradited to Berlin.

There, former Ukrainian military officer Serhiy Kuznetsov will face a charge of anti-constitutional sabotage. He is due to be removed from Italy under German police escort in the next few days.

Prosecutors believe Mr Kuznetsov coordinated and led a group that planted explosives on the pipes deep beneath the Baltic Sea in 2022, though they have not disclosed any evidence.

The case has serious implications for relations between Ukraine and Germany, which is the biggest source of military aid for Kyiv in Europe.

Mr Kuznetsov’s lawyer said his client “feels like a scapegoat” and is “very sad” that his government has not spoken out in his defence, or even confirmed that he was a serving soldier at the time of the blasts.

“If he carried out the attack, then he did so because he was ordered to do so because he was for sure a captain of the Ukrainian army,” Nicola Canestrini said after Wednesday’s hearing.

The BBC has seen a copy of Mr Kuznetsov’s military ID among the court papers. He has not commented publicly on whether he was involved in the explosions.

“The Ukrainian government knows exactly where he was every day of September 2022,” his lawyer said. “So, if he’s innocent, why don’t they say it? If he did it, why don’t they say it? That’s his question.”

The BBC has approached government and security sources in Kyiv, but they have not commented.

Mr Kuznetsov was arrested in northern Italy in late August, at a glamping site near the city of Rimini where he had booked in for a few nights with his wife and two of their children.

His passport details were entered online at check-in, and in Italy that information is automatically transferred to the carabinieri, the local police.

Later that night, officers came knocking at the family’s door.

Serhiy Kuznetsov's lawyer Nicola Canestrini

Serhiy Kuznetsov’s lawyer Nicola Canestrini says his client feels like a “scapegoat”

A month later, a second Ukrainian suspect was detained at his home close to Poland’s capital Warsaw on another arrest warrant issued by Germany.

Volodymyr Zhuravlyov, an amateur deep-sea diver, has lived in Poland with his family since just before Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

He was held in custody for 17 days, but a court then refused to extradite him.

The judge delivered a passionate speech, arguing that no Ukrainian could be prosecuted for what he characterised as a legitimate act of self-defence against Russia’s “bloody and genocidal” invasion of Ukraine.

In Italy, further from Ukraine, the mood and the politics are very different.

Mr Canestrini described the Italian appeal court’s ruling as a “great disappointment”, but said the fight for his client would now move to Germany – with the aim of having Mr Kuznetsov acquitted on the same grounds.

Many Ukrainians consider whoever did destroy Nord Stream to be heroes for taking out an important revenue source for Russia, and struggle to understand why Germany – a key ally of Ukraine – is pursuing this prosecution.

On Wednesday, one man stood outside the palatial courthouse in Rome wrapped in a Ukrainian flag and holding a poster that read: “Serhiy Kuznetsov is a defender, not a criminal.”

Map of Nord Stream gas pipelines

Nike ACG Lava Loft Down Trail Running Jacket with Smart Ventilation

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Where there’s an uncomfortable athlete, there’s room for a wild, high-tech solution. At least that seems to be Nike’s strategy of late, resulting in such contrivances as robo-shoes and active-breathing jackets. The all-new Lava Loft Down Jacket is a little less animated, but it still uses a rather unconventional solution to solve a common problem, interspersing baffles of ultra-warm down with wide open vents to react to the massive weather shifts a trail runner can experience when logging miles. When it’s time to remove the Lava Loft all together, the 10-oz jacket packs down to fit in your hand like an apple.

There seem to be a lot of masochists out there, and a big chunk of evidence supporting that conclusion is the existence of the ultra marathon. As if a good, old 26 miles (42 km) wasn’t grueling enough, how about 50 miles (80 km)? Or 100? Or even 135 miles … through Death Valley?! And hey, pavement is kind of smooth and straightforward, so why don’t we also throw in highly variable rock and dirt trail that climbs and dives through 10s of thousands of feet worth of elevation?

Masochism.

But there are plenty of folks out there doing all that and more in the name of sport, fitness and personal growth. And, in many cases, those kinds of runs involve frosty twilight starts, sun-baked midday stretches through exposed, wide-open spaces, frigid high-alpine ridge scampers, chilly darkly shaded forest plunge, furious unexpected squalls, and maybe all of the above.

Put succinctly, trail runners need to be prepared for virtually every type of weather that Mother Nature has scribbled down in her playbook. And they certainly don’t want to be weighed down carrying a wardrobe’s worth of apparel options on their back.

In setting out to develop a trail running jacket meant to excel through those mercurial conditions, Nike’s ACG (All Conditions Gear) design team turned to the Atlas body mapping system for insight. Located at Nike’s Sport Research Lab in Beaverton, Oregon, the Atlas system delivered the cellularly precise data the team used to pinpoint exactly where trail-running athletes run hot and sweaty versus cold, giving them a blueprint for mapping out insulation and ventilation zones.

The perforated ventilation strips separate the down baffles to create warm and cool zones

Nike

After developing a prototype based on that raw data, ACG worked with the Nike Running team to test and refine a multitude of prototype iterations, racking up hundreds of hours worth of testing and development. Ultimately, the project found the most precise placement for the jacket’s blend of perforated ventilation and 700-fill ExpeDRY Gold down. A specific formulation of hydrophobic down, ExpeDRY includes non-toxic gold particles in each down cluster to electro-statically break up water molecules and keep the down dry, fluffy and warm.

As typical in a down jacket, the down is contained in horizontal baffles that run across the body and sleeves, but rather than being one baffle atop the next, Nike ACG places thin rows of perforated ventilation between baffles in critical zones. These rows can be seen around the chest, on the back, and up and down both sleeves. The perforations keep air flow moving across the hottest, sweatiest areas to wick away moisture.

Nike has put loads of data, research and development into the all-new Lava Loft Jacket
Nike has put loads of data, research and development into the all-new Lava Loft Jacket

Nike

To further manage internal and external moisture, the jacket relies on a combination of Nike’s quick-wicking/dispersing Dri-Fit fabric, water-repellent Repel four-way-stretch fabric, and durable water repellent (DWR) baffle material.

The Lava Loft jacket travels about as lightly as possible, packing down into palmable size in its own pocket. At 10 oz (284 g) for a size medium, it’s not quite the lightest down jacket available, but it’s not so far off from ultralight staples like the 6.8-oz (193-g) Zpacks Down Jacket or 8-oz (227-g) Mountain Hardwear Ghost Whisperer.

Nike unveiled the Lava Loft Down Jacket this month at the China International Import Expo. It plans to launch the new piece globally on its website and at select retailers beginning January 1, 2026. Nike did not include pricing information with the announcement, but that will be available in the coming weeks.

Source: Nike

Nvidia surpasses revenue expectations and predicts sustained high demand for AI chips

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Nvidia blew past Wall Street financial targets in its third quarter, posting a 62% surge in revenue and forecasting continued strong growth for the current quarter with demand for its AI chips showing no sign of slowing down.

“Blackwell sales are off the charts, and cloud GPUs are sold out,” CEO Jensen Huang said in a prepared statement.

Nvidia’s stock rose as much as 5% in after hours trading, after finishing the regular session up 3%.

Sales in the company’s datacenter unit, which accounts for the vast majority of Nvidia’s business, expanded 66% year-over-year to $51.2 billion, compared to the $49.7 billion expected by analysts. Overall revenue of $57 billion was above Nvidia’s own projections and topped the $55.5 billion expected by Wall Street.

Looking ahead, Nvidia projected fourth-quarter revenue between $63.7 billion and $66.3 billion, well above the $62.4 billion that analysts expected.

Nvidia’s strong results are a clear sign that the AI boom shows no signs of slowing down — but the question is whether those headline numbers will be enough to soothe jittery investors about the industry’s broader outlook. The biggest source of market nerves is the growing concern over whether AI revenue growth can keep pace with the staggering capital expenditures required to build and run next-generation models. There’s also the risk that only a handful of companies will capture most of the economic value.

Mounting power constraints, supply chain issues and fresh scrutiny of “circular” AI investments have also raised doubts about how sustainable the current trajectory really is. Analysts have warned about Nvidia’s role in a possible AI bubble — especially given the company’s $24 billion AI-investment blitz in 2025.

Case in point: In the deal announced Tuesday, Nvidia and Microsoft will invest up to $10 billion and $5 billion, respectively, in Anthropic. In turn, Anthropic will purchase $30 billion of Azure compute capacity, while also collaborating with Nvidia on future chip and model-engineering work. This follows Nvidia’s $6.6 billion investment in OpenAI in October and a $6 billion investment in Elon Musk’s xAI in November, per PitchBook, as well as its commitment to invest up to $100 billion in OpenAI in a massive September deal that sent the stock higher.

In recent weeks, investors have been reassessing expectations, said Daniel Newman, analyst and CEO of the Futurum Group: “Has there been too much exuberance? Is this demand real?”

Still, Nvidia’s results speak for themselves for those looking for optimism. Still, some analysts insist this isn’t a bubble. And analysts like Stephanie Link, chief investment strategist at Hightower Advisors, argues that the demand is fundamentally real — and far broader than Big Tech.

“I don’t think we are in a bubble in AI because there are so many industries that are seeing significant growth,” she said. “AI needs more data centers, an upgraded grid, and more power — which we don’t have enough of. Each industry will be spending billions: Big Tech $400B, industrials $100B building data centers, utilities $200B, and power companies $100B — and that’s just this year. The demand is there, unlike the dot-com bubble where there wasn’t real demand.”

Dozens Killed in Russian Strikes on Ukraine

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new video loaded: Russian Strikes in Ukraine Kill More Than Two Dozen People

A deadly Russian barrage of missiles and drones in Ukraine came as President Volodymyr Zelensky visited Turkey in a bid to revive peace talks to end his country’s war with Russia.

By Axel Boada

November 19, 2025