
'Love, Death + Robots': When to Watch Season 4 on Netflix
Love, Death + Robots is back, after a three-year wait, with more animated mayhem. The series debuted in 2019 and has delivered tantalizing visuals and cutting-edge storytelling, consistently pushing the envelope within the medium. Get ready, because 10 new genre snippets -- that range from sci-fi and fantasy to horror -- are nearly here to break your brains, but in a good way.
The series's animation style runs rampant, which is by design. Like Star Wars: Visions, the animated anthology featuring the work of animation studios worldwide, the program (created by Deadpool director Tim Miller and executive produced by David Fincher) highlights the work of up-and-coming animation houses. If it's one thing the previous volumes have taught us, it's to expect the delightfully unexpected.
Fincher directed an episode in volume 3 and helmed Can't Stop, an episode in the new installment, which stars the members of the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Other volume 4 cast members include MrBeast, Kevin Hart, John Oliver, Niecy Nash, John Boyega, Rahul Kholi and Rhys Darby.
Dinosaur warriors, space skirmishes, rockstar puppets and sentient kitchen appliances are just a few details awaiting us once the new episodes drop. Read on to learn when to watch volume 4 of Love, Death + Robots.
Read more: Netflix Review: Our Top Choice in a Crowded Market
Netflix
When to watch Love, Death + Robots season 4
All 10 episodes of the fourth volume of Love, Death + Robots will premiere on Netflix on Thursday, May 15.
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Forbes
37 minutes ago
- Forbes
The New Cannabis Power Play: B-Real, Tyson, Method Man Bet On Seeds
B-Real In A Cannabis Grow Operation In cannabis, everything starts with a seed. Before the jars, the pre-rolls or the sleek celebrity packaging, there's DNA. And in 2025, a growing wave of cultural icons is going straight to the source, getting their hands in the dirt and their names on genetics. B-Real. Method Man. Mike Tyson. Each is moving beyond the typical endorsement formula, teaming up with well-known seed banks to release carefully selected cannabis genetics for home growers around the world. These aren't limited to U.S. states or temporary product drops: they're global plays, already active in Europe, the Americas and beyond. 'Selling flower is cool, but seeds are a different kind of legacy,' says B-Real, frontman of Cypress Hill and founder of Dr. Greenthumb's, in an exclusive interview. 'When we release seeds, we're handing people the source code. That means something.' 'It gives growers around the world direct access to some of the best genetics in the world,' he adds. 'We're not just dropping product: we're empowering cultivation, creativity and local expression. The more the game grows, the more important it is to stay rooted.' While most celebrity cannabis launches focus on packaging, flavor profiles and retail placement, these projects are rooted in access, preservation and lineage, both genetic and cultural. Seeds, once a niche category, are now among the industry's fastest-growing segments. Legal frameworks are expanding. Home cultivation is gaining ground. And online seed platforms are connecting distant markets that flower never could. For the artists leading this shift, it's not about a logo or licensing. It's about creating something that actually grows. 'When we release seeds, we're handing people the source code. That means something.'The Seed Shift: Why Genetics Matter For decades, cannabis branding centered on the end product; what's consumed, sold or photographed. But with new laws rolling out globally and home grow regulations softening in key markets, the spotlight is shifting to the beginning of the supply chain: genetics. In 2022, the U.S. cannabis seed market was valued at $567.76 million, with forecasts projecting it could surpass $2 billion by 2030, according to Data Bridge Market Research. Globally, Allied Market Research projects the market could top $6.5 billion by 2031, growing at over 18% annually. What's fueling that growth? Home growers. Consumers looking for quality control. And regulatory quirks that make seeds, especially dormant ones, easier to ship across borders than the flower they eventually produce. Unlike typical cannabis product lines, which are locked behind layers of jurisdiction, seed sales often fall under hemp rules. A 2022 clarification by the U.S. DEA confirmed that cannabis seeds are federally legal as long as they contain less than 0.3% THC. That opened the gates for both domestic and international commerce. 'When we release seeds, we're not just entering a market,' says Bryan Zabinski, co-founder of TICAL, Method Man's cannabis brand. 'We're offering people a chance to grow a piece of culture in their own homes.' The medium is the message. And this time, the message comes with roots. B-Real's Insane Blueprint More than two decades after debuting his alter ego, Dr. Greenthumb, B-Real is releasing the real DNA behind his brand. His latest collaboration, developed with Amsterdam-based Barney's Farm, kicked off with a global release of the iconic Insane OG strain. 'I've known Derry [Brett, founder of Barney's Farm] since the early Amsterdam days,' B-Real says. 'We've talked about collaborating for years, but we waited for the right time. Now legalization's advancing, and people want genetics they can trust.' 'The more the game grows, the more important it is to stay rooted.'The seed drop was timed with B-Real's European tour and unveiled at Mary Jane Berlin, one of the continent's top cannabis expos. More strains are in the pipeline, along with international flower rollouts expected in late 2025 and early 2026. 'I've been around long enough to know what makes a great cut, and I only work with breeders I trust,' B-Real says. 'This version of Insane OG hits all the marks: flavor, structure, potency, yield. It stays true to the original but steps up to today's standards. It's dialed in for growers who want quality and consistency every time.' And the global play isn't just a distribution strategy; it's a philosophical one. 'Seeds give us a head start,' he says. 'In a lot of places, you can't sell weed yet. But you can sell seeds. That opens the door.' B-Real's Insane OG 'It lets us show up early, put roots down and build something meaningful before the regulations catch up,' B-Real continues. 'This launch in Europe is just the start.' Still, he's quick to point out that this isn't about jumping into every market for the sake of reach. 'You keep it real,' he says. 'If it doesn't reflect who we are and where we came from, I'm not endorsing it… Legacy is about staying true, even while you grow. We've got a wider reach now, but we're still speaking the same language.' For B-Real, the business of seeds is about more than expansion. It's about ownership. 'Genetics are the foundation,' he says. 'If you don't protect your strains, you're handing away your legacy. We've been shaping this space for decades. Owning our genetics means we control the story, the quality and the future of what we built.' Method Man's TICAL Tactics Method Man sees seeds as evolution, not extension. The Wu-Tang Clan icon has always repped cannabis culture, but 2025 marked his official entry into the genetics arena through TICAL's first international seed drop. 'Entering the genetics space is a natural evolution for TICAL,' says Bryan Zabinski, co-founder of the brand. 'It takes time to get it right.' The team spent five years working with FreeWorld Genetics to develop a lineup that reflects both quality and purpose. The debut line includes eight exclusive cultivars (Shaolin Spritzer, Sweet Morning Mimosa, 24K Gold Fangs and others) developed in collaboration with FreeWorld Genetics and distributed by Zamnesia, a leading European seed bank and cannabis marketplace. Method Man 'It all started with the home grower,' Zabinski says. 'Getting these seeds into the hands of passionate cultivators, whether in the U.S. or Europe, means the spirit of TICAL lives beyond the shelf. It grows in people's homes.' 'This drop is as much about growing with the people and bridging cultures as it is about genetics,' he adds. 'If one grower plants a TICAL seed in their backyard, basement or closet, they're growing a piece of hip-hop history.' From phenotype selection to naming, the TICAL team was involved in every detail. The goal wasn't just quality, but recognition and respect for the plant's lineage. 'Our team was very involved with the creative development of these strains,' Zabinski says. 'From the genetics used, to the profiles we like, to choosing the names as a nod of respect—recognizing the lineage and honoring the OG breeders who helped curate this cultural journey.' 'When cultural leaders engage at the genetic level, it creates a different kind of legacy.'While TICAL is rooted in Method Man's legacy, the seeds are more than merch. They're curated storytelling in living form. 'The standard is real or nothing,' Zabinski says. 'Potent. Stable. Created with care. If our name is on it, it better grow strong, smoke clean, and leave a mark.' 'When cultural leaders engage at the genetic level, it creates a different kind of legacy,' he continues. 'Not just influencing what people consume, but what they grow.' Tyson's Knockout Genetics Mike Tyson's cannabis brand, Tyson 2.0, has long focused on high-impact flower, vapes and edibles. But in 2024, the former champ entered the seed space with a rollout through Barcelona's Royal Queen Seeds. 'It's a no-brainer to collaborate with them,' Tyson told Forbes in 2024. 'If you're the best in the world at what you do, most likely, we're going to be partners.' The first wave included six strains (Gelato 44, Dynamite Diesel, NYC Sour D Auto, GOAT'lato Auto, Punch Pie and Corkscrew Auto) with more expected over a three-year partnership. Tyson 2.0 seeds are currently available in the U.S., excluding Kansas and Kentucky, Europe, Thailand, and soon, South America. 'Growing cannabis at home has long been a pastime of this community,' said Adam Wilks, CEO of Carma HoldCo, which owns Tyson 2.0. 'Our collaboration makes it easy for consumers to know the seeds they buy produce the same high-quality cannabis that Tyson himself expects.' Hispanics Have Joined The Chat Outside the U.S., artists across Latin America and Europe are also releasing branded seeds, often in collaboration with local seed banks. In fact, they have been doing it for years, well before Tyson, B-Real or Method Man. Others are stepping in, too. From Wiz Khalifa's breeding program with Compound Genetics to Berner's Cookies empire, long powered by genetics from collaborators like Seed Junky and Powerzzzup, the move to seed-level branding is gathering steam. Each drop isn't just a product; it's a piece of identity. The message may be wrapped in marketing, but what's planted is personal. What Comes Next This didn't start in a boardroom. It started where most good weed stories do: in the shadows, in closets, in quiet corners of defiance and creativity. Now, as cannabis spreads across borders and legal systems, seeds have become something else: an anchor, a message, a way to leave fingerprints on the future of the plant. Celebrities stepping into genetics aren't chasing the next product. They're choosing the long road. The patient one. The one that starts in soil, not strategy decks. Because the real flex in 2025 isn't just smoking good weed. It's growing it.
Yahoo
40 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Did you see a balloon in the Wisconsin sky this weekend? Here's what to know about it
Did you see something in the sky across southeastern Wisconsin on June 22? You're not alone. FOX6 Milwaukee Chief Meteorologist Tom Wachs said on X, formerly known as Twitter, the station "had a lot of calls" about a balloon floating in the sky. FOX6 reported that the National Weather Service was unfamiliar with the object, and confirmed the balloon belonged to aerospace and defense company Raven Aerostar. Aerostar Culture and Communications Director Anastasia Quanbeck confirmed to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel in a June 23 email that a "Thunderhead balloon" is in the area. "Thunderhead Balloon Systems serve various purposes including extending communications across wide distances, environmental monitoring, earth observation, and scientific research," Quanbeck said. Aside from research, Quanbeck added balloons also can "restore communications after national disasters" and "provide overhead support to firefighters during forest fires." The Sioux Falls, South Dakota-based company's website says it has completed missions for NASA, Google and the United States Air Force. This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: What to know about the weird balloon seen over southeastern Wisconsin


Geek Wire
43 minutes ago
- Geek Wire
Rubin Observatory makes its debut and registers first discoveries
After more than 20 years of planning and construction, astronomers celebrated the release of the first images from the Vera C. Rubin Observatory today — and also registered hundreds of the first discoveries from the world's newest eye on the sky. University of Washington astronomer Mario Juric, a member of the Rubin team and director of UW's DiRAC Institute, said that discovery data for 2,104 previously undetected small bodies in the solar system were reported to the Minor Planet Center early today. Those small bodies include 2,015 main-belt asteroids, nine trans-Neptunian objects and seven near-Earth objects. (But don't worry: None of those NEOs has a chance of hitting Earth anytime soon.) 'The over 2,100 asteroids we discovered are impressive, but just a drop in the bucket relative to what's coming. We'll have moments where we find over 20,000 in a single night, more than the entire world presently finds in a year,' Juric told GeekWire in an email. 'By sometime next year Rubin will double the number of known asteroids, then continue to discover hundreds of new comets, the remaining few dwarf planets, and maybe even a new planet in our solar system,' he said. 'This will be the most comprehensive census of our planetary home in history.' During today's 'First Look' briefing in Washington, D.C., astronomers explained the science behind their scan for asteroids — and showed off eye-pleasing imagery that included a colorful wide-angle view of the Trifid and Lagoon nebulas in the constellation Sagittarius, galactic closeups gleaned from the observatory's survey of the Virgo Cluster, and a zooming video scan of the same region of the sky. Check out these videos highlighting Rubin's high-resolution views: UW astronomer Željko Ivezić, the director of Rubin construction, said the observatory's Simonyi Survey Telescope and LSST Camera are designed to create high-resolution, color-coded maps of the night sky at a rate that's 10 to 100 times faster than previously possible. 'This is like comparing the speed of your car to the speed of an airplane,' he said. With major funding from the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science, the Rubin Telescope was built on a mountaintop in Chile — which is one of the world's prime spots for astronomical observations, thanks to its dry air and dark skies. The construction cost has been estimated at $800 million, which includes tens of millions of dollars that were covered by private contributions from the likes of Microsoft tech pioneers Bill Gates and Charles Simonyi. In recognition of Simonyi's $20 million donation, the observatory's 8.4-meter (28-foot) telescope has been named after his family. The observatory itself is named after the late astronomer Vera Rubin, who analyzed the rotation rate of galaxies to come up with evidence for the existence of dark matter — a mysterious, invisible kind of stuff that makes up more of the universe's content than the matter we can see. Fittingly, the Rubin Observatory is expected to shed new light on the nature of dark matter and an equally mysterious phenomenon called dark energy, which appears to be driving the accelerating expansion of the universe. Rubin will serve as an early warning system for transient cosmic events such as supernova explosions and gamma-ray bursts. And based on computer modeling, the observatory is expected to discover more than 5 million asteroids and other objects in our solar system over the course of its 10-year Legacy Survey of Space and Time, or LSST. Ivezić said Rubin stands a good chance of detecting a distant hypothetical world that's been dubbed Planet Nine, if it exists. 'We will see way beyond the orbits where Pluto and other Kuiper Belt objects are found,' he said. 'It depends on the object size, but we could see Pluto even if it were at a 10 times larger distance, roughly speaking.' The observatory could also spot interstellar objects such as 'Oumuamua and Borisov, the two only known such objects discovered to date. 'It is very hard to predict how many we would discover, because we don't understand the population,' Ivezić said. 'It's only two objects. But by simple scaling arguments, we do expect 10, maybe 20, somewhere in there. So we will be an extremely powerful solar system survey.' The speed and breadth of Rubin's observations will be the keys to its discoveries. The LSST Camera is regarded as the world's largest digital camera, capable of capturing 3,200-megapixel images at a rapid-fire pace. Each image spans an area equivalent to about 45 full moons. About 20 trillion bytes of astronomical data are expected to be produced on a nightly basis and analyzed with the aid of sophisticated computer tools — including tools developed by the DiRAC Institute. Over the course of the 10-year Legacy Survey of Space and Time, Rubin's images will cover the full stretch of sky visible from the Southern Hemisphere every three or four nights, creating time-lapse movies of the changing cosmos. 'The movie has started, the camera is running,' Energy Secretary Chris Wright said in a video clip that was played during today's briefing. The University of Washington, which was one of the original partners in the project, is planning a presentation about the Rubin Observatory at 7 p.m. PT Thursday at Kane Hall on the Seattle campus. Check out UW's website for further information and to register. In the meantime, feast your eyes on the images below. This image shows a small section of the Rubin Observatory's view of the Virgo Cluster, including two spiral galaxies at lower right, three merging galaxies at upper right, several groups of distant galaxies and many stars in our own Milky Way galaxy. Click on the image for a larger version. (Credit: NSF-DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory) This image shows a small section of the Rubin Observatory's total view of the Virgo Cluster. Bright stars in the Milky Way galaxy shine in the foreground, and many distant galaxies are in the background. Click on the image for a larger version. (Credit: NSF-DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory) This is an updated version of a report first published on June 22.