Mindful Routines for Families: Why Rituals Can Matter More Than Schedules

The Most Glamorous Nights Still End with Pajamas and Toothbrushes

Between set calls, school drop-offs, and late dinners, schedules can often feel like sand slipping through your fingers. But rituals are different. They are small, meaningful moments that help the body feel grounded and acknowledged.

Founded by Mariana Gordon and Sondra Bakinde, The Mindful Mantis offers gentle, thoughtful tools that help mindful families anchor mornings, transitions, and bedtimes in ways designed to fit real family life.

### Why Rituals Beat Routines in a Star-Speed World

Routines are checklists. Rituals, however, can be calming experiences that support nervous system regulation.

A routine says: brush teeth and grab shoes.
A ritual says: breathe slow, notice your body, connect before you go.

Rituals travel from home to hotel to grandma’s house without losing their power. When nights run late or call times shift, a tiny ritual can still fit. This flexibility matters for mindful parenting because predictability helps growing brains relax.

Relaxed brains are more receptive to learning, self-regulation, and positive social interactions. Over time, these micro-moments may support emotional awareness and connection for both kids and caregivers.

### One-Minute Rituals You Can Start Tonight

You do not need special props or extra time. Try a one-minute practice in each part of the day and then style it to your family vibe.

**Morning Glow-Up**
– Open the curtains for natural light.
– Take three balloon breaths with hands on the belly.
– Set a tiny intention like “Try one kind thing” or “Listen to your body.”

**Out-the-Door Cue**
– Tap the doorframe and say the plan in one sentence.
– Share a high five for teamwork to spark feel-good chemistry.
– Play a quick noticing game for children’s mindfulness: find three blue things.

**After-School Landing**
– Offer a crunchy snack to help the body settle.
– Do a color check on a simple scale: red (fired up), yellow (wiggly), green (ready), blue (tired).
– Guide a two-minute kids’ meditation where a warm light travels from toes to head.

**Screen-Time Shift**
– Place devices on a “sleeping tray.”
– Do five slow shoulder rolls and a big yawn to reset.
– Name a mood and a need: Feeling buzzy? Time to go outside. Feeling bored? Try a puzzle.

**Bedtime Wind-Down**
– Dim the lights, soften your voice, and slow your pace on purpose.
– Share a gratitude trio: one thing from today, one person, one hope for tomorrow.
– Do a goodnight body scan: toes, knees, belly, heart, and forehead each get a friendly hello.

These rituals are tiny on purpose. Small is repeatable. Repeatable becomes reliable. Reliable becomes soothing—even on the busiest days.

### The Science That Makes Rituals Work

Young nervous systems learn regulation within relationships.

When you pair a consistent cue with a calming action, neurons wire faster pathways to steady. Slow breathing nudges the heart to a calmer rhythm and supports vagal tone, which helps with stress recovery.

Naming feelings lights up the brain’s planning center. Predictable sequences shrink uncertainty, which eases cortisol spikes.

That is why mindful parenting is less about perfect technique and more about steady signals. Caregivers can communicate safety, calm, and presence.

Over weeks and months, these signals shape attention, empathy, and flexible thinking.

### Style Your Rituals with Star-Worthy Flair

For visual learners and style-focused families, a good mood board can bring rituals to life.

Rituals can be beautiful and simple at the same time. Think sensory, portable, and sustainable.

– **Sight:** soft lamp for bedtime reading, a taped rectangle by the door as the launchpad, a tiny plant on the window ledge.
– **Sound:** a two-minute morning playlist or a single chime to start cleanup.
– **Scent:** orange slice at snack time or mint by the washbasin.
– **Touch:** a cozy throw for storytime or a smooth worry stone near the backpack hook.

Keep it light so your rituals can work in small spaces, hotel rooms, and grandparents’ houses.

If you want a guided start, the playful lessons in The Mindful Mantis curriculum are short, sensory-friendly, and designed for real family life. Parents who prefer bite-sized videos can explore the Magic Mantis Course and adapt practices to their culture and schedule.

### Bridge Home and School Without Extra Stress

Rituals shine when kids encounter the same cues across settings.

Ask your child’s teacher which transition tools they use, then mirror one at home. A feelings wheel on the fridge and a breathing poster by the door create shared language.

A pocket reminder can help caregivers coach with calm: **Name it, breathe it, choose it.** This bridge can help integrate children’s mindfulness into everyday habit rather than a once-a-week activity.

It also helps caregivers stay regulated, which is the secret sauce. Kids borrow our calm before they learn to find their own.

### Troubleshooting with Compassion

– **If a child resists:** Keep rituals tiny and predictable. Offer choices within the ritual — do you want to pick the song or the book? Choice invites cooperation.
– **Forgetting on chaotic days:** Tie rituals to things that always happen. A toothbrush cues a breath. The door handle cues a high five. The bedside lamp cues a body scan.
– **Feeling silly?** Lean into play. Kids’ meditation can be goofy. Blow bubbles to practice long exhales. Balance a stuffed animal on your belly, breathe, and rock it to sleep.
– **It is not working yet:** Progress can be quiet. Look for shorter meltdowns, easier transitions, or faster repair after conflict. Those are wins.

### The Bigger Picture

Rituals are how mindful families write a calmer story. They say you are safe here and feelings are welcome. They build a home where emotional wellness is ordinary and connection is the baseline.

You do not need to overhaul your life. You need one tiny moment repeated with care. That is the kind of quiet consistency that creates resilient kids and steadier nights.

The Mindful Mantis team loves meeting parents right where they are. If you want a playful story that doubles as a meditation, explore *The Meditating Mantis* and *Mio & The Stoic Spider*, which are gentle, science-savvy ways to begin a lifelong practice of calm and resilience—one page and one breath at a time.
https://hollywoodlife.com/2025/12/03/mindful-routines-for-families-rituals-matter-more-than-schedules/

Agentforce use cases now number 18,500 as Salesforce turns in a $10.9 billlon quarter

**A Tale of Two AI Firms**

Tuesday saw contrasting fortunes for two AI giants. On one hand, Microsoft’s stock took a tumble amid reports—since denied by the company—that it had lowered its AI sales targets due to sluggish customer demand. On the other hand, rival Salesforce experienced a share price lift following the release of its quarterly results, which revealed significant momentum in its Agentforce platform.

**Salesforce Q3 Fiscal 2026 Highlights**

For Q3 fiscal 2026, Salesforce reported earnings of $2.09 billion, up 37% year-over-year, on revenues that grew nine percent to $10.9 billion. Notably, Agentforce and Data 360 achieved $1.4 billion in Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) for the quarter, marking a 114% increase year-over-year. Within that figure, Agentforce ARR alone hit approximately $540 million, soaring 330% year-over-year.

More than 70% of Salesforce’s top 100 wins included five or more cloud products, highlighting broad adoption across its suite.

**Revenue Breakdown by Product Line – Q3**

– Agentforce Sales: $2.3 billion, up 8% year-over-year (constant currency)
– Agentforce Service: $2.5 billion, also up 8%
– Agentforce 360 Platform, Slack, and Other: $2.2 billion, up 19%
– Agentforce Marketing and Agentforce Commerce: $1.4 billion, up 1%
– Agentforce Integration and Agentforce Analytics: $1.4 billion, up 6%

**Performance and Customer Adoption**

Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff commented on the quarter:
*“We had strong performance across Agentforce Service, Agentforce Sales, and Slack. It’s really a hat trick for Salesforce, with large customers saying, ‘Let us show you what we’re doing in Service, Sales, and Slack.’ It’s a ‘Wow!’ experience right now.”*

Regarding Agentforce use cases, there are now 18,500 examples at some stage of implementation, with 9,500 being paid deals. This is a significant increase from Q2, which had 12,500 overall Agentforce deals and around 6,000 paid deals.

Benioff added:
*“We all know that the speed of innovation over the last three years has far exceeded the speed of customer adoption, but that is changing. At Dreamforce, customers are saying, ‘Yes, I’m going to use this now.’ They are deploying customer agents, employee agents, omni-channel supervisors, harmonizing and federating data, and upgrading applications.”*

Customers actively using Agentforce have jumped 70% quarter-over-quarter. Over 50% of new Agentforce bookings and 50% of Data 360 bookings came from existing customers expanding their investments — a sign of deepening adoption.

Data 360 continues to accelerate as the foundation for every Agentforce deployment.

**Other Key Topics from the Post-Results Call**

**Pricing for the Agentic Age:**
Benioff explained Salesforce’s approach to pricing, noting the introduction of what they call the Agentic Enterprise License Agreement. Originally, pricing was expected to be usage- or transaction-based, but customer demand has pushed Salesforce to offer more flexible and enterprise-wide licensing models.

**$8 Billion Informatica Acquisition:**
Benioff is optimistic about the potential of the Informatica acquisition.
*“During due diligence, we saw a lot of promising tech in their labs. Combining Informatica with Data 360 and MuleSoft takes us to a new level in harmonization, integration, and federation of data,”* he said.
He estimates the combined opportunity could reach about a $10 billion business next year, delivering AI-powered intelligence, accuracy, and reliability—especially in reducing hallucinations and adding context to AI outputs.

**‘Divorce’ from Veeva and Life Sciences Cloud Growth:**
Benioff took a jab at Salesforce partner-turned-rival Veeva:
*“They decided to become our competitor, and we’re taking market share from them. They even mentioned losing deals to us in their earnings call, but they haven’t yet seen the full impact of our gains.”*
Salesforce’s Life Sciences Cloud now boasts over 120 industry leaders, including five of the top 20 pharma companies. This momentum is expected to continue expanding across the sector.

**U.S. Public Sector Opportunity:**
Benioff shared insights from recent meetings in Washington, D.C., with senior government officials, including the Treasury Secretary.
He highlighted Salesforce’s growing role in helping major agencies re-automate and modernize their workflows. Notable examples include:
– The U.S. Air Force and Army running critical workflows on Salesforce
– Over 120 apps running at Veterans Affairs, significantly improving veteran services
– The IRS automating up to 98% of manual activities in its Office of the Chief Counsel, reducing case opening times from 10 days to 30 minutes, and saving an estimated 500,000 minutes annually through legacy system retirements

Salesforce’s Agentforce will further optimize and accelerate processes at the IRS and beyond.

**Addressing the MIT Report on AI ROI:**
Benioff referenced a recent MIT report claiming 95% of AI projects fail to deliver ROI. He explained:
*“Many customers initially tried building their own AI models and toolkits, with limited success. The real value now comes from delivering AI-powered customer agents through platforms like Agentforce.”*

**My Take**

Salesforce delivered a strong quarter, countering much of the investor skepticism around the pace of Agentforce adoption. While there is undoubtedly a long road ahead, the trajectory is clear—Agentforce adoption is heading strongly upward.

The increasing variety of use cases further strengthens the business case for enterprises hesitant or cautious about diving into AI-driven platforms.

Onwards!
https://diginomica.com/agentforce-users-now-number-18500-salesforce-turns-109-billlon-quarter

GOP congressman and retired general says Trump should ‘absolutely’ fire Pentagon chief

One Republican member of Congress with an extensive military record is calling on President Donald Trump to fire Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

During a Tuesday interview with CNN reporter Manu Raju, Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.), a retired brigadier general in the U.S. Air Force and member of the House Armed Forces Committee, expanded on his view that the embattled defense secretary should be “held accountable” following a Washington Post report. The report alleges that Hegseth ordered the deaths of two people who survived a missile strike.

“We do not kill two survivors who are not posing an imminent threat to anybody,” Bacon said. “I just want to make sure I get the facts. If what is being reported is true, somebody was wrong and they should be held accountable. It doesn’t sound good. And if somebody actually did this, they should be held accountable,” he continued. “And it should be at the top, not the bottom.”

When asked by Raju whether Hegseth’s actions necessitated his removal, Bacon responded, “absolutely.” He also referenced his prior call for Hegseth to be fired over a separate incident known as “Signalgate,” in which the defense secretary accidentally included Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg on a group text sharing classified information about impending strikes in Yemen.

“I felt that way under Signalgate. He should have taken responsibility then, and he didn’t,” Bacon said.

Hegseth’s account of his involvement in the strike has been inconsistent. Initially, during a Fox News interview, he claimed he knew “exactly” who was on the boat that was destroyed and that he watched the events unfold in real time.

However, during Tuesday’s Cabinet meeting at the White House, Hegseth said he had left the room prior to the secondary strike that killed the two survivors. Instead, he stated that Admiral Frank M. Bradley, who was in charge of the mission, made the call to order the strike on the survivors. Hegseth called it “the correct decision.”
https://www.alternet.org/trump-fire-pete-hegseth/

It Was a Starry (and Very New York) Front Row at the Chanel Métiers d’Art 2026 Show

Happy Chanel Day to All Who Celebrate

Today in New York, Chanel designer Matthieu Blazy unveiled his Métiers d’Art 2026 collection with not one, but two Manhattan shows. Following up his highly anticipated spring 2026 debut in Paris back in October, Blazy held a pair of star-studded presentations—one at 3 p.m., another at 7 p.m.—at a nondescript subway station at 168 Bowery, where guests watched models strut in front of a stationed train.

Until today, New York hadn’t hosted a Chanel show since 2018, when the late Karl Lagerfeld presented a Métiers d’Art collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in front of the Temple of Dendur. And, naturally, Blazy’s splashy New York takeover came with a very starry front row. (Would it be a Chanel show otherwise?)

In addition to new house ambassadors like A$AP Rocky and Ayo Edebiri, all manner of Hollywood royalty came out for the affair, including stars such as Tilda Swinton, Meg Ryan, Bowen Yang, Teyana Taylor, Dapper Dan, Kristen Stewart, and Christine Baranski.

What’s more? Many of the A-listers in attendance had personal connections to New York. Rocky, for one, was born and raised in Harlem, while actors like Edebiri and Ryan studied at NYU. While some have since departed the hustle and bustle of the city, many remain fixtures of New York’s cultural scene, like Questlove and SNL’s Bowen Yang.

In honor of Chanel’s New York minute, Vogue caught up with the front row and asked them about some of their favorite Big Apple memories and must-haves.

https://www.vogue.com/slideshow/chanel-metiers-dart-2026-new-york-show-front-row

Scott Steiner breaks silence after Bron Breakker eviscerates CM Punk on WWE RAW

Bron Breakker’s fiery promo on RAW, delivered immediately following his impressive victory at WWE Survivor Series, has set the stage for an explosive new feud with CM Punk.

The intense exchange between Breakker and Punk promises to bring a fresh wave of excitement to the WWE universe, as both superstars prepare to clash in what is expected to be a high-stakes showdown. Fans are eagerly anticipating the next chapter in this unfolding rivalry.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/wwe/news-scott-steiner-breaks-silence-bron-breakker-eviscerates-cm-punk-wwe-raw

Noem calls for ‘full travel ban’ on countries ‘flooding’ US with immigrants after DC attack

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced Monday that, following a meeting with President Donald Trump, she is recommending a sweeping travel ban on every country she claims is sending dangerous immigrants to the United States.

Noem made the announcement in a fiery post on X, denouncing certain immigrants as “killers” and “leeches.” She stated, “I just met with the President. I am recommending a full travel ban on every country that’s been flooding our nation with killers, leeches, and entitlement junkies.”

She slammed certain immigrants as threats to public safety and accused them of draining resources meant for Americans.

“Our forefathers built this nation on blood, sweat, and the unyielding love of freedom—not for foreign invaders to slaughter our heroes, suck dry our hard-earned tax dollars, or snatch the benefits owed to AMERICANS,” she said. “WE DON’T WANT THEM. NOT ONE.”

The announcement came after law enforcement officials reported that an Afghan immigrant allegedly attacked two National Guard members last Wednesday in Washington, D.C., just blocks from the White House.

This incident has heightened concerns about immigration policies. According to Noem, the Afghan suspect involved was “radicalized” after arriving in the U.S.

RELATED: Alleged D.C. Shooter Entered US Under Afghan Resettlement Push Mayorkas Vowed Would Be Done ‘Swiftly and Safely’

[Click here to download the full report.]
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/noem-calls-full-travel-ban-countries-flooding-us-immigrants-dc-attack

17-year-old shot during fight in Madera, police say

MADERA, Calif. (KFSN) – A 17-year-old boy is in critical condition at the hospital after being shot during a fight.

Officers responded to a call at a home on Rogers Street, east of Lake Street, at about 1:30 a.m. on Sunday regarding a possible shooting. Upon arrival, they were informed that the victim was already being taken to the hospital.

Police located the vehicle carrying the injured teen and administered life-saving aid while calling for emergency medical services. The teen was then transported to the hospital for treatment.

Investigators believe the shooting stemmed from an argument over a family issue. Authorities have stated there is no ongoing threat to the community.

The Madera Police Department is not releasing additional details about a possible suspect or the identities of those involved in the incident. Anyone with information is encouraged to contact the Madera Police Department.
https://abc30.com/post/17-year-old-shot-during-fight-madera-police-say/18231635/

Trump issues White House invitation to families of the two National Guard members who were shot

President Donald Trump on Sunday said he has invited the family of a National Guard member fatally shot last week to the White House. He mentioned that he spoke to her parents, who were “devastated” by the tragedy.

U.S. Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom died following a shooting incident on Wednesday in Washington, D.C. Her colleague, U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe, who was seriously injured in the same event, remained in critical condition. The president said he has discussed a White House visit for the parents of both members of the West Virginia National Guard.

“I said, ‘When you’re ready, because that’s a tough thing, come to the White House. We’re going to honor Sarah,” Trump told reporters. “And likewise with Andrew, recover or not.”

In recent days, local vigils in West Virginia have honored the soldiers, including one held Saturday evening at Webster County High School, where Beckstrom attended classes.

“Sarah was the kind of student that teachers hoped for. She carried herself with quiet strength, a contagious smile, and a positive energy that lifted people around her,” said Gabriel Markle, the school’s principal. “She was sweet, caring and always willing to help others.”

Beckstrom, 20, and Wolfe, 24, were deployed with the West Virginia National Guard as part of Trump’s aggressive crime-fighting plan that federalized the D.C. police force.

A 29-year-old Afghan national faces one count of first-degree murder and two counts of assault with intent to kill while armed in connection with the shooting. This incident prompted the Trump administration to halt all asylum decisions and pause issuing visas for people traveling on Afghan passports.

Funeral arrangements had not been finalized for Beckstrom, according to Cathy Pettry, owner of Dodd & Reed Funeral Home in Webster Springs. Pettry stated on Saturday that her funeral home has been in contact with Beckstrom’s family about the services.

At the vigil, the hometown crowd, seated in bleachers and folding chairs, lit candles while listening to speeches from clergy and West Virginia Governor Patrick Morrisey, who said he visited Wolfe’s family earlier in the day.

Wolfe, of Martinsburg, entered service in February 2019. He graduated from Musselman High School in 2019, according to Berkeley County Schools. He remained hospitalized and “fighting for his life,” Morrisey said during an interview the following day on Fox News Channel’s “The Sunday Briefing.”

U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi also told “Fox News Sunday” that she planned to meet with Wolfe’s family.

Morrisey called it a challenging time for the state. Referring to Beckstrom as a “favorite daughter of Webster County,” he shared that he quickly learned about her reputation as someone with a big heart who loved to serve others.

Beckstrom, from Summersville, graduated in June 2023 and enlisted in the National Guard that same month. She served with distinction as a military police officer, according to the West Virginia National Guard.

“She had a lot of kindness and she certainly had courage,” Morrisey told the crowd during Saturday’s vigil. “Though her life lasted far too short, she has left a mark that’s going to last forever.”

AP writer Josh Boak contributed to this report from West Palm Beach, Florida.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/30/trump-white-house-invitation-national-guard-members/

‘The Beatles Anthology’ Gets a New Ending: Director Oliver Murray on How Episode 9 Finally Put a Sweeter Cap on the Group’s Historic Docuseries

The newly refurbished version of *The Beatles Anthology* has been rolling out on Disney+ over several days this week, culminating with a newly commissioned Episode 9 premiering Friday night. This updated edition offers more than just a fresh edit and polish—it delivers an all-new finale that feels sweeter and more uplifting than the original series’ gradual fade-out, which ended with the break-up of the most popular band of all time.

Fans are unlikely to mind the extra hour of added context and sentiment. As the new episode premiered, its director, Oliver Murray, shared with *Variety* the intentions behind this fresh finale. Murray is the same filmmaker whom Apple Corps enlisted two years ago to direct a short film about the “final Beatles single,” *Now and Then*. Although he wasn’t yet a teenager when the original *Beatles Anthology* first aired in prime time 30 years ago, Murray was chosen to weave together archival footage alongside Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr.

Back in the ’90s, the three surviving Beatles reactivated as a group, working on old John Lennon home demos to create new songs such as “Free as a Bird” and “Real Love.” These tracks were added to the *Anthology* albums released in 1995. They also briefly attempted “Now and Then,” which wasn’t completed until 2023 and is foreshadowed in the new Episode 9.

The British filmmaker says he set out to humanize the trio as they reassessed their legacy in the ’90s, while also acknowledging that their story is “modern, 20th century folklore that doesn’t age,” much like *The Lord of the Rings*.

**The Interview**

*The Apple team clearly appreciated your work on the “Now and Then” short film, leading to this new *Anthology* episode. Did the commission come after finishing that project?*

“I was in L.A. doing press for the *Now and Then* short with Jonathan Clyde, Apple Corps’ director of production. On the last day, I was called into an office in Santa Monica and asked if I’d consider developing an extra episode for the *Anthology* re-release, with time over Christmas to review materials, talk to archivists, watch footage, and come back with a treatment.”

“Between Christmas dinners and family visits, I jotted down ideas. The brief was loose but emphasized including more from the ’90s sessions featured in *Now and Then*. We had only scratched the surface of the ‘Free as a Bird’ and ‘Real Love’ material, so I knew that could be a focus.”

*How did you approach Episode 9 compared to the previous eight episodes?*

“Episode 9 was a gift—it allowed us to step outside the strict chronology of Episodes 1-8, which are a faithful reconstruction of the original series. I wanted to bring a contemporary sensibility and focus on *how* the band felt to be Beatles—the ‘north star’ of this episode.”

“I also liked making the *Anthology* feel cyclical. Themes of brotherhood from Episode 1, where they find each other, echo in Episode 9 as they rebuild their friendship. Instead of ending with their breakup in 1970, the finale lifts the heavy fog of their final years and finishes on a more positive note.”

*Episode 9 ends in the mid-’90s with footage of the band making “Free as a Bird” and “Real Love” and promotional interviews. There are no contemporary interviews or references after that. It stops in time much like the original series stopped in 1970. Was that a deliberate choice?*

“Absolutely. Every time I finished editing, I imagined saying, ‘Right, it’s 1995.’ I could have interviewed Ringo or Paul today, but I didn’t want to juxtapose 2025 perspectives talking about 1965 events. It felt nebulous.”

“Given the *Anthology* is a revered artifact you have to treat carefully, I wanted to take the gloves off and create something with modern rhythms while still tethered to a 30-year-old foundation. Thematically, we could wander through memories, brotherhood, and the unique existence the Beatles lived.”

“I also aimed to follow the old filmmaking mantra: ‘arrive late, leave early’—to focus on the essential, poignant moments. Interestingly, *Now and Then* as a short film could almost serve as an ‘Episode 9.5’ since all of this material ties together.”

*You included rare footage of McCartney, Harrison, and Starr interviewed together in Studio Two at Abbey Road, which fans have never seen before. How rare was that?*

“I couldn’t believe that joint interview was unseen until now. While Episodes 1-8 show them mostly individually, Episode 9 reveals them engaging together, having seen each other’s interviews, realizing they each see the story differently.”

“Ringo comments, ‘This isn’t my *Anthology,* it’s our *Anthology.*’ Even the Beatles themselves can’t fully grasp their own legacy—it’s sprawling, evolving modern folklore.”

*How much of Episode 9’s material had been seen before?*

“It’s roughly a 50/50 split between unseen and previously released material. What can’t be overstated is the restoration work done by Park Road Post, Peter Jackson’s company. While DVD rips and leaks exist, this new version has been meticulously scrubbed up—viewers are seeing the footage as it was meant to be seen.”

“Moments like the three Beatles casually singing ‘Thinking of Linking,’ one of their earliest original songs, first appeared in DVD extras but never curated into a linear story. Now it’s properly presented on a premium streamer like Disney+, allowing deeper appreciation.”

*You mentioned aiming to appeal both to lifelong Beatles fans and younger audiences new to the band. How did you balance that?*

“I wanted Episode 9 to be accessible for newcomers who might use it as an entry point, outside the strict chronology. There are stories about the band’s haircuts, boots, and inventive studio work that capture their essence.”

“At the same time, it’s rich with meaningful details for hardcore fans. The trick was avoiding the middle ground where it wouldn’t fully satisfy either group.”

*Throughout the episode, how do the Beatles express their feelings about their legacy?*

“The episode’s core is about how they felt being Beatles. There are proud, joyful moments, alongside melancholy—especially for George, who wrestled with being forever labeled ‘George Harrison: Beatle,’ a badge he couldn’t remove.”

“We see different facets of their personalities and how they experienced that legacy. Without John—who’d passed in 1980—George comes across as the most skeptical, sometimes an outsider, but still a willing participant. Watching this reconciliation is satisfying, especially for fans familiar with documentaries like *Get Back* or *Let It Be,* which painted a more complicated picture of their final years.”

*It’s remarkable that decades after years apart, the relational dynamics among Paul, George, and Ringo still surface when they reunited in the ’90s. What did you notice about their chemistry?*

“It’s amazing. After decades of little contact, when they gathered in Abbey Road’s Studio Two, the old dynamics were still there, dormant but alive.”

“Paul was energetic, racing ahead with ideas, full of exuberance. George somewhat filled the Lennon role, bringing thoughtful input. Ringo was quiet, weighing in sparingly but delivering poignant or humorous ‘cherries on the cake.’ Their interplay, forged in their youth, came full circle.”

*That final scene of them sitting on the grass at George’s estate playing a tune—how fitting is that as an ending to their story?*

“It’s a lovely, intimate way to close this definitive Beatles saga, much truer to their legacy than simply fading out at 1970. That footage now feels timeless; we’re 30 years on from when it was shot—further than the 25 years from 1970 to 1995.”

“For many, it’s a time warp. In 1995, the Beatles seemed distant and aged, but the footage reveals comparatively youthful men—not just middle-aged icons reminiscing but creators reconnecting.”

*What was your personal experience with *The Beatles Anthology* growing up?*

“I was 10 when the original *Anthology* aired. My family had just moved, surrounded by boxes, and the TV was on a makeshift stand of stacked boxes. My parents declared, ‘This is what we’re watching,’ and, although I was skeptical, the story of four working-class kids with a dream mesmerized me.”

“For me, and globally, the Beatles’ story is modern 20th-century folklore. It doesn’t age like filmmaking techniques might, similar to how *The Lord of the Rings* holds up. I wanted to humanize them—as young men having fun making music together again, not as curmudgeons reflecting on the past.”

*Any final thoughts on the Beatles’ enduring legacy?*

“They remain astounding—George was 24 when he made *Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.* At that age, I was doing silly things like making bongos out of potatoes! The Beatles’ music and story have become a cultural language passed down through generations. For those who weren’t there the first time, it never gets old—like classic literature or Shakespeare.”

“It’s an honor to help bring their story to new audiences, ensuring it continues to resonate and inspire.”

*The Beatles Anthology*, now streaming on Disney+, with Episode 9 offering a fresh, heartfelt close to an iconic chapter in music history.
https://variety.com/2025/music/news/beatles-anthology-episode-9-director-oliver-murray-interview-1236595076/

CSU Rams close out Mountain West era with loss to Air Force

The Rams suffered a tough loss to Air Force, falling 42-21 at Canvas Stadium. With this defeat, the Ram-Falcon trophy has been surrendered back to the visitors.

There is currently no clear timeline for when the trophy might make another appearance in Fort Collins. Fans will be eagerly awaiting the next matchup between these rivals to see if the Rams can reclaim the prized trophy.
https://www.denverpost.com/2025/11/28/csu-rams-college-football-air-force/