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Canneseries 2026 : Noah Hawley sera l'invité d'honneur de Canneseries Industry
Le Festival International des Séries de Cannes, Canneseries, vient d'annoncer que l'écrivain, scénariste et réalisateur américain Noah Hawley serait l'invité d'honneur de l'édition 2026 de Canneseries Industry. Un showrunner de renom auquel on doit notamment les séries "Fargo" ou encore "Alien". Il est derrière les célèbres séries Fargo et Alien. Ce jeudi, le Festival International des Séries de Cannes, Canneseries, a annoncé le nom de l'invité d'honneur de l'édition 2026 de Canneseries Industry. Il s'agit de Noah Hawley, écrivain, scénariste et réalisateur américain de renom. Le showrunner sera donc présent sur la Croisette du 23 au 28 avril prochain, à l'occasion de la 9e saison de Canneseries.
Microsoft aurait dû y penser : cette appli audio change la vie sur Windows

Chelsea pousse David Datro Fofana vers la sortie : le Celtic en embuscade.

Open d'Australie : Monfils, Rinderknech, Humbert... le tirage des 14 Français ICI #AusOpen #AO2026 #Monfils #Rinderknech #Humbert
Le tableau messieurs de lrsquo;Open drsquo;Australie 2026 nrsquo;a pas eacute;pargneacute; les Franccedil;ais. Degrave;s le 1er tour, Ugo Humbert heac ... lire la suite

Revoir le Château-Neuf : l'exposition sur la demeure disparue des rois à Saint-Germain-en-Laye (78)
Bruno Le Maire remet l'épée d'académicien à Bernard Arnault - Charline explose les faits

Le cours de l’or (once, gramme, kilo) ce Jeudi 15 janvier 2026
Vous voulez acheter de l'or ? Voici combien coûtent une once d'or, un kilo d'or, un gramme d'or sur les marchés ce Jeudi 15 janvier 2026.

Si la peau a un capital soleil, peut-on le ralentir ?
How 'Heated Rivalry' fans took over the internet

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Elon Musk says retirement savings 'won't matter' in 20 years. We asked 7 personal finance and AI gurus what they think.
The Tesla board has proposed a pay package for Elon Musk that could be worth up to $1 trillion.ALLISON ROBBERT/Getty Images; Getty Images; Tyler Le/BIElon Musk said retirement savings won't be needed in an abundant future.Business Insider asked seven personal finance and AI experts for their thoughts on Musk's vision.They all agreed: You should be saving for your retirement."Savings? Where we're going, we don't need savings."That twist on Doc Brown's famous line from "Back to the Future" captures Elon Musk's controversial view that future retirees won't need nest eggs."Don't worry about squirreling money away for retirement in 10 or 20 years," the Tesla and SpaceX CEO told the "Moonshots with Peter Diamandis" podcast earlier this month. "It won't matter."The world's richest man predicted that advances in AI, energy, and robotics will generate such an "abundance" of resources for all that individuals' retirement savings will be "irrelevant."Musk's blue-sky vision comes at a time when years of stubborn inflation, elevated interest rates, and weak wage growth have created a nationwide affordability crisis. Household debt hit an all-time high of $18.59 trillion in the third quarter of 2025, up more than 50% from the same point in 2015.Business Insider asked seven personal finance and AI experts for their thoughts on Musk's comments.Their reactions all boiled down to one thing: You really should be saving for retirement.Musk did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.'Dangerous and misleading'"Most Americans should absolutely ignore these comments," said Geoffrey Sanzenbacher, a research fellow at Boston College's Center for Retirement Research (CRR). "Musk's speculation sends a dangerous and misleading message."Sanzenbacher cast doubt on Musk's timeframe, and said the tech billionaire's words were "especially dangerous" as Social Security is likely to be cut in the coming years due to a funding shortfall.Americans should be "saving more, not less," given that prospect, he said. He added that even if Musk's future comes to pass, "people who saved now will hardly be much worse off in this utopian future."Alicia Munnell, a senior advisor at CRR and its former director, also dismissed Musk's recommendation."I would pay no attention to anything Elon Musk says out of his core area of expertise," she said."He has no idea how the American lives, how important Social Security and 401(k)s are to maintaining people's standard of living," Munnell continued. "He needs to stay out of public policy and concentrate on going to Mars!"Olivia Mitchell, the director of Wharton's Boettner Center on Pensions and Retirement Research, said there was "some truth" in Musk's view that AI could boost productivity and reduce costs over time.But she warned his advice was "risky" for US households, especially as their retirement security will "still depend heavily on individual saving beyond Social Security.""Even in a richer economy, gains are likely to be uneven and uncertain, so people must still save, in case the future does not unfold as predicted," Mitchell added.Sharing the wealth will take workKristin Pugh, a private wealth manager at Creative Planning, said AI would allow people to afford their basic needs without working, freeing them to spend more time doing other thingsBut past technological advances have made people more productive without leading them to work less, and created wealth gains that weren't distributed equally, she said."Before we 'cancel' the idea of saving for another time in our lives, let's look at the environment and the logistics that would provide for our basic needs," Pugh said."We need to push leaders like Musk and Altman for the game…
