Here Are the Best Movies to Stream this Weekend on Peacock, Including ‘Bugonia’

This movie is a prequel to ‘The Hunger Games,’ showing a young Coriolanus Snow during the 10th Hunger Games. He’s tasked with mentoring Lucy Gray Baird, a tribute from the poor District 12, hoping to rebuild his family’s name. The story reveals how the Capitol’s cruel games began and how Panem’s political landscape changed. It became available to stream on Peacock on January 14, 2026, letting fans experience more of Suzanne Collins’ world on film.

Markets: A Mildly Disappointing Friday

The only real excitement, if one can call it that, came from the rather unexpected enthusiasm for space ventures. AST SpaceMobile, having secured a government contract – one assumes involving something terribly important and probably expensive – soared 14.29%. Firefly Aerospace, buoyed by an analyst’s upgrade, managed a respectable 12.30% gain. And Novo Nordisk, thanks to a regulatory nod for its weight loss treatment in the U.K., jumped 8.95%. One begins to suspect the entire market is looking for an escape route.

A Miner’s Folly: Or, The Lease and the Bitcoin

The broader markets, however, displayed a restraint most commendable. The S&P 500 dipped a fraction, and the Nasdaq Composite followed suit, as if to murmur, “Let us observe this spectacle with a judicious eye.” Mara Holdings and Hut 8, fellow adventurers in this digital realm, enjoyed a modest ascent, proving that even in folly, there is a degree of camaraderie. One wonders, though, if their gains are rooted in genuine prosperity or merely a shared delusion.

PNC: A Regional Bank’s Modest Triumph

Revenue, it appears, reached a record high, a statistic which, while impressive, says little about the underlying health of the patient. Net interest and fees also enjoyed a similar flourish, amounting to $6.1 billion for the quarter – a 3% increase, year on year. The net interest income itself was a respectable $3.7 billion, improved by 2%. One assumes this is all perfectly legal.

Crypto Privacy Panic: Monero Sparks Retail Frenzy and Market Mayhem! 🚨🤡

And guess what? It’s not alone! Zcash (ZEC) and Dash (DASH)-the troublemaker twins-mimicked Monero’s wild ride, soaring to dizzy heights before nose-diving faster than a roller coaster on a caffeine buzz. Zcash hit $750 and then plummeted back to $400; Dash went from $120 to $35, because hey, what’s a privacy coin rally without a good ol’ crash? 🎢🤪

What Gamers Need for Faster and Safer Online Play

No matter how powerful your computer is, a poor internet connection will always hold you back. Things like lag, lost data packets, and your internet provider slowing down your speed are what really make the difference between a good gamer and a winning one. If you want a better online experience, focus less on upgrading your hardware and more on improving how your data is being sent and received.

Nuclear Dividends: Seriously?

I’ve got some Cameco (CCJ +3.19%), fine. It’s uranium. They dig it up. They refine it. It’s…logical. They’re the second largest, behind Kazakhstan, which, let’s be honest, nobody really thinks about. 17% of the world’s uranium. Okay. Good for them. They’re making money – 15.18% margin. Up 124% in a year. Which is…fine. But I didn’t buy it for a dividend. That’s the problem. You’re looking at this thinking “passive income”? From Cameco? It’s a pittance. $0.17 a share? Seriously? It’s insulting. They raised it twice. By a little. It’s like they’re doing you a favor. I bought it because, well, it might go up. That’s it. If you’re looking for actual income, you’re looking in the wrong place.

AMD: A Discount, So It Goes.

They make chips, these AMD folks. Not the kind you eat. The kind that make computers think. And now, they’re trying to make computers seem to think, with this artificial intelligence business. A lot of hype, naturally. But also, a lot of potential. They say a trillion-dollar market. Which is, frankly, a ridiculous number. But numbers are just numbers, aren’t they?

Super Micro & the AI Fickleness

The S&P 500 (^GSPC 0.06%) experienced a negligible decline, settling at 6,939. The Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC 0.06%) fared little better, drifting down to 23,515. Among the company’s peers, Dell Technologies (DELL +0.73%) managed a modest gain, while Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE 2.25%) suffered a slight setback. These fluctuations, one suspects, reflect the usual assortment of anxieties concerning data centers, memory costs, and the general capriciousness of fate. It is all rather predictable, really.