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WX Brands Launches ‘Here By Chance,' Wine Made for Life's Spontaneous Moments
WX Brands Launches ‘Here By Chance,' Wine Made for Life's Spontaneous Moments

Yahoo

time24-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

WX Brands Launches ‘Here By Chance,' Wine Made for Life's Spontaneous Moments

The premium Paso Robles Cabernet Sauvignon invites consumers to embrace serendipity. NOVATO, Calif., June 24, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--WX Brands is proud to announce the launch of Here By Chance, a brand that celebrates spontaneity and serendipity while delivering exceptional quality. Here By Chance toasts to life's unplanned moments with its inaugural item, an award-winning Paso Robles Cabernet Sauvignon. In addition to quality, today's premium wine shoppers crave an emotional connection with the brands they support. Here By Chance was created for this new generation through its celebration of unplanned moments and spontaneous occasions. According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Americans have on average four hours per day for leisure activities and of those four hours, only 30 mins per day for socializing. Here By Chance encourages people to make the most of these rare opportunities for connection, believing that serendipitous moments and spontaneous experiences bring us together and lead to meaningful discoveries. One such example is Paso Robles' origin story – a region unintentionally stumbled upon by Spanish explorers. "Here by Chance represents an exciting evolution in the WX Brands portfolio," says Patrick Cramb, Vice President of Marketing at WX Brands. "We've identified a shift in buying behavior where wine selection is driven by brand connection and storytelling just as much as the varietal and region. It's exciting to have created a powerful narrative that resonates with today's consumers – we're able to deliver both the emotional appeal that drives purchase decisions and incredible quality in the bottle." The wine is crafted by award-winning Central Coast winemaker, Kip Lorenzetti, who has spent his career honing his talents in the region. His credentials include serving as lead winemaker for Chronic Cellars, known for its iconic Paso wines with bold character. "After more than a decade crafting wines throughout the Central Coast region, I've learned that great Cabernet Sauvignon is about balance, vibrancy, and a sense of adventure," says Lorenzetti. "Here By Chance is made for wine drinkers who appreciate bold, expressive flavors and are always ready for the next unexpected adventure." Data confirms that Paso Robles continues to captivate both consumers and the wine industry alike. Nestled in the heart of California's Central Coast, the region has grown from just 50 wineries to over 200 in the last 25 years, making it California's fastest-growing American Viticultural Area (AVA). The terroir, characterized by a Mediterranean climate, produces world-renowned Cabernet Sauvignon due to its mineral-rich soils, hot days, and cool nights that allow for longer growing seasons. The inaugural 2022 vintage has captivating notes of cassis and cedar along with the classic Paso Robles "dust". Every sip is textured with bold tannins, providing structure, a lush mouthfeel, and a luxurious finish. Here By Chance is rolling out onto shelves nationwide this summer with a suggested retail price of $24.99. For more information on Here By Chance, visit and follow along on Instagram at @herebychancewines. About WX Brands: Established in 1999, WX Brands offers a unique portfolio of wine brands that are sold both domestically and globally. WX Brands also develops exclusive wine brands for retailers around the world. Products are sourced from 14 countries and sold in 20 countries resulting in over 4 million cases sold worldwide. In February 2019, Wine Business Monthly named WX Brands #18 among the Top 50 US wine companies. View source version on Contacts Media Contact: Ana Cahuas, Double Forteacahuas@

I set two atheists up on a date. They spent the evening discussing God
I set two atheists up on a date. They spent the evening discussing God

Irish Times

time10-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Times

I set two atheists up on a date. They spent the evening discussing God

I set two atheists up on a date. It was a few years ago, when the Covid -era restrictions had convinced us that we would never again meet a new person. Unless it was online. And we'd had enough of that. The two atheists, both friends of mine, met for a drink along the canal. They spent the evening discussing God. There is no greater power they both agreed. P, my closer friend of the two, believes that life and love are dictated by chance. Your soul mate might board the 7.15am train from Connolly to Pearse Street every morning. You board the later one. Maybe one day, you get the early one and meet them and start chatting. Or maybe they are sick and stayed home that day. You never meet. It's all down to chance. READ MORE P's date, on the other hand, believes in serendipity. Although serendipity is really just the romantic version of chance. So, take the above scenario, where in the latter instance this pair do not meet on the train. But a minor accident aboard the Dart lands one of the soul mates in the doctor's office, where she meets the other, who was kept out of work with illness. In the waiting room, he overhears her telling the receptionist about the incident and intrigued, he starts a conversation with his soul mate. [ I told my boyfriend about my soulmate, without registering his reaction Opens in new window ] The rest, as they say, is history. In the instance of my two atheist friends, the fairy-tale would become resigned to a brief historical footnote. If the opening scenes sounded like the beginning of a noughties romcom, starring Bill Murray and Kate Hudson , it wasn't meant to be. God had different plans in store. Or maybe one of them simply forgot to text back. Who knows. Anyway, this friend, P, and I lived together for a brief period and spent much of that time discussing existence, and much more of our time discussing love (to the extent that P politely suggested at one point, we could perhaps talk a little less of love). These are the topics reserved for people with whom you spend copious amounts of time, where the mundane need not eclipse the existential. Friends you see so often that conversations are conversations, and not catch ups. Believing in chance was a comfort, P told me; it removes control from your hands. Her admission reminded me of the 'humbling and character-building experience of astronomy' of which Carl Sagan speaks in his celebrated book, Pale Blue Dot. The insignificance of our individual experience is reassuring to many, while for others (me!) it is anxiety-inducing. 'Our posturings, our imagined self-importance, the delusion that we have some privileged position in the universe, are challenged' Sagan writes, when we witness the diminutiveness of our home planet. Without the structure of a formal belief system, we have the freedom to create our own understanding of life. There is no doctrine to tell us how and what to believe; that might guide us or challenge our instincts and guttural value system. This freedom, however, can be intimidating. Choice is a scary thing. [ Illness management: 'If my condition does not improve, does that make it my fault?' Opens in new window ] I often wish, when it came to migraine, that I had a formal belief system to look to. One that could categorically assure that 'God does not give you more than you can handle', 'it will all make sense in time' or even the more kitsch, 'everything happens for a reason'. If everything does not happen for a reason, then why does it happen? Randomness feels a cruel instructor of fate. It was almost 20 years ago now that I received in my local church the blessing of the sick. It was not without hope that I walked up the aisle with my hands across my chest. Embarrassed by the jittery shimmer of hope I held that this teenage girl was destined for a miracle. That same year, an experimental doctor promised he would have my migraine cured by Easter time. Innocently and naively, I shared this news on my Facebook status with comparison to Christ's resurrection. (it didn't come to pass) More recently, a therapist asked me to outline my belief system. I began rather coyly but stopped abruptly when he began to interrogate. I didn't like his questions. I didn't want to lose this comfort to logic. My therapist, who enjoyed playing devil's advocate and readily contested anything I said, simply nodded and changed the subject. Perhaps he understood that, for pain without reason, the rational brings little comfort.

Serendipity leads to creative breakthroughs. Here's how your team can create it
Serendipity leads to creative breakthroughs. Here's how your team can create it

Fast Company

time04-06-2025

  • Business
  • Fast Company

Serendipity leads to creative breakthroughs. Here's how your team can create it

We often think of serendipity as luck—a fortunate coincidence or a happy accident. But what if it's something more intentional? What if serendipity is less about chance and more about conditions? Whether it's a hallway conversation that sparks a billion-dollar idea or a side project that becomes your next calling, many of the most transformational moments in life and work are unplanned, but not uninvited. These moments happen when we build environments, both mental and physical, that are open to the unexpected. The question isn't whether serendipity exists. It's whether you're making space for it. The Case for Intentional Serendipity Take Steve Jobs. He famously credited a college calligraphy class—an elective he took purely out of curiosity—with inspiring the design of Apple's iconic typography. At the time, the class had nothing to do with his career. But it ended up shaping the aesthetic identity of one of the most influential companies in history. Or consider the origin story of CRISPR. The revolutionary gene-editing tool began with a casual conference conversation between two scientists from different disciplines. Their impromptu exchange sparked a collaboration that led to one of the most important scientific breakthroughs of the 21st century. These weren't just lucky accidents. They were the result of environments primed for discovery—spaces where curiosity, diversity, and ambiguity could coexist. Serendipity isn't magic; it is emergence, and you can design for it. In my work with senior leadership teams, I've seen this firsthand. I once hosted an off-site where a brief side conversation during a break, completely off-agenda, led two leaders to uncover a shared experience that reshaped how they collaborated. What followed was a strategic pivot that the team had been struggling to make for months. It reminded me that the real breakthroughs often don't happen during scheduled agenda items; they happen between them. The key is creating the conditions where these moments can arise. A Framework for Creating Serendipity Orchestrating serendipity means increasing your exposure to diverse inputs, unexpected ideas, and interdisciplinary collisions. Here's how to make it happen: 1. Create Surface Area You can't bump into new ideas if you're stuck in the same lanes. Professionally, that might mean attending events outside your industry, joining cross-functional projects, or working from a new space, whether a coworking hub, a public library, or your favorite off-route coffee shop. Personally, try picking up a new hobby, joining a different kind of community, or reaching out to someone who sees the world differently than you do. Try this: Connect with someone whose work is completely unrelated to yours. Ask what they're obsessed with and why. 2. Lead with Curiosity Serendipity doesn't reward certainty; it rewards openness. In organizations, that means creating cultures where good questions matter more than fast answers. Replace 'Why are we doing this?' with 'What else might be possible?' Encourage exploration, tangents, and thoughtful wandering. Individually, follow your fascinations. Read outside your domain. Ask better questions at dinner parties. Let your interests lead you, even if you don't yet know where they're going. Start a 'curiosity stack,' a running list of topics, people, and ideas that fascinate you. Just follow the breadcrumbs and see where they lead you. 3. Engineer Cross-Pollination Innovation loves unlikely collisions. Inside companies, don't wait for an annual retreat to mix disciplines. Create micro-moments of exchange like shared meals, rotating pair sessions, or jam sessions across departments. Outside of work, host a gathering where not everyone knows each other. Invite people across industries, cultures, and generations. Try organizing a 5-5-5 Dinner: five people, five perspectives, and five curated prompts. See what emerges when diverse minds meet around a shared table. In an era of accelerating complexity, innovation doesn't come from working harder; it comes from thinking differently, which requires exposure to new perspectives. A Harvard Business School study found that teams with greater cognitive diversity solve problems faster than more homogeneous ones. Similarly, the World Economic Forum identifies curiosity, creativity, and cross-domain collaboration as top future-of-work skills. Put simply, the ability to generate new value depends on your ability to connect unexpected dots, and serendipity is the connector. Build Your Serendipity Habit The most extraordinary breakthroughs often begin in ordinary moments—but only if you've built a system that invites those moments in. This week, try one of these: Reconnect with someone in a different field you've been meaning to reach out to. Sign up for a class or event that has nothing to do with your job. Start a conversation with a colleague about something unrelated to work and follow where it leads. Serendipity isn't a fluke; it's something you can design. When you embrace curiosity, invite collisions, and stay open to the unknown, you increase the odds that something meaningful and unexpected will find its way to you. The next big thing in your work or life may already be coming—you just need to be ready to meet it.

If everything does not happen for a reason, then why does it happen?
If everything does not happen for a reason, then why does it happen?

Irish Times

time03-06-2025

  • General
  • Irish Times

If everything does not happen for a reason, then why does it happen?

I set two atheists up on a date. It was a few years ago, when the Covid -era restrictions had convinced us that we would never again meet a new person. Unless it was online. And we'd had enough of that. The two atheists, both friends of mine, met for a drink along the canal. They spent the evening discussing God. There is no greater power they both agreed. P, my closer friend of the two, believes that life and love are dictated by chance. Your soul mate might board the 7.15am train from Connolly to Pearse Street every morning. You board the later one. Maybe one day, you get the early one and meet them and start chatting. Or maybe they are sick and stayed home that day. You never meet. It's all down to chance. READ MORE P's date, on the other hand, believes in serendipity. Although serendipity is really just the romantic version of chance. So, take the above scenario, where in the latter instance this pair do not meet on the train. But a minor accident aboard the Dart lands one of the soul mates in the doctor's office, where she meets the other, who was kept out of work with illness. In the waiting room, he overhears her telling the receptionist about the incident and intrigued, he starts a conversation with his soul mate. [ I told my boyfriend about my soulmate, without registering his reaction Opens in new window ] The rest, as they say, is history. In the instance of my two atheist friends, the fairy-tale would become resigned to a brief historical footnote. If the opening scenes sounded like the beginning of a noughties romcom, starring Bill Murray and Kate Hudson , it wasn't meant to be. God had different plans in store. Or maybe one of them simply forgot to text back. Who knows. Anyway, this friend, P, and I lived together for a brief period and spent much of that time discussing existence, and much more of our time discussing love (to the extent that P politely suggested at one point, we could perhaps talk a little less of love). These are the topics reserved for people with whom you spend copious amounts of time, where the mundane need not eclipse the existential. Friends you see so often that conversations are conversations, and not catch ups. Believing in chance was a comfort, P told me; it removes control from your hands. Her admission reminded me of the 'humbling and character-building experience of astronomy' of which Carl Sagan speaks in his celebrated book, Pale Blue Dot. The insignificance of our individual experience is reassuring to many, while for others (me!) it is anxiety-inducing. 'Our posturings, our imagined self-importance, the delusion that we have some privileged position in the universe, are challenged' Sagan writes, when we witness the diminutiveness of our home planet. Without the structure of a formal belief system, we have the freedom to create our own understanding of life. There is no doctrine to tell us how and what to believe; that might guide us or challenge our instincts and guttural value system. This freedom, however, can be intimidating. Choice is a scary thing. [ Illness management: 'If my condition does not improve, does that make it my fault?' Opens in new window ] I often wish, when it came to migraine, that I had a formal belief system to look to. One that could categorically assure that 'God does not give you more than you can handle', 'it will all make sense in time' or even the more kitsch, 'everything happens for a reason'. If everything does not happen for a reason, then why does it happen? Randomness feels a cruel instructor of fate. It was almost 20 years ago now that I received in my local church the blessing of the sick. It was not without hope that I walked up the aisle with my hands across my chest. Embarrassed by the jittery shimmer of hope I held that this teenage girl was destined for a miracle. That same year, an experimental doctor promised he would have my migraine cured by Easter time. Innocently and naively, I shared this news on my Facebook status with comparison to Christ's resurrection. (it didn't come to pass) More recently, a therapist asked me to outline my belief system. I began rather coyly but stopped abruptly when he began to interrogate. I didn't like his questions. I didn't want to lose this comfort to logic. My therapist, who enjoyed playing devil's advocate and readily contested anything I said, simply nodded and changed the subject. Perhaps he understood that, for pain without reason, the rational brings little comfort.

Contestant's final wrong answer on Who Wants to be a Millionaire sees record loss
Contestant's final wrong answer on Who Wants to be a Millionaire sees record loss

The Independent

time26-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Independent

Contestant's final wrong answer on Who Wants to be a Millionaire sees record loss

Nicholas Bennett, a contestant on "Who Wants to be a Millionaire?", incorrectly answered the £1 million question, losing £375,000. He used two lifelines, asking host Jeremy Clarkson and phoning a friend, but neither knew the answer. The question asked which word, coined by a famous writer, originated from a fairytale about three princes. The correct answer was "serendipity," but Bennett chose "Yahoo." Clarkson expressed his sympathy, calling it potentially the biggest loss in the show's history. Despite the loss, Bennett still won £125,000, his safety net amount.

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