Tech / Technology

Early Black Friday deal: Get up to 70% off at Lovehoney

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Lovehoney is throwing an early Black Friday sale with up to 70% off sex toys, lingerie, and more.
woman holding sex toys against yellow background

UP TO 70% OFF: Lovehoney is throwing its very own Black Friday sale with up to 70% off sex toys, lingerie, bondage gear, and more. But you’d better hurry; it’s only while supplies last.


Our top picks:

Best vibrator deal

Lovehoney silencer classic vibrator

$7.50 at Lovehoney
(save $17.49)

lovehoney purple vibrator


Best male sex toy deal

Lovehoney head master double stroker

$6.49 at Lovehoney
(save $6.50)

Lovehoney head master double stroker


Best sex toy kit deal

Lovehoney first time fun vibrator kit

$32.99 at Lovehoney
(save $22)

first time vibrator kit

Black Friday may be known as a day for finding great deals on electronics, clothing, and home goods, but Lovehoney is changing the game by hosting its own early Black Friday sale with up to 70% off sex toys.

Here are our favorite deals from Lovehoney’s Black Friday sale:

Best vibrator deal

Why we like it

What if we told you that you could reach orgasmic bliss for less than $8? With Lovehoney’s Black Friday sale, you can do just that (and so much more). This little vibrator, for example, is only $7.50 and has more than 1,000 glowing reviews from satisfied customers (a few titles read, “Who needs a man,” “Heaven,” and “OMG,” to give you an idea).

Lovehoney’s silencer classic vibrator may not look like much, but it’s just enough to get you where you need to go. Its compact size and discreet design make it perfect for travel or solo play. Plus, it’s waterproof and features three speeds and four patterns, so you can control when and how you reach your pleasure peak.

The only caveat is that it’s battery-powered, so stock up on those before getting down to business. But it’s a great first vibrator or budget-friendly option for when manual stimulation just isn’t cutting it.

Best male sex toy deal

Why we like it

Lovehoney’s Black Friday sale isn’t limited to vibrators; the company’s also offering hefty discounts on masturbators, prostate massagers, and penis pumps.

One standout deal we found is the Lovehoney head master double stroker. This penis sleeve is usually sold out due to its popularity, but with the Black Friday discount, you can snag it for a fraction of the price.

This blow job toy is clear, stretchy, and open-ended, so just about anyone can wear it and watch their pleasure skyrocket. You can also turn it inside out to explore the second texture. Just be sure to add a water-based lube to avoid any discomfort.

Best sex toy kit deal

Why we like it

Sometimes, variety is the spice of life. If you’re looking for a first-timer sex toy kit (or a nice little gift), this four-piece set is a great place to start. Aptly named the first time fun vibrator kit, it includes a classic vibrator, egg vibrator, G-spot vibrator, and mini bullet vibrator.

While these toys are battery-powered, they’ll give you a little taste of what it’s like to stimulate different pleasure points. And, at just $32.99, this kit is a total steal for the range of toys it offers. This way, you can find out what you like on the cheap and experiment with different sensations before you drop a hundo on that high-end, luxury vibrator.

If you’re looking for a couple’s sex toy kit, we recommend checking out Lovehoney’s Wilder Weekend sex toy kit. It comes with 10 toys, including cock rings and a rabbit vibrator.

Even more sex toy deals

Tech / Technology

Stephen King tweets his ‘Salem’s Lot’ remake review

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Stephen King has shared his review of Gary Dauberman’s “Salem’s Lot” remake in a series of posts on Twitter/X.
A man with glasses looks serious while talking. Part of a Twitter/X post from Stephen King is visible at the bottom of the image.

Will we ever actually get to see IT writer Gary Dauberman’s remake of Stephen King’s novel ‘Salem’s Lot?

The project has been sitting on the Warner Bros. shelves for a while, but based on King’s recent review, we’re hoping it sees the light of day soon.

The horror master — who isn’t always favourable when he reviews adaptations of his work — took to Twitter/X recently to praise the remake, describing it as “muscular and involving”.

“It has the feel of ‘Old Hollywood,’ when a film was given a chance to draw a breath before getting to business. When attention spans were longer, in other words,” wrote King. “It feels like a horror movie version of slow-burn movies like THE GREAT ESCAPE. It builds very well. There are diversions from the book I don’t agree with, but on the whole, faithful.”

King even went on to describe his favourite scene from the movie, which sounds fittingly gruesome for a story about vampires.

“Best scene: Danny Glick in the hospital, trying to claw down a blood bag,” wrote King. “The Glick scene could have been directed by John Carpenter in his prime.”

Although Salem’s Lot may not be getting a theatrical release, the latest reports suggest it may end up launching on Max. Here’s hoping it’s soon.

Tech / Technology

Review: ‘All the Light We Cannot See’ is a sweet, if heavy-handed, series

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Based on Anthony Doerr’s novel, “All the Light We Cannot See” is a Netflix series about two young people in World War II. It releases November 2.
A young woman in a blue dress holding a radio microphone.

August, 1944. American aircraft bomb the Nazi-occupied French city of Saint-Malo. In a townhouse, a blind girl reads Jules Verne over a radio broadcast, waiting for her great-uncle and father to come home. Not far from her, in an upscale hotel-turned-fortress, a German soldier listens to her words. Their lives are inextricably connected and are about to become even more so, but as the bombs rain down, they are unaware of the forces that tie them together.

So begins Netflix’s All the Light We Cannot See, opening in near-identical fashion to Anthony Doerr’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel on which it is based. Spanning years and much of the European continent, Doerr’s novel is a densely layered war epic. Cursed gems, radio technology, and secret codes all play a part within its many, many pages.

Given the novel’s heft and immense popularity, adapting it for the screen presents a tricky challenge — one that director Shawn Levy (Stranger Things, Free Guy) and screenwriter Steven Knight (Peaky Blinders, Serenity) mostly rise to meet. The four-part limited series is unable to replicate Doerr’s lyrical prose, resulting instead in some fairly heavy-handed dialogue. However, it more than makes up for that shortcoming with its genuine earnestness and high-quality production, which results in an adaptation that is cinematic and sweet in equal measure.

All the Light We Cannot See is part war story, part coming-of-age tale.

A man in a dark coat and hat kneels before a young girl in a red coat holding a mobility cane.

Nell Sutton and Mark Ruffalo in “All the Light We Cannot See.”
Credit: Netflix

While All the Light We Cannot See opens with a boy and a girl weathering the bombing of Saint-Malo, there are several years’ worth of story leading us to that point. The series winds back the clock to explore each character’s childhood, using the events in Saint-Malo as a framing device. Notably, the series spends far more time in Saint-Malo than in the past: one of the many changes Knight’s adaptation makes from original book. However, the chronological back-and-forth recalls the structure of Doerr’s novel, all while creating a sense of inevitability: Everything in the boy’s and girl’s lives has been leading to these fateful few days in Saint-Malo.

The girl is Marie-Laure LeBlanc (Aria Mia Loberti). Before Saint-Malo, she lives in Paris with her father Daniel (Mark Ruffalo), the master locksmith at the Museum of Natural History. He makes her a scale model of their neighborhood to help her learn its roads by touch, and he tells her about the many wonders of the Museum. One such wonder is the famed jewel known as the Sea of Flames. Legend has it that whoever possesses it will live forever, but that their loved ones will suffer great misfortune. (The greatest misfortune that Marie’s portion of All the Light We Cannot See suffers are the British accents put on by all these supposedly French characters. A common trait in period movies, I know, but an aggravating one nonetheless.)

Luckily, what these scenes lack in accent realism (charming as he is, Ruffalo’s is extra shaky), they make up for in whimsy, whether that’s Daniel teaching a young Marie (Nell Sutton) how to use the Paris model or Marie listening to illuminating radio broadcasts from a figure known simply as “the professor.” Even when the Nazis’ invasion of Paris forces Marie and Daniel to flee to Saint-Malo to live with Daniel’s Uncle Etienne (Hugh Laurie), Marie seeks out the professor’s broadcast wherever she can.

The boy listens to the professor, too. He is Werner Pfennig (Louis Hofmann), a German orphan who’s a whiz at building and fixing radios. His genius catches the eye of an elite Nazi academy, where Werner faces unspeakable cruelty. The only things that keep him believing in the good of humanity, even as he’s sent on missions to eliminate illegal radio transmissions, are the professor’s words of guidance and kindness. Nations apart, both Werner and Marie look to those words as lifelines to hang on to as the world grows dark around them.

Marie and Werner’s discussions of light and darkness can tend towards being too on-the-nose, especially when you’ve heard variations of them over and over again. However, both Loberti and Hofmann wear their hearts on their sleeves, each performer creating a portrait of hopeful, clear-eyed youth. It helps that both actors are relative unknowns to U.S. audiences. Hofmann is most recognizable for his work in the German series Dark, while Loberti is a complete newcomer. Their takes on Marie and Werner shine throughout the series, and while they rarely share the screen, All the Light We Cannot See makes sure to draw parallels between their resourcefulness, kindness, and perseverance.

All the Light We Cannot See is a feast for the senses.

A young man in a soldier's uniform runs along a wall as an explosion occurs nearby.

Louis Hofmann in “All the Light We Cannot See.”
Credit: Netflix

In addition to the strength of its two leads, All the Light We Cannot See benefits from a beautifully realized world. While much of the series was shot in Budapest and Villefranche-de-Rouergue, exterior shots of the real Saint-Malo help ground us in the city, from its narrow streets to its massive wall extending along the sea.

All the Light We Cannot See also relishes in the tactile — a choice that drops us right into Marie’s point of view, as touch is one of the primary ways in which she navigates the world. We watch young Marie examine the nooks and crannies of the wooden Paris model with her hands, and later reach for familiar touchstones in Etienne’s house, like banisters or tables and chairs. Thanks to this focus on texture, we become extra receptive to everything from bomb shrapnel to the rubble-strewn across Saint-Malo.

Equally captivating is the show’s use of that all-important titular light. Whether it’s the sun’s golden rays diffusing through a room or a campfire keeping the darkness at bay, light is everywhere in All the Light We Cannot See. The show’s nighttime scenes in particular make for a much-needed antidote to the majority of overly dim night scenes in film and TV today. Here, crisp shadows and blue hues win out over shapeless darkness. (Fitting, given the show’s many speeches about how light always overcomes the dark.) A sequence in which sinister Nazi gemologist von Rumpel (Lars Eidinger) hunts Marie through a darkened grotto is especially representative of this feat. It establishes the presence of light through the reflection of the moon on the water and the explosion of bombs outside — a juxtaposition of natural beauty and wartime horror in full effect.

That same dichotomy between beauty and the horrors of war runs throughout All the Light We Cannot See. The Sea of Flames is a stunning gem, shining as if lit from within, yet its supposed curse — and von Rumpel’s dogged obsession — make it more of a danger than something to be treasured. James Newton Howard’s soaring score contrasts with the whistles and explosions of bombs and artillery. But the most prominent source of duality in All the Light We Cannot See is none other than the radio. Nazi officers and French resistance members alike refer to the radio as a tool of war, but for Marie and Werner, it’s a means to connect with others and to feel less alone during a time of great strife. The latter is the path All the Light We Cannot See emphasizes again and again, rejecting any cynicism in favor of bringing an optimistic message to beautiful, blinding light.

All the Light We Cannot See premieres on Netflix Nov. 2.

UPDATE: Oct. 31, 2023, 11:24 a.m. EDT All the Light We Cannot See was reviewed out of its world premiere at 2023’s Toronto International Film Festival.

Tech / Technology

John Carpenter scares Stephen Colbert backstage in ‘Late Show’ Halloween opener

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John Carpenter made a return to “The Late Show” to scare Stephen Colbert backstage.
A man wearing a suit looks behind him, appearing unnerved, while walking down a corridor.

Given that it’s Halloween and he was just on The Late Show show recently, it seems only right that legendary horror director John Carpenter made a brief return to make Stephen Colbert jump.

In the clip above the host is walking backstage when Carpenter pops out at him, before the two have a silly exchange in which Colbert casually dismisses his biggest franchise.

“You’re the master of horror,” says Colbert. “The Fog, The Thing, They Live, Christine, In the Mouth of Madness, Prince of Darkness—”

Halloween?” responds Carpenter.

“Yeah, it’s Halloween!”

“No no no, my movie, Halloween.”

“Oh, the movie! Yeah, never really did it for me. But they can’t all be winners. Thanks John!”

Tech / Technology

This 8-piece gift-boxed Japanese knife set is $130

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Save on an eight-piece Japanese knife set from Seido at the Mashable Shop.
Seido knife set laying on orange background with chopped veggies

TL;DR: Through October 31, you can snag the Seido Japanese Master Chef’s 8-piece knife set for only $129.97 instead of $429 — that’s a 69% discount for a limited time.


In the culinary world, what you use to prepare meals can make all the difference. If you’re passionate about cooking and strive for excellence in the kitchen, or if you just like your tools to be precise and well-made, this set of knives could be a good fit. It can also be for the home cook on your shopping list, because this Seido Japanese 8-piece knife set comes with a gift box and is available at a steep discount through October 31.

These knives are made with strong, high-carbon stainless steel and feature a razor-sharp 15° angle blade for a more acute cutting area. This beautiful set features handmade Japanese craftsmanship with a Damascus-etched blade and an ergonomic Pakka wood handle.

This eight-piece set is a complete culinary toolkit. It includes essential knives for various cooking tasks, from slicing and dicing to chopping and carving. Here’s what you get, all in a tidy box ready to gift:

  • 8-inch chef’s knife

  • 8-inch slicing knife

  • 8-inch bread knife

  • 7-inch cleaver

  • 7-inch and 5-inch Santoku knives

  • 6-inch boning knife

  • 3.5-inch paring knife

While the holiday season is about being with the ones you love most, food is almost always involved. Grab a set of these knives for an easier prep for your holiday feasts. Or take advantage of the included gift box and reduced price and gift it to the foodie in your life.

Grab this Seido Japanese master chef’s 8-piece knife set with a gift box ahead of the holiday hustle while they are on sale for $129.97 (reg. $429) until October 31 at 11:59 p.m. PT.

Prices subject to change.