alternative 1) Try updating the Manjaro grub on the other partition. It may turn up there in the Manjaro grub menu. If it does try booting from that menu. Teamviewer will most likely still have broken dependencies on the new kernel.
alternative 2) I forget which grub setting it is in LL grub but it has to do with default save stuff on dual boot disks that makes a shutdown OS the default reboot in grub. Convenient but people forget about it sometimes when updates and upgrades get messed up. Info is out there. If you find it change the setting and update grub and the kernel should appear in the menu but you will still probably have broken dependencies from teamviewer. It's meant to protect OSs from restart update install errors, which apparently you have, but it's also Important/convenient for root passworded OSs.
alternative 3) Uninstall teamviewer altogether and run Lite Updates. Try reinstalling after the new kernel boots properly.
TCÂ
alternative 2) I forget which grub setting it is in LL grub but it has to do with default save stuff on dual boot disks that makes a shutdown OS the default reboot in grub. Convenient but people forget about it sometimes when updates and upgrades get messed up. Info is out there. If you find it change the setting and update grub and the kernel should appear in the menu but you will still probably have broken dependencies from teamviewer. It's meant to protect OSs from restart update install errors, which apparently you have, but it's also Important/convenient for root passworded OSs.
alternative 3) Uninstall teamviewer altogether and run Lite Updates. Try reinstalling after the new kernel boots properly.
TCÂ
All opinions expressed and all advice given by Trinidad Cruz on this forum are his responsibility alone and do not necessarily reflect the views or methods of the developers of Linux Lite. He is a citizen of the United States where it is acceptable to occasionally be uninformed and inept as long as you pay your taxes.