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Anson Frericks, a former executive at Anheuser-Busch, has criticized how the company has handled the backlash against Bud Light. Now, Anheuser-Busch has gotten involved with issues that he's been fighting against, Frericks told Insider. Anheuser-Busch US CEO Brendan Whitworth hasn't explicitly defended the Bud Light partnership with influencer Dylan Mulaney, nor has he called it a mistake. The dip in Bud Light sales persisted through the end of June, USA Today reported. In a TikTok video posted at the end of June, Mulvaney alleged that Bud Light never reached out to her following the onslaught of hate she received.
Persons: Anson Frericks, Bud Light, Bud, influencer Dylan Mulvaney, Brendan Whitworth, Mulvaney, Whitworth, Frericks, he's, Busch, He's, Vivek Ramaswamy, Marc Benoiff, Brendan Whitworth hasn't, influencer Dylan Mulaney, Getty, LAURIE DIEFFEMBACQ, Dylan Mulvaney Organizations: Anheuser, Busch, Service, Whitworth, CBS, Newsweek, Street, Fox News, Daily Mail, Fox, Bud, MAG, AFP, Pride Month, Human, USA Locations: Wall, Silicon
Carlo Vittorini, who as publisher guided Parade magazine, the nearly ubiquitous weekly Sunday newspaper supplement, to revenue and circulation heights, died on June 25 at his summer home in Nantucket, Mass. His wife, Nancy Vittorini, said the cause was congestive heart failure. Mr. Vittorini spent 50 years in the magazine business, nearly all of it when it was still thriving. In 1992, when Parade’s circulation was soaring, he confidently told The St. Joseph News-Press/Gazette of Missouri: “Nobody can get a message out as quickly as we can. Newhouse Jr., the chairman of Advance Publications, as Parade’s publisher, president and chief executive.
Persons: Carlo Vittorini, Nancy Vittorini, Vittorini, Joseph, , Newhouse Jr Organizations: Sunday, Joseph News, Press, of, Newsweek can’t, S.I, Advance Locations: Nantucket, of Missouri
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailDisney streaming issues could be solved with a bundle like Netflix, says media mogul Tom RogersTom Rogers, Newsweek Editor-at-Large, joins 'Fast Money' to talk Disney's streaming troubles and steps he thinks the company could take moving forward.
Persons: Tom Rogers Tom Rogers Organizations: Newsweek
Russian forces in Zaporizhia have been on the frontlines without a break for nine months, a military blogger wrote. Russian forces have "no available personnel to replace them with," the Institute for the Study of War said. While some Russian commanders have tried to give soldiers a break, they later faced retaliation from higher-ranking officers, the blogger wrote. The psychological toll of Putin's war in Ukraine on Russian forces has been extensively reported on. Instead, he was sent to the frontlines in eastern Ukraine and captured by Ukrainian forces a few days later.
Persons: Putin, , Vladimir Putin's Organizations: for, Service, Institute for, US Army, National, ., Newsweek, New York Times, The Times Locations: Zaporizhia, Ukraine, Russian, Ukrainian
A graphic purporting to show Garth Brooks playing to a nearly empty arena has its origins in a satirical article but the image is circulating online without that context, prompting comments suggesting that the event really happened. The image of Brooks and the article originated on satirical website Dunning-Kruger Times (here), which lists the story under the category “Punishing Garth Brooks” (here). The original photo used in the article and the image circulating online shows Brooks performing in May 2022 at Paul Brown Stadium in Cincinnati, Ohio (here). Reuters has previously debunked claims about Garth Brooks that originated on the Dunning-Kruger Times site (here), (here). The claim that Garth Brooks performed in an empty arena after refusing to ban Bud Light from his new bar originated on a satirical website.
Persons: Garth Brooks, “ Garth, , Brooks, Bud, influencer Dylan Mulvaney, Dunning, Garth Brooks ”, tomfoolery ”, , dunning, kruger, Bud Light, Read Organizations: Newsweek, Kruger Times, Defense, Paul Brown, Reuters Locations: America, Nashville, Cincinnati , Ohio
Boris Bondarev told Newsweek he believes the Wagner mutiny will hasten Putin's ouster. His war was from the very beginning doomed," Boris Bondarev told Newsweek on Tuesday. He quit his post in May 2022 after criticizing Russia's war in Ukraine. The Wagner Group's mutiny erupted after a long-running feud between its chief, Yevgeny Prigozhin, and the Russian military leadership. In the lead-up to the attempted mutiny, the mercenary group leader had been growing increasingly critical of Russia's war in Ukraine.
Persons: Boris Bondarev, Wagner, Bondarev, , Wagner Group's, Putin, Yevgeny Prigozhin, Prigozhin, Prigozhin's Organizations: Newsweek, Service, UN, Moscow Times, Foreign Affairs, Russian, The New York Times, Russian Embassy, Times, Defense Ministry Locations: Russian, Ukraine, Geneva, Switzerland, Belarus
But something went wrong in Putin’s approach, and it wasn’t just the incompetence of his military, the bravery of Ukrainians or the intercession by the West. In a nutshell, the problem is this: A monopoly on truth can be sustained only through a monopoly on violence. Big Brother can tell the Big Lie only if he has the Big — and only — Gun. But it creates risks, including the risk that someone from one of those centers of power will be willing to tell an inconvenient truth. And it may be why he appeared to have been treated as a hero, almost a liberator, in Rostov-on-Don.
Persons: what’s, Putin, Prigozhin’s Wagner, Ramzan Kadyrov, Prigozhin, ” —, Organizations: Newsweek, Ministry of Defense, NATO Locations: Ukraine, Rostov, Moscow
The outlandish claim comes amid health concerns after the destruction of the Kakhovka dam in Ukraine. The bizarre claim comes after the destruction of a major dam near Kherson caused flooding along the Dnieper River in southern Ukraine earlier this month. "When bitten, mosquitoes can infect military personnel with a dangerous infection, such as malaria," he said. Alex Babenko/Getty ImagesWhile the bizarre claim appears to have little basis, the dam's destruction has caused fears over subsequent disease and health concerns. A military partisan movement said the Russian army has recently suffered a cholera outbreak after the destruction of the dam, Newsweek reported.
Persons: Igor Kirillov, , Max Seddon, Kirillov, " Seddon, didn't, Alex Babenko, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus Organizations: Kremlin, Service, Chemical Protection Troops, Ukraine, Financial Times, White, Yahoo News, Metro, Politico, Newsweek, WHO Locations: Russian, Ukraine, Russia, Moscow, Kyiv, Kherson, West, Nova
In 2020, the Romero family moved into an underground bunker in the middle of the US. The Romero family transformed a nuclear bunker into their home. "We took all of our life savings — everything, basically our last penny and then some — and purchased the bunker," Romero said. The bunker was unfurnished, so the Romero family is now renovating the space into a home. The room the Romero family transformed into the primary bedroom.
Persons: Romero, , Ruben Romero, I'm, TikTok Romero, Romero family's, There's, there's, it's, he's Organizations: Service, Newsweek, AT, Center, YouTube Locations: Niagara Falls , New York, Peachtree City , Georgia
A video showing aerial views of the WNBA Championship victory parade in Chicago in 2021 has been mislabeled in online posts mocking sparse turnout for the 2023 NBA Championship victory parade for the Denver Nuggets. “Nobody showed up to the Denver Nuggets championship parade,” read a tweet sharing the old footage (here). The city of Denver, which hosted the championship parade, estimated that 750,000 people attended (here). The full Denver Nuggets 2023 Championship parade footage shared by the NBA can be seen (here). Video shows the WNBA championship victory parade for Chicago Sky in 2021.
Persons: , Read Organizations: WNBA, Denver Nuggets, Facebook, Chicago Sky, Newsweek, Wintrust, Google, Chicago, NBA, Reuters Locations: Chicago, Michigan, Denver
A clip from an old episode of the TV show "Mythbusters" has resurfaced on Twitter. Account @ChudsOfTikTok posted the clip as a comparison of what happened on the Titan submersible. But what is shown in the video clip is under extremely different circumstances from the lost sub. But if something goes wrong with the suit's pressurization, it could be catastrophic for the diver. Then they put the mannequin in an old diving suit and sunk it 300 feet underwater, where the pressure is about nine times great than at sea level.
Persons: , doesn't, Jessi Combs, Kari Byron, Tory Belleci, Grant Imahara, ChudsofTikTok Organizations: Titan, Service, Newsweek
For the new company's first hire, GymBird is choosing one lucky person to walk 10,000 steps in one day for $10,000, according to its site. Accepting the offer requires the CSO to train for a month until they feel comfortable walking 10,000 steps in a single day. "By the last day of the month, they must walk the full 10,000 steps within a 24-hour period," GymBird wrote in its job offering. Just under 10,000 steps each day (9,800) can lower risk of dementia by 50%, according to two studies published in JAMA Neurology and JAMA Internal Medicine last year. For every 2,000 steps you walk daily, you can reduce your risk of cancer, heart disease and premature death by 10%, peaking at 10,000 steps, the research shows.
Persons: GymBird, they're, Warren Buffett Organizations: CSO, Nutrition Solutions, Newsweek, CNBC Locations: U.S
Retired Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges told Newsweek that Ukraine could retake Crimea before the summer ends. Hodges believes recapturing Crimea would be essential for Ukraine to rebuild its economy. "My principal caveat still remains that if the United States were to provide what Ukraine needs, then Ukraine could actually still liberate Crimea by the end of this summer," retired Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges told Newsweek on Wednesday. The Biden administration has held back from sending long-range weapons to Ukraine that have the capacity to strike targets in Russia. US officials told Ukraine in February that they weren't able to send over the ATACMS due to insufficient supply, per Politico.
Persons: Ben Hodges, Hodges, , Pat Ryder, Biden, Vladimir Putin Organizations: Newsweek, Service, US Army, State Department, Pentagon, Tactical Missiles Systems, Ukraine Locations: Ukraine, Crimea, United States, Russia, Sevastopol, Saki, Russian, St . Petersburg, Belarus, Poland, Russians, Mykolaiv, Europe
Lisl Steiner, a flamboyant photojournalist who was celebrated for her intimate, emotive images of history-tilting figures like Fidel Castro, John F. Kennedy and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., as well as luminaries of music, stage and sports, died on June 7 in Mount Kisco, N.Y. She was 95. Her death, at a hospital, was confirmed by her friends Ingrid Rockefeller and Vivian Winther, who had been collaborating with her on a documentary about her life. Shooting for publications including Newsweek, Time, Life and National Geographic, Ms. Steiner was known for her flamboyant attire, her trademark explosion of fiery red hair, her sassy personality and her uncanny knack for connecting with her subjects, whom she jokingly referred to as “victims.”
Persons: Lisl Steiner, Fidel Castro, John F, Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr, Ingrid Rockefeller, Vivian Winther, Steiner, Organizations: Newsweek, Geographic Locations: Mount Kisco
A former Trump advisor is now campaigning with Ron DeSantis and trash-talking his old boss. Steve Cortes, once one of Trump's most senior advisors, asked on Twitter: "Who would work for Trump???" Ron DeSantis — Trump's primary opposition for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination. Steve Cortes, a senior advisor on Trump's 2016 and 2020 campaigns, has loudly supported DeSantis since he announced his endorsement in a Newsweek op-ed in May. "This young leader will be an amazing president," Cortes tweeted on Saturday while campaigning with DeSantis in Nevada.
Persons: Ron DeSantis, Steve Cortes, messier, , Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis —, DeSantis, Cortes, Trump, John Kelly, he's, Kelly — Organizations: Trump, Twitter, Republican, Service, Florida Gov, Newsweek, DeSantis, GOP, White, White House, Truth Locations: Nevada
Footage shows an orca swimming off with a destroyed rudder after killer whales attacked a catamaran. The boat was sailing in the Strait of Gibraltar in April, an area where orcas have been targeting boats. Recently-posted footage appears to show one of the killer whales swimming off with one of the severed rudders. "We were about to cross shipping lines and turning south to the Canary Islands when we felt like we got bad with a wave," Kriz told Newsweek in a recent interview. Not again,'" Kriz told Newsweek.
Persons: , Dan Kriz, Kriz, orcas, Maxi Jonas Orcas, Joshua Zitser Organizations: Newsweek, Service, REUTERS Locations: Strait, Gibraltar, Canary, Florida
Trump sued Mary Trump for giving the New York Times information for a 2018 story about his taxes. Mary Trump weighed in on the indictment in a blog post, in which she said there was "nothing he won't do to get away with his crimes," per Newsweek. Trump's attorney Alina Habba said that it was "no surprise" that Mary Trump violated the older settlement, per Bloomberg. Mary Trump will most likely appeal the ruling, Bloomberg reported. A representative for Mary Trump did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment, which was sent outside of normal working hours.
Persons: Trump, Mary Trump, , Donald Trump's, Robert Reed, Mary Trump's, Reed, Alina Habba, greedily, Habba Organizations: New York Times, Service, Bloomberg, Trump, Newsweek, New Locations: New York
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNetflix and Warner Bros. Discovery among streaming stocks on the riseTom Rogers of Newsweek discusses whether investor's are rallying around streaming stocks. Hosted by Brian Sullivan, “Last Call” is a fast-paced, entertaining business show that explores the intersection of money, culture and policy. Tune in Monday through Friday at 7 p.m. ET on CNBC.
Persons: Tom Rogers, investor's, Brian Sullivan, Organizations: Netflix, Warner Bros ., Newsweek, CNBC
Ted Cruz preached tolerance for the LGBT community during a Twitter spat with a pastor. "Let he that is without sin among you, let him first cast a stone at her," Cruz tweeted. The Texas senator then invoked another Bible verse to support his argument that gay people should not be persecuted. We are talking the laws of man, not the Old Testament laws of God,'" Cruz tweeted. Cruz also mentioned another Bible verse — "let he that is without sin among you, let him first cast a stone at her" — arguing that it is cruel and hypocritical to judge others for sinning.
Persons: Ted Cruz, Cruz, , Sen, Tom Ascol, Jesus, Caesar, Ascol, Hodges, Roe, Wade Organizations: Service, Newsweek, The Texas Tribune Locations: Florida, Texas, Uganda
But one ship captain said killer whales have more to fear from us than we have to fear from them. The captain told Newsweek he's worried boaters will start shooting orcas out of fear. "I am very concerned about the near future for these beasts and I think we have a huge responsibility to protect these animals," Sébastien Destremau told Newsweek. "They could crush the boat in a heartbeat if they wanted to," he told Newsweek. "The shocks were really hard and really strong, they were really going for it," he told Newsweek.
Persons: Orcas, , he's, Sébastien Destremau, Destremau, White Gladis, they're, haven't Organizations: Newsweek, Service Locations: Spain
The Ukrainian Navy's "last warship" was destroyed, a Russian Defense Ministry spokesman said. The Yuriy Olefirenko was hit with "high-precision weapons" in the port of Odesa, Russia claimed. Russia said the Yuriy Olefirenko was hit on Monday with missiles, which Konashenkov called "high-precision weapons," per Reuters. Russia has rarely targeted the port after signing the UN-backed Black Sea Grain Initiative last year. Whichever side holds the piece of land can control ship traffic between the ports of Kherson and Mykolaiv and the Black Sea, per Forbes.
Persons: Yuriy Olefirenko, , Igor Konashenkov, Konashenkov, Frederik Mertens, Mertens Organizations: Russian Defense Ministry, Ukrainian Navy, Service, Ukrainian, Russian Defence Ministry, UN, Forbes, Navy, Hague, Strategic Studies, Newsweek Locations: Odesa, Russia, Telegraph, Ukraine, Soviet, Kherson —, Dnipro, Kherson, Mykolaiv, Ukrainian
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via Email‘Netflix should take a victory lap’, says top media mogul Tom RogersTom Rogers, Newsweek editor-at-large and former Engine Media executive chairman, joins 'Fast Money' to discuss Netflix's recent performance and upcoming shareholder meeting.
Persons: Tom Rogers Tom Rogers Organizations: Netflix, Newsweek, Engine Media
Ukraine claims it has used US-made Patriot missile systems to down Russian hypersonic missiles. The weapons are among the most advanced surface-to-air missiles sent to Ukraine. Ukrainian officials have claimed they have used the weapon to shoot down several Russian hypersonic Kinzhal missiles, which Moscow previously boasted were unstoppable. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had long been requesting the US to send defensive surface-to-air missile systems, which can strike aircraft, cruise missiles, and shorter-range ballistic missiles. It is unclear how many Patriot missile systems Ukraine has, but they are among the most advanced surface-to-air missiles sent to Ukraine.
Sci-fi author Tim Boucher says he's created 97 books in nine months with the help of AI. In a Newsweek article, Boucher said he used Midjourney, ChatGPT, and Anthropic's Claude. Sci-fi author Tim Boucher says he's created 97 books in nine months with the help of AI. In an article for Newsweek, Boucher said he'd used AI image generator Midjourney to illustrate the books, and ChatGPT and Anthropic's Claude for brainstorming and text generation. He wrote in Newsweek: "AI has proven to be a remarkable catalyst for my creative work.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailDisney CEO Bob Iger believes this is a battle he can win against Gov. DeSantis: Puck's Matt BelloniMatt Belloni, Puck news founding partner, and Tom Rogers, Newsweek editor-at-large and former NBC Cable president, join 'Squawk Box' to discuss the latest in the feud between Disney and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, which saw the company cancelling plans for an estimated $1 billion facility in Florida.
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