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AdvertisementPaying subscribers can message MacNaughton directly through Substack's chat feature and share artwork and feedback with her community. DrawTogether's total number of paying subscribers has more than doubled since introducing chat, McNaughton said. Before Substack, MacNaughton already had an online following, which she said contributed to the success of her Substack. Using the chat feature, Zukhovich interacts directly with her paying subscribers, who share what they cooked that week or ask for recipe ideas using certain ingredients. Before Substack's chat feature, MacNaughton encouraged her audience to share their work with her on Instagram.
Persons: , Wendy MacNaughton, DrawTogether, she's, McNaughton, MacNaughton, Jasmine Sun, Katie Zukhovich, Zukhovich, Substack, I'm Organizations: Service, Business, Substack Locations: MacNaughton
In a third suit, Liza Gardner says that in 1990, Mr. Combs coerced her into sex and then, a couple of days later, choked her so hard she passed out. In a statement, Jonathan D. Davis, a lawyer for Mr. Combs, said: “The new claims against Mr. Combs for alleged misconduct from many years ago, which were filed at the last minute, are all denied and rejected by him. Because of Mr. Combs’s fame and success, he is an easy target for accusers who attempt to smear him. As news of those suits ricocheted through social media, accusations from Mr. Combs’s past were resurfaced and dissected. In a 2004 interview, Kimora Lee Simmons, the model and TV personality, said that Mr. Combs had threatened her while she was pregnant.
Persons: , Dan Charnas, , Mr, Combs, Joi Dickerson, Neal, drugging, Dickerson, Ventura’s, Liza Gardner, Jonathan D, Davis, Combs’s, Sean John, Kimora Lee Simmons, Gina Huynh Organizations: Combs Global, New York Legislature, Combs Locations: New York
Of all the clichés about hip-hop we’ve endured over 50 years, the idea that hip-hop is the product of “the streets”— with all the attendant implications about what and who is and isn’t authentic — remains the most tiresome. In reality, hip-hop is largely the product of kids who stayed inside. composed in real time — annotating, cross-referencing, and building on a living library of specific beats and sounds that would become the foundation of hip-hop. The records preserve the ethos of the world of the first hip-hop generation. They grew up in 1970s and ’80s New York, largely within African American families or those from the Caribbean.
Organizations: Caribbean . Records Locations: York
Was Hip-Hop Really Invented 50 Years Ago?
  + stars: | 2023-08-04 | by ( Dan Charnas | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
The music world has been gearing up for Aug. 11, which will be widely celebrated as the 50th anniversary of the birth of hip-hop. The story goes like this: On that date in 1973, in the rec room of an apartment building on Sedgwick Avenue in the Bronx, a teenager named Cindy Campbell threw a party, charging admission to raise money so that she could buy clothes for the coming school year. This gathering, one of many that her brother Clive would DJ as “Kool Herc,” is counted by many as the birth of the yet-nameless genre, in part because Herc is said to have honed its foundational musical impulse there.
Persons: Cindy Campbell, Clive, Kool Herc, , Herc Locations: Sedgwick, Bronx
Something Navy is an apparel brand that was created by fashion influencer Arielle Charnas in 2020. Now, the company has endured losses in sales and more than half its employees and CEO have left. The apparel brand launched by fashion influencer Arielle Charnas in 2020 has faced faltering sales, hordes of employees have left the company, and the brand has fallen behind on payments to suppliers. Currently, no merchandise is being sold through Something Navy's website, where a note says: "The Something Navy site is getting a little refresh. Something Navy, which is a private company, was valued at $100 million a year after the brand launched, the company told Insider in 2021.
Persons: Matt Scanlan, Silas Capital, Silas Chou, Jenny Fleiss, Charnas, Brandon Charnas Organizations: Navy, Service, Something, Kind Venture, Silas, US Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC, Staples, Something Navy Locations: Wall, Silicon, Hong Kong
Brandon Charnas isn't cooperating with a "possible insider trading violations" probe, the SEC said. Charnas, the husband of Something Navy's Arielle Charnas, bought Office Depot stock in 2021. Charnas made stock trades before an announcement that Staples wanted to acquire Office Depot, the SEC said in its statement. The SEC said Charnas hasn't cooperated with the probe, "improperly asserted" his Fifth Amendment right, and refused to turn over documents. In December, an Insider investigation found that Arielle Charnas' company was struggling to stay afloat amid an employee exodus, lackluster sales, and delayed payments to factories and models.
Persons: Brandon Charnas, Charnas, SEC hasn't, Something, Arielle, Staples, Brandon Charnas didn't, didn't, Charnas hasn't, it's, Matt Scanlan Organizations: SEC, Service, Something Navy Locations: Wall, Silicon
Its CEO is leaving the company, most employees have either quit or been laid off, and production of new clothing is on hold, several people told Insider. Several people told Insider last year that Charnas was furious with Scanlan for keeping her in the dark about the company's struggles. Arielle Charnas recently said on Instagram that "a lot of changes had to be made" at Something Navy. (The company's founder told Insider that Package Free finally paid them this week after dodging them for a year.) Scanlan's spokesperson told Insider that a sale of Something Navy was on the horizon.
Persons: Charnas, Matt Scanlan, Scanlan, Bradstreet, Arielle Charnas, Monica Schipper, who's, Matt, he's, Darian DiCianno, Charnas hasn't, they'd, Brandon, he'd, Eugene Gologursky, Silas Chou, Jenny Fleiss, Ivory Ella, They're, Betty Wang, cofounding Naadam, Blue, Thakoon's, Laura Cook, Michael Yeager, Elisa Giorgi, Bailey Miller, Scanlan's Organizations: Navy, Associates, Something Navy, company's, Saks Fifth, Hamptons, Naadam, Los, Nordstrom, United, Blue, & $ Locations: Jersey, Charnas, India, Hong Kong, Los Angeles, New, Newport Beach , California, Its New Jersey, stiffing
One day around 2015, a dozen or so gift boxes showed up at the Brentwood, California, studio of the celebrity fitness trainer Tracy Anderson. "It was an exclusive boutique fitness studio," the former New York trainer said. Darren Gerrish/WireImageThe method demanded that TA trainers, most of whom were also professional dancers, perform the strenuous workouts full out, every time. Let's help you do it correctly so you don't get injured,'" the former New York trainer said. "This is at a time where everyone is already overworked," one of the former New York trainers said.
Many content creators have used their success to launch brands, turning followers into customers. "I was interacting with millions of different people as a content creator," Yoo, who lived in South Korea at the time, said. Yoo is one of many creators who have used their achievements to launch brands in recent years, turning loyal followers into loyal customers. Creating "pushed me naturally into the direction" of launching a brand, Yoo said. To understand how to successfully make the leap, Insider spoke with Yoo and six additional creators who've built brands beyond fan merchandise.
Arielle Charnas, the founder of Something Navy, said she works from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.Insider asked founders whether it's possible to run and scale a startup working four hours a day. Insider asked more than 50 founders over email whether entrepreneurs can be successful working just four hours a day. It's possible to start with a few hours a dayMany founders start their businesses as side hustles while working a 9-to-5 job. Courtesy Justin SilvermanOcean Ronquillo-Morgan, a 24-year-old software engineer, spends about three hours a day on her side hustles. She said she won't work past 7 p.m. on weeknights or on weekends, doesn't respond to emails outside of work hours, and logs off from work when she's on vacation.
Arielle Charnas founded her blog Something Navy in 2009, which evolved into a clothing brand in 2020.Insider reported that Charnas detached from promoting her brand on social media, among other missteps. Charnas' behavior shows how social media can quickly build and destroy brand loyalty. Insider published a recent article outlining late merchandising payments, meager sales, an employee exodus, and Charnas' detachment from promoting her brand on social media. For example, Charnas didn't acknowledge hiring Betty Wang as company president on social media and has been frequently photographed sporting designer clothing instead of her own products. Charnas' behavior on social media shows the positive and negative impacts the platforms can have on a business, especially when they're vital to an entrepreneur's success.
It only paid one supplier in full right after Insider started reporting a story about delayed payments. According to Warren's correspondence with the supplier, Something Navy paid the remaining $20,000 it owed on Tuesday, just days before Insider's story was published. Murarka finally received the payment in full around the same time the other supplier received his payment, Insider reported. Former Something Navy told Insider that they've been caught in a flood of emails since the spring from suppliers asking about late payments. A Something Navy representative claimed that all outstanding payments referenced in Insider's story were made before Insider provided the company with fact-checks last week.
From the outside, it doesn't look as if Charnas' company is in trouble. Mark Sagliocco/Getty Images for Beach MagazineSeveral former employees told Insider they cut ties with Something Navy because they saw signs the company was struggling. Several current and former Something Navy employees told Insider they'd been inundated with emails since the spring from suppliers, freelancers, and models asking where their money was. In one email viewed by Insider, Scanlan told a supplier that cash was tight but promised payment was on the way. The current Something Navy employee said that based on data she'd seen, the retail locations most likely don't turn a profit.
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