Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "sharer"


7 mentions found


Under Armour — The sportswear maker's Class A shares slumped 11% and its Class C stock fell 9% after it issued lower-than-expected full-year earnings guidance. Under Armour now expects earnings in the range of 18 cents to 21 cents while analysts polled by FactSet had forecast 59 cents. Cisco Systems also hiked its 2024 revenue guidance, saying it now expects revenue of $53.7 billion at the midpoint of a range. Meme stocks — Shares of AMC and GameStop extended losses following the revival of the meme stock movement on Monday and Tuesday. Baidu reported CNY 31.51 billion ($4.7 billion) of revenue, topping the CNY 31.34 billion expected by analysts, according to StreetAccount.
Persons: Armour, FactSet, Goose, Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, Chubb, Deere, GoodRX, Raymond James, John Ransom, Coupang, Tesla, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Hakyung Kim, Sarah Min, Samantha Subin, Jesse Pound Organizations: Walmart, Wall, LSEG, Revenue, , Berkshire, Cisco Systems, AMC, GameStop, Deere, Company, Baidu, UBS, ISI, European Union, Facebook Locations: Krakow, Poland, The Seattle
In early 2023, YouTuber Lizzy Capri felt trapped in "creator prison." Starting in 2017, Capri became known online as "Lizzy Sharer" (she became "Lizzy Capri" in 2019). In the world of influencers, having a "niche" — specific content geared toward a specific audience — is often praised as an asset. In March 2023, she published a video titled "Goodbye to the old Lizzy..." to announce her content would change. Lizzy CapriThe hard pivot was tough financiallyWhen she pivoted, Capri did it more for herself than for the business.
Persons: Lizzy Capri, she'd, Capri, she's, Lizzy Sharer, OnlyFans, I've, it's, Bryce Adams, Adams Organizations: Business, Mattel, Locations: Capri, OnlyFans, States
My sister and I inherited his house and sold it to put deposits down on our own apartments. We knew we'd inherit the house and his possessions; he'd told us we were the only people in his will. We had two weeks to put our dad's house on the market, clear out 40 years of memories, and decide what to do with all his possessions. AdvertisementAdvertisementIt took me a long time to accept the inheritanceI was almost embarrassed by suddenly having money. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe money didn't feel like mine and neither, to a certain extent, did the flat.
Persons: , Dad, he'd, everything's, We'd, We've, hadn't, should've, I'd, I'm, sharer, I've, wouldn't, didn't Organizations: Service Locations: Australia
OPEN THROAT, by Henry HokeThere is a moment toward the end of “Open Throat,” Henry Hoke’s slim jewel of a novel, where the narrator, a mountain lion living in the desert hills surrounding Los Angeles’s Hollywood sign, falls asleep and dreams of Disneyland. We first meet the mountain lion — who uses they/them pronouns, per the publisher’s description, and identifies as queer — in somewhat happier times. Although hungry and losing their natural habitat to commercial development, they enjoy eavesdropping on privileged hikers as “they decide what is good or bad about their therapists,” and visiting “town,” where their “people” live: an encampment of unhoused people whose eventual eradication forces the mountain lion to flee. Told in fragmented prose (I have the urge to reproduce it here with line breaks intact, like poetry), “Open Throat” follows this survival journey as we learn about the lion’s past loves and losses in crushing flashbacks. “A father to a kitten is an absence,” the lion remembers, “a grown cat to a father is a threat.”
Persons: Henry Hoke, ” Henry, sharer ”, Organizations: Hollywood Locations: ,
Google search data shows that people are looking up "what to talk about at work" more than they have in the past two decades. Young workers say they've found it hard to navigate small talk with their colleagues from different backgrounds. Searches yield results of conversation starters, engaging prompts, and topics to never bring up at work. And while these guides may be helpful for some, they're also showing that others are finding it hard to know what's appropriate to talk about at work. "I'm a pretty social person at parties, but I actually find it hard to talk with my co-workers," Smith said.
A handful of creators are in Qatar, or heading there in the next few weeks, to help capture the best moments from the 2022 World Cup. This year’s World Cup, which has been shrouded in controversy, kicked off Sunday. In a Short posted earlier this week, de la Haye captured his dad's reaction when he told him they're going to the World Cup. "Every World Cup ... faithfully, we sit and home and support our team." He will be filming from the semifinal and final matches, but made a comedic Short with his World Cup predictions.
2: The hosts don't know what they don't knowThe problem is, VC podcasts don't stick to the core issues of venture capital. 3: The hosts want us to believe what they don't knowThere's a shocking amount of this kind of drivel on the tech podcasts. This is what a good tech podcast should do: Use access to the best and most successful investors and innovators to illuminate the way Silicon Valley works. But that's not what matters in the world of tech podcasts. But after 40 hours of listening to tech podcasts, I feel kind of bad about it.
Total: 7