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

Search resuls for: "coy"


25 mentions found


Opinion | Why Don’t We Just Ban Fossil Fuels?
  + stars: | 2024-02-16 | by ( Peter Coy | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Imagine there were no law against arson and we were trying to figure out a way to stop it. One way would be to require people to pay for the right to burn down buildings. Another would be to issue a strictly limited number of tradable arson-permission certificates, which would-be arsonists could trade among themselves. Burning fossil fuels isn’t the same as burning houses. Unlike arson, the combustion of oil, natural gas, coal and other fossil fuels provides real benefits — running our cars, heating and cooling our homes and so on.
Persons: Let’s Organizations:
Opinion | What the Dutch Lost When They Lost Manhattan
  + stars: | 2024-02-14 | by ( Peter Coy | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Considering the diverging fortunes of the two islands since that year, this appears at first blush to be the worst deal in history for the Dutch, who formally gained Rhun and lost Manhattan. Likewise, the Dutch didn’t gain Rhun, because they had already seized it to tighten their ruthless monopoly of the nutmeg trade. The 1667 Treaty of Breda, which ended the Second Anglo-Dutch War (out of four), merely acknowledged the facts on the ground. On paper, the deal was even worse for the Dutch than if it had been only an island-for-island exchange. (A separate treaty allowed Dutch ships to carry some cargoes to England without tariffs.)
Persons: Let’s, , New Netherland Organizations: Times, Manhattan, British Locations: Rhun, Indonesia, Manhattan, New Amsterdam, Breda, New, Albany, Connecticut, Delaware, Caribbean, Suriname, South America, today’s Ghana, Dutch, England
A reboot of "Fantastic Four" is in the works at Marvel Studios. The film will star Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Joseph Quinn, and Ebon Moss-Bachrach. AdvertisementThe Marvel Cinematic Universe's long-awaited reboot of "Fantastic Four" is on the horizon, and details are finally coming into focus. Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Joseph Quinn, and Ebon Moss-Bachrach will star as the titular superheroesThe Fantastic Four in Marvel Comics. 'The Fantastic Four' premieres July 25, 2025Marvel Studios' The Fantastic Four arrives in theaters July 25, 2025. pic.twitter.com/Y8KfOo8ZoZ — Marvel Studios (@MarvelStudios) February 14, 2024Shakman told Collider that the movie will begin filming in the UK at Pinewood Studios in the spring.
Persons: Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Joseph Quinn, Ebon Moss, Bachrach, Matt Shakman, , Kevin Feige, Chris Pizzello, Jon Watts, Tom Holland's, Adam Driver, Penn Badgley, Jodie Comer, Margot Robbie, Reed Richards, Marvel, Pascal, Sue Storm, Johnny Storm, Ben Grimm, Shakman, you've, Y8KfOo8ZoZ Organizations: Marvel Studios, Service, San Diego Comic, Marvel Comics, Variety, coy, Marvel, Collider, Pinewood Studios
London has a jarring profusion of odd skyscrapers with funny names or nicknames. Cheshire and Christian Hilber, also of the London School of Economics, advanced the starchitect argument in an article way back in 2008. Last year, Cheshire included the starchitect idea in an article for a policy journal of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Land-use decisions in Britain are mainly discretionary rather than rules-based, as in, for example, Chicago, Cheshire noted in his article last year. The elected committees that decide on applications in London are unpredictable and can be swayed by lobbying, he wrote.
Persons: Paul Cheshire, Christian Hilber, Gerard Dericks Organizations: London, Guardian, London School of Economics, Political Science, University of Oxford, U.S . Department of Housing, Urban Locations: London, Cheshire, Britain, Chicago
The National Football League, founded in 1920, was an unpopular pipsqueak 90 or so years ago. The college player who went first in the 1936 draft, a Heisman Trophy winner, decided to become a foam rubber salesman instead of turning pro. began to change the rules of the game in a way that encouraged passing, made scoring easier and elevated the role of strategy. Sunday’s Super Bowl is pretty much certain to be the most-watched televised event of 2024; N.F.L. With that kind of viewership, it’s no surprise that the N.F.L.
Organizations: National Football League, Nielsen, Forbes, IBM, Nike, Pfizer
Gail Collins: So, Bret — more than 350,000 new jobs in January without an inflation surge! I guess that means the Biden plan is really working out, hehehehe. First, prices for groceries are still too damn high — up 25 percent in the last four years, according to The Washington Post. That practically amounts to a campaign ad for Donald Trump every time people are at checkout. Gail: Well, it’s a pretty good sign for Biden that an economic conservative like you so desperately wants him to win.
Persons: Gail Collins, Bret —, Biden, Bret Stephens, Donald Trump, Peter Coy, Joe, Gail Organizations: The Washington
A step or two back, a man in a yellow gown, his brow furrowed and his arms behind his back. The object in the bucket is a kidney that is being transplanted from one person to another. Not bad for a guy who never graduated from high school. Columbia University admitted him without a diploma after he dropped out of Martin Van Buren High School in Queens. (The high school relented and gave him an honorary one after he got the Nobel.)
Persons: Alvin Roth —, Roth, Martin Van Organizations: Surgeons, Economic Sciences, Columbia University, Martin Van Buren High School Locations: New York City, Boston, Martin Van Buren, Queens
For Mercedes, it is a devastating loss, unable to retain a generational talent and the face of its entire motorsport brand. He has been so successful with Mercedes that it’s almost hard to imagine the 39-year-old Briton racing for any other team. Hamilton holds the all-time record for F1 wins (103), achieving 82 of those with Mercedes and 21 with McLaren. It also reunites him with Ferrari team principal Fred Vasseur, who Hamilton raced for at junior level. Last season, a Mercedes driver failed to win a race across a whole season for the first time since 2011.
Persons: CNN —, Lewis Hamilton, Carlos Sainz, Will Buxton, Hamilton, , ” Hamilton, ” Ferrari, , Red, Bryn Lennon, it’s, Mercedes, McLaren, McLaren –, , Clive Mason, Ferrari, Fernando Alonso, Sebastian Vettel, Red Bull, Max Verstappen, Charles Leclerc, Leclerc, Nico Rosberg, Leonhard Foeger, ” Phil Duncan, Juan Manuel Fangio, Jack Brabham, CNN’s Coy, Tom Brady’s, Tampa Bay Buccaneers “, Hamilton’s, Fred Vasseur, Aston Martin, John Thys, Toto Wolff, “ Lewis, Duncan Organizations: CNN, Mercedes, Ferrari, Arrows, Hamilton, Constructors, Scuderia, Reuters, CNN Sport, NFL, New England Patriots, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Red, McLaren, Getty Locations: Hamilton, Bull’s, AFP, Austria
John Chambers grew up in West Virginia and went on to run what was once the world’s most valuable company, the computer networking firm Cisco Systems Inc. Now he is trying to help economically lagging West Virginia by making it a “start-up state” akin to Israel, which has been called the start-up nation. I interviewed Chambers recently about his hopes and the magnitude of the challenge. Chambers was born in 1949 while his parents were in medical school at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland. He grew up mostly in Charleston, W.Va., and earned a bachelor’s degree and a law degree from West Virginia University. Chambers became a salesperson for IBM, then for Wang Laboratories, before joining Cisco in 1990, six years after the company was founded in Silicon Valley.
Persons: John Chambers, Chambers, Organizations: Cisco Systems Inc, Case Western Reserve University, West Virginia University, Mountain, IBM, Wang Laboratories, Cisco, JC2 Ventures, John, John Chambers College of Business Locations: West Virginia, Israel, Cleveland, Charleston, W.Va, Mountain State, Ravenswood, , Silicon Valley, mater
The baby bust that we all know about has gotten worse in a way that isn’t yet widely understood. And they have continued to fall since, according to a report to clients by James Pomeroy, a global economist for HSBC, the London-based bank. It’s titled, “The Baby Bust Intensifies: How Bad Could It Get?” (Sorry, no link.) Pomeroy didn’t wait for the official data collectors such as the United Nations to assemble data trickling in from national statistical agencies. In most of the countries for which Pomeroy managed to get data, the total number of births continued to fall steeply in 2023.
Persons: James Pomeroy, Pomeroy didn’t, ” Pomeroy, Pomeroy Organizations: HSBC, United Nations Locations: London, United States, Czech Republic, Ireland, Poland
Opinion | The Promises and Problems of Buying Local
  + stars: | 2024-01-29 | by ( Peter Coy | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
You can crisscross North Dakota from Fargo to Bismarck to Minot and never see a Walgreens, Rite-Aid or Walmart pharmacy. With narrow exceptions, a 1963 state law prohibits drugstores that aren’t majority-owned by a pharmacist. (CVS Health, whose predecessor company was already in the state in 1963, is grandfathered in.) It has withstood multiple challenges in court, repeal efforts in the stage Legislative Assembly, and even a statewide ballot initiative. North Dakota, by the way, also has a public bank and a state-owned flour mill, both founded shortly after World War I, so it’s kind of different.
Persons: Stacy Mitchell Organizations: Rite, Aid, Walmart, CVS Health, Institute for Local, Reliance Locations: Dakota, Fargo, Bismarck, Minot, Portland , Maine, North Dakota
I was a senior in college in 1978 when I wrote my first opinion piece that touched on airline deregulation. It was an editorial in The Cornell Daily Sun (“Ithaca’s only morning newspaper”!) I wrote, “When Kahn began hacking away at airline protectionism the airlines screamed, but today fares are lower, passenger volume is way up and airlines are actually profiting. People complain about high fares, unreliable service, lack of legroom and so on. The public’s disgruntlement has created an opening for talk about some pretty extreme solutions.
Persons: Alfred Kahn, Jimmy Carter’s, , Kahn, Ganesh Sitaraman Organizations: Cornell Daily Sun, Cornell, Civil Aeronautics Board Locations: Washington,
Melanie, the singer-songwriter who rose through the New York folk scene, performed at Woodstock and had a series of 1970s hits including the enduring cultural phenomenon “Brand New Key," has died. Her publicist Billy James told The Associated Press that Melanie died Tuesday. With a voice that could shift from high-pitched and coy to a deep soulful rasp, Melanie wrote and sang hits including “Look What They’ve Done to My Song Ma" and “Lay Down (Candles in the Rain)." “I probably have a quirky way of writing, and I think I was misunderstood,” she told the Tennessean newspaper in 2014. Melanie was married to her manager and producer Peter Schekeryk from 1968 until his death in 2010.
Persons: Melanie, Billy James, Leilah, Beau Jarred, coy, I’ve, you’ve, , , Paul Thomas Anderson's, Jimmy Fallon, Melanie Safka, Joan Baez, Janis Joplin, Ray Charles, Miley Cyrus, Peter Schekeryk Organizations: New, Woodstock, Associated Press, , Tennessean, American Academy of Dramatic Arts, Party, Woodstock Music, Fair Locations: New York, Tennessee, U.S, Queens , New York, Greenwich, York, Europe, City
Folding clothes and wiring a new home were two of the tasks they were asked to think about. The date of 2047 for the 50 percent chance is 13 years earlier than researchers were estimating in a survey conducted one year earlier. It’s still possible for the human race to direct A.I. Gardeners use hoes and rakes rather than clawing the soil with their bare hands, right? Artificial intelligence can be the hoes and rakes of the 21st century.
Persons: , Ethan Mollick, “ America’s Organizations: Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Gardeners
Making banks safer would seem like an easy thing for Americans to agree on, especially after the wipeouts of the global financial crisis in 2007-09, followed by the failure last year of three big ones: Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank and First Republic Bank. A wide-ranging lobbying campaign by the nation’s biggest banks and their allies seems to be succeeding in beating back a proposal put forward last year by three federal agencies (the Federal Reserve, the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.) to require shareholders of big banks to put more of their own skin in the game — so that if things go bad the banks won’t have to drastically cut lending or turn to taxpayers for a bailout. “Candidly, my expectation is that there’s going to be a fairly significant softening of the capital proposal,” Keegan Ferguson, a director on the financial services team of Capstone, an advisory firm, told me. The backsliding appalls a lot of economists, among them Anat Admati, a professor of finance and economics at Stanford’s Graduate School of Business. Admati is a co-author with Martin Hellwig, a German economist, of a 2013 book on pretty much exactly this topic, “The Bankers’ New Clothes: What’s Wrong With Banking and What to Do About It.” (An updated edition of the book just came out.)
Persons: , ” Keegan Ferguson, Anat Admati, Martin Hellwig Organizations: Valley Bank, Signature Bank, First Republic Bank, Federal Reserve, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp, Capstone, Stanford’s Graduate School of Business Locations: German
Julie Theis and Jake Chocholous started to build a romantic rapport in the first several episodes of "The Trust." And in turn, it started to affect the game: In episode three, Julie chooses to vote to eliminate Simone, fearing that Jay is going to vote Jake out. Eventually, Julie chooses to disclose some of that information to Jake, leading the other women to begin to distrust her. Jake and Julie are playing coy about their relationship on InstagramBoth Jake and Julie still follow each other on Instagram ahead of the finale, but they're being coy about the status of their relationship. @jakechocholous/InstagramAnother follower explicitly asked him whether or not he had a relationship with Julie.
Persons: , Julie Theis, Jake Chocholous, Jake, Julie, Simone, Jay, she's, Jake hasn't, coy, Jake nodded Organizations: Service, Business, coy, Netflix, Cosmopolitan
Opinion | Can Elon Musk Really Do That?
  + stars: | 2024-01-19 | by ( Peter Coy | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Angela Aneiros, an assistant professor at Gonzaga University School of Law in Spokane, Wash., can’t get enough of Elon Musk. “For better or worse, he’s like the gift that keeps on giving to corporate law professors. The students relate to Musk and I can say to them, ‘Here’s the perfect example of what not to do.’”The latest perfect example is what Musk wrote on Monday on X, which he owns. “Unless that is the case,” he wrote, “I would prefer to build products outside of Tesla.”To Aneiros and other experts in corporate law, Musk’s threat is audacious, for reasons I’ll get into. But it’s also a teachable moment in that it surfaces principles concerning how corporations, their boards and their executives work with one another.
Persons: Angela Aneiros, can’t, Elon Musk, there’s, , Musk, , , I’ll, it’s Organizations: Gonzaga University School of Law Locations: Spokane, Tesla
Business Insider previously spoke to moms who swear that flying business class with their babies is worth every extra penny. But what do flight attendants make of babies in business class? AdvertisementBI spoke to two flight attendants who shared their unfiltered thoughts on the hotly debated practice and whether it's worth it. The flight attendants see why some parents only fly business class with their babiesBoth flight attendants said they understand why parents with infants who can afford it would opt to fly in business class. "In business class, we have a lot less people to cater to and you are paying for more of an experience.
Persons: , splurge, Leanna Coy, aren't, Joel Sharpe, Lea, @flightattendantbaelee, they're, Coy, it's, Justin Paget, It's, they'll Organizations: Service, Business, Getty, American Airlines, Sky
CNN —Aleksander Aamodt Kilde remembers seeing the net along the edge of the ski slope rushing towards him at 120 km/h (74.6 mph). Mikaela Shiffrin was waiting at the hospital when Kilde came out of surgery. The American, widely considered one of the greatest skiers of all time, then traveled to Austria where she earned an emotional victory – her 94th overall World Cup win, the most in men’s or women’s skiing history – in the FIS World Cup women’s slalom. “Really, really proud of this evening,” she said, per the Olympic channel. “She just shows up, the star she is, and for me how much love she brings and how much care she brings into something that’s really, really difficult,” he said.
Persons: CNN — Aleksander Aamodt Kilde, ” Kilde, CNN Sport’s Coy Wire, Mikaela Shiffrin, Kilde, Harald Steiner, , , Petra Vlhova, they’ve, Shiffrin, Aleks, , , ” Shiffrin, Giovanni Auletta, that’s, he’s Organizations: CNN, CNN Sport’s, FIS Locations: Norwegian, Wengen, Switzerland, Bern, Kilde, Austria, Innsbruck, men’s
But for nearly 15 years, leading introductory economics textbooks gave students an outdated or incomplete explanation of how the Federal Reserve conducts monetary policy. Only now are the textbooks catching up with reality, and some still haven’t fully embraced the new world. And the Council for Economic Education, a nonprofit, is aiming to publish updated standards for what high school economics students should know in 2025. Still, it’s disappointing — though maybe not surprising — that it has taken so long for the notoriously slow-moving world of education to catch up. To explain where the textbooks lagged, I need to do a quick run through the recent changes in monetary policy.
Persons: I’m Organizations: Federal Reserve, College, for Economic Education
Opinion | Is the Fed Falling Prey to Groupthink?
  + stars: | 2024-01-15 | by ( Peter Coy | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
If you’re looking to argue that the Fed suffers from too much unanimity, the inflationary surge of 2022 looks like evidence. In speeches, various members of the committee had been expressing concerns about inflation, but they weren’t voting that way. She worked at the Fed for 25 years in stints between 1984 and 2022, including one writing up the minutes of Federal Open Market Committee meetings. Meade said one reason dissents are few is that “the meetings aren’t about today, they’re about tomorrow.” Committee meetings occur eight times a year. If a voter feels uncomfortable with the (unanimous) rate decision, that person will try to rally support for a different path at future meetings.
Persons: James Bullard, Louis, Ellen Meade, , ” Meade, Levin, Meade Organizations: Federal Reserve Bank of St, Duke University, Fed, Open
‘True Detective: Night Country’ Review: Iced In
  + stars: | 2024-01-12 | by ( Mike Hale | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
“True Detective” was never a series that went in for tender moments, but “True Detective: Night Country” — the show’s fourth season, after a five-year hiatus — takes a particularly unforgiving approach to the human condition. What is happening is that someone is disposing of the dismembered body of the close family member they have just killed. Created for HBO back in 2014 by the writer and English professor Nic Pizzolatto, the original iteration of “True Detective” was a gothic crime drama, in anthology form, marked by Pizzolatto’s penchant for ostensibly profound, quasi-poetic dialogue — Raymond Chandler by way of Rod McKuen. The new season, directed and largely written by the Mexican filmmaker Issa López (it premieres on Sunday), dispenses with the poetry — it is by and large a plain-spoken affair. But where Pizzolatto’s “True Detective” stories were essentially traditional noirs with a gloss of pop psychology and horror-movie sensationalism, López commits fully to the outré and the supernatural.
Persons: , Nic Pizzolatto, Raymond Chandler, Rod McKuen, Issa López, López, That’s Organizations: HBO, coy Locations: Mexican
CNN —About this time last year, Ben Shelton was an up-and-coming tennis player taking his first-ever trip outside the United States. It figures, then, that Shelton enters his second full season as a professional tennis player with weighty expectations. “There’s not one path for everybody, and I don’t think that my path is perfect, but it really worked for me,” says Shelton. I don’t feel like I have too many miles on my body yet.”On the court, Shelton is physical and powerful. I think I’m also more comfortable taking away time and coming forward to the net.
Persons: Ben Shelton, Shelton, ” Shelton, Skip, Novak Djokovic, Brad Gilbert, Andy Roddick, Frances Tiafoe, Geoff Burke, Reuters It’s, Roddick, Taylor Fritz, Tommy Paul, coy, someone’s, , Aslan Karatsev, Kazuhiro Nogi, – Carlos Alcaraz, Coco Gauff, Emma Raducanu, – Shelton, “ There’s, , haven’t, Scott Perelman, Bryan, Djokovic, Mike Stobe, Shelton – Organizations: CNN, CNN Sport, Melbourne, ATP, Reuters, Football, Japan, University of Florida, NCAA, Roddick, Georgia Tech Locations: United States, Australia, Japan, American, USA, AFP, Georgia, Florida, Tokyo, Swiss, tennis
Opinion | Elon Musk Is Making a Giant Mistake … Unless?
  + stars: | 2023-12-01 | by ( Peter Coy | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Elon Musk is so smart that you have to wonder if trashing X, formerly Twitter, is somehow in his best interest. This couldn’t possibly be one giant mistake, could it? Actually I think it is a giant mistake. There is, however, an unlikely scenario where damaging X in the short run might benefit Musk in the long run. He cut more than three-quarters of the staff, including most of those involved in keeping hate speech off the platform, which predictably resulted in more hate speech and fewer advertisers.
Persons: Elon Musk, Organizations: The New York Times DealBook Summit
Gavin Newsom of California on Fox News. My contribution to the predebate festivities is the following table, which highlights some differences between Florida and California. While median household incomes in California are nearly a third higher than in Florida, the poverty rate is also higher. Forty-one percent of fourth graders in Florida test at or above the proficiency level in math, versus 35 percent nationally. By eighth grade the states are equally weak, at 23 percent at or above proficiency in math, below the (disappointing) 26 percent national average.
Persons: Ron DeSantis, Gavin Newsom, Fox’s Sean Hannity, DeSantis, Newsom, Organizations: Gov, Fox News, Republican, Democrat, Yale, Santa Clara University, Times Locations: Florida, California
Total: 25