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Jake Gyllenhaal was born with a lazy eye and is still considered legally blind. While filming the 2015 film "Southpaw," Gyllenhaal removed his contacts to focus more intensely. Though his lazy eye resolved itself naturally over time, Gyllenhaal is still considered legally blind. On set, Gyllenhaal removed his contact lenses "to force himself to listen more closely," THR's Rebecca Keegan wrote. Gyllenhaal told THR that he's been seeking roles that "freak me out a bit."
Persons: Jake Gyllenhaal, I've, Gyllenhaal, , it's, he's, THR's Rebecca Keegan, Conor McGregor Organizations: Service, Business, Hollywood, UFC
CNN —San Diego Padres infielder Tucupita Marcano has been banned for life by Major League Baseball for betting on baseball games. The MLB investigation found that 25 of those bets included Pirates games while Marcano was assigned to the Major League club. Those players are Oakland Athletics pitcher Michael Kelly, Padres minor league pitcher Jay Groome, Philadelphia Phillies minor league infielder José Rodríguez and Arizona Diamondbacks minor league pitcher Andrew Saalfrank. According to MLB rules, a player found guilty of betting on baseball games involving teams other than their own are subject to a one-year suspension. “The longstanding prohibition against betting on Major League Baseball games by those in the sport has been a bedrock principle for over a century.
Persons: Tucupita Marcano, Marcano, , Michael Kelly, Jay Groome, José Rodríguez, Andrew Saalfrank, Rob Manfred, Manfred, , Kelly, A’s, Michael, Rodríguez Organizations: CNN, San Diego Padres, Major League Baseball, MLB, Pittsburgh Pirates, Pirates, Major League, Marcano’s Pirates, Padres, Major League Baseball’s, , Players Association, Oakland Athletics, Philadelphia Phillies, Arizona Diamondbacks, “ MLB, Oakland, Phillies, Diamondbacks
Major League Baseball permanently banned San Diego Padres infielder Tucupita Marcano on Tuesday for placing hundreds of bets on baseball, including wagers on the Pittsburgh Pirates when he was a member of the team last season. MLB’s Department of Investigations found Marcano placed 387 baseball bets, including 231 MLB-related bets, through a legal sportsbook in 2022 and 2023, the league said. The Department of Investigations found all four players placed MLB-related bets while in the minors. MLB said a legal sports betting operator informed the league in March that it had “identified past baseball betting activity” from accounts connected to multiple players. He placed 29 baseball bets, including 28 MLB-related bets and one parlay bet on college baseball games in 2021 and 2022, the league said.
Persons: Tucupita Marcano, Marcano, Pete Rose, Rob Manfred, Michael Kelly, Jay Groome, José Rodriguez, Andrew Saalfrank —, , Kelly —, Marcano hadn’t, Kelly, Groome, Rodríguez, Saalfrank, Zac BonDurant Organizations: Major League Baseball, San Diego Padres, Pittsburgh Pirates, MLB’s Department of Investigations, MLB, Pirates, Cincinnati Reds, Major League, Oakland Athletics, Padres, Philadelphia Phillies, Arizona Diamondbacks, Department, Investigations, , A’s, Marcano, Houston Astros, Boston Red Sox, Triple, Phillies, Chicago White, Diamondbacks, Getty
Rainier...)," Larsen wrote in the email, referring to a snowcapped peak near Seattle, where Amazon is headquartered. Months later, Amazon struck a deal with Shopify that put Buy with Prime on the Shopify merchant marketplace, extending the tool's reach with sellers. Advertisement"When merchants push that metric to >75%, it'll be a good indication that we've found product-market fit," Larsen wrote. To use Buy with Prime, Amazon charges merchants a 3% Prime service fee in addition to fulfillment fees and payment processing fees. However, Piiparinen said the 3% service fee is less than the referral fees merchants pay when selling on Amazon.com.
Persons: , Craig Leslie, Leslie, It's, Peter Larsen, Andy Jassy, Larsen, Santos, Anders Piiparinen, who's, doesn't, Piiparinen, Amazon's, Smart, ZOA, GreatCircleUS.com, Madeline Stone Organizations: Service, Amazon, Business, Bean Coffee Company, Shoppers, Ekrin Athletics, BI, Prime Locations: . Rainier, ., Seattle, Piiparinen, mstone@businessinsider.com
There is a reason the value meals are only returning on a limited basis, says Shubhranshu Singh, associate professor of marketing at the Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, who has studied the economics of fast-food value meals. "They want customers to get the value meal and then buy more, the idea isn't that the consumer will buy a value meal and walk away," Singh said. "If consumers do that, selling that value meal will be such a bad idea." "How can they serve $5 value meals with that minimum wage and still make a profit? But he added, "We are not upset about the value menu, but I don't speak for those that have higher cost pressures than I do."
Persons: Shubhranshu Singh, Johns, it's, Singh, Burger, Scott Rodrick, CNBC it's, Nick Snowberger, Snowberger, McDonald's franchisee's Organizations: Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, CNBC Locations: Burger, McDonald's, California, Northern California, Montana and Wyoming
Richard Linklater Sees the Killer Inside Us All
  + stars: | 2024-06-01 | by ( David Marchese | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
It’s the kind of thing I’ve thought a lot about my entire life: What could transform me? I was probably more in the camp of we’re fixed, give or take whatever little percentage around the edges. So I was interested in this notion lately that, oh, you can change, the personality isn’t fixed. I sort of like that it’s all on the table, that everybody’s thinking you kind of are who you say you are. I feel this little rush of competitiveness, which I really don’t have in the world of art at all — or my life even.
CNN —Brazilian Olympic gold medalist pole vaulter Thiago Braz is set to miss the upcoming Games in Paris after he was handed a 16-month doping suspension. According to the AIU, Braz argued that he did not knowingly consume ostarine but ingested it through a supplement he had been given by a sports nutritionist to improve his health. Braz, a two-time Olympic medalist, had been hopeful of competing in Paris this year. “After two days of hearings in London, the athlete’s defense arguments prevailed, proving that Thiago Braz was actually a victim of supplement contamination (an unintentional violation with no significant fault),” said Braz’s lawyer Marcelo Franklin. Braz won Olympic gold in Rio after a tense battle against France’s Renaud Lavillenie, who was the pole vault world record holder at the time.
Persons: Thiago Braz, Braz, AIU, Paul Gilham, , Brett Clothier, Mr Braz, , Marcelo Franklin, France’s Renaud Lavillenie Organizations: CNN, Integrity Unit, Sport, CNN Sport, Olympic, Games Locations: Paris, Switzerland, Brazil, London, Rio, Brazilian, Tokyo
The Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) banned Thiago Braz, a Brazilian pole vaulter who won gold at the 2016 Olympics, for 16 months for doping, the organization announced Tuesday. Braz is expected to miss the 2024 Paris Games. The 30-year-old set the men’s Olympic record in pole vault at 6.03 meters when he won gold at the 2016 games in his home country. The AIU said a majority of a panel reviewing the case determined Braz was not at significant fault or negligence. His positive test occurred in July at the Bauhaus Galen Diamond League meeting in Stockholm ahead of the world championships.
Persons: Thiago Braz, Braz, WADA, , Braz —, , Andrej Isakovic Organizations: Integrity Unit, Games, Doping Agency, Sport, Bauhaus Galen Diamond League, Getty Locations: Brazilian, Brazil, Stockholm, AFP
General signage before practice for the first round of the 2024 NCAA Tournament at PPG Paints Arena. Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY SportsA major change could be coming for college athletes — they may soon start getting paid. Other casesThe settlement is expected to cover two other antitrust cases facing the NCAA and major conferences that challenge athlete compensation rules. Hubbard v. the NCAA and Carter v. the NCAA are also in front of judges in the Northern District of California. College sports have been trending in this direction for years, with athletes receiving more and more monetary benefits and rights they say were long overdue.
Persons: Charles LeClaire, , Charlie Baker, Steve Berman, Grant, Michael McCann, McCann, Logan Riely, Hubbard, Carter, Fontenot, they're, George Zelcs Organizations: PPG Paints, NCAA, ACC, SEC, Former Arizona State, Grant House, Sedona Prince, TCU, NBC, Washington Huskies, Michigan Wolverines, College Football Playoff, Notre Dame, Big, Atlantic Coast, Washington, Oregon State, Northern District of, College Locations: Oregon, amateurism, Houston, Southeastern, Washington State, Northern District, Northern District of California, Colorado, Fontenot
Brent Jacquette knows a thing or two about college sports. A former collegiate soccer player and coach in Pennsylvania who is now an executive at a consulting firm for athletic recruiting, he’s well aware of issues surrounding pay for college athletes. But even for an industry veteran like Mr. Jacquette, the news of the N.C.A.A.’s staggering settlement in a class-action antitrust lawsuit on Thursday came as a surprise, with more than a little anxiety. The first words that came to mind, he said, were “trepidation” and “confusion.”And he was not alone in feeling unsettled. Interviews, statements and social media posts mere hours after the settlement was announced showed that many were uncertain and concerned about what the future of collegiate sports holds.
Persons: Brent Jacquette, Jacquette, , Phil DiStefano, Rick George Organizations: University of Colorado Locations: Pennsylvania, University of Colorado Boulder
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNCAA student payment deal former creates big liability issues, says TD Ameritrade CEO Joe MogliaJoe Moglia, former TD Ameritrade CEO and Coastal Carolina athletics chair, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the NCAA's pending settlement, what happens to schools with smaller programs than the big moneymakers, and much more.
Persons: Joe Moglia Joe Moglia Organizations: Coastal Locations: Coastal Carolina
CNN —College athletes could soon get dramatically different paychecks. The lawsuitThe House v. NCAA lawsuit was filed by Grant House and Sedona Prince, two college athletes, against the NCAA and the Power 5 conferences – the Pac-12, Big Ten, Big 12, Southeastern and Atlantic Coast – in US District Court Northern District of California Oakland Division in 2020. But college athletes in the House lawsuit say current NIL rules and an “anticompetitive” college system hurt their chances to make money. The possible settlement comes against a backdrop of attitudes toward college athletes receiving payments gradually changing. Earlier this year, members of the Dartmouth College men’s basketball team became the first college athletes to vote to join a union, a significant milestone in the rapidly changing business for collegiate sports.
Persons: Grant, Caitlin Clark, Caleb Williams, NILs, Michael Reaves, , Chris Jones, ” Jeffrey Kessler, Kessler Organizations: CNN — College, National Collegiate Athletics Association, NCAA, Grant House, Sedona Prince, Big, of California Oakland Division, College, Football, Division, Department of Education, Supreme, Iowa, USC, Westmont, FMC, CNN, National Association of Collegiate, Athletics, Baylor Lady Bears, USA, Sports, Reuters, Yahoo Sports, Athletic, ESPN, ACC, Dartmouth College men’s Locations: Southeastern, Atlantic, California, U.S, United States
Since its founding, the N.C.A.A. has operated with a business model that defined the college athlete as an amateur. But the N.C.A.A.’s $2.8 billion settlement on Thursday night in a class-action antitrust lawsuit represents the heaviest blow — and perhaps a decisive one — to that system. If approved by a U.S. district judge in California, the settlement would allow for the creation of the first revenue-sharing plan for college athletics, a landmark shift in which schools would directly pay their athletes for playing. This sea change, though, also carries its own questions, according to critics.
Organizations: U.S Locations: California
LinkedIn is another often-overlooked platform where student-athletes can promote themselves and score brand deals, athletes and experts told Business Insider. Oostburg and Printz told BI they've used LinkedIn to secure NIL brand deals and connect with agents or other professionals they want to work with. College athletes have used LinkedIn to get brand deals and sign with talent agentsOostburg said she landed two sponsorship deals through LinkedIn, including with the Nashville Zoo and a startup called Backhat. Griffin, who's scored more than 30 NIL deals during his career, landed his first through LinkedIn. "If you're doing NIL or not, as a college athlete, you're also a college student," he said, "and LinkedIn is the spot to be for college students."
Persons: , Tanner Maddox, Sabrina Oostburg, Connor Printz, Jack Adler, Adler, Oostburg, Printz, Raymond, Belmont Athletics Oostburg, hasn't, Samantha Green, Green, Chase Griffin, Griffin, who's, you've Organizations: Service, LinkedIn, Business, Villanova, Belmont University, Claremont McKenna College, College, Nashville Zoo, Belmont Athletics, Athlete, UCLA
More than 100,000 are also in the dark in Louisiana as storms batter the state, as well. Parts of Texas and western Louisiana are under a rare Level 4 of 4 high risk of excessive rainfall Thursday, the Weather Prediction Center said. Major flooding has prompted water rescues in at least one Texas city. Texas and Louisiana have been in the bull’s-eye of seemingly unrelenting rounds of torrential, flooding downpours since the start of April. A tornado warning had been issued earlier Thursday evening in Harris County, including downtown Houston, according to the National Weather Service.
Persons: Samuel Peña, John Whitmire, Houston Mayor John Whitmire, Houstonians, what’s, Hurricane Harvey Organizations: CNN, Houston Fire, Hyatt, Weather Prediction, WPC, National Weather Service, Houston, KPRC, Houston Astros, Oakland Athletics, Houston Mayor, Centerpoint, METRO, Training, Florida Panhandle, Regional Climate Center ., Hurricane Locations: Houston, Hyatt Regency, Texas, Louisiana, Bryan, United States, Georgia, Waco, Mississippi, Lake Charles , Louisiana, Harris County, Harris, city’s, Gulf, Alabama, Florida, Shreveport , Louisiana
University commencement season in New York City starts on Friday, in a climate that is anything but normal. At N.Y.U., dozens of graduate student workers are threatening to withhold grades if the university does not remove police officers from campus. Nemat Shafik, Columbia’s president, announced on Monday that the school was canceling its main commencement ceremony, largely for security reasons. will hold its large commencement ceremony at Yankee Stadium next Wednesday. The New School will hold its commencement at Louis Armstrong Stadium in Queens next Friday.
Persons: Nemat, Shafik, , Zohar Ford, Dr, , ” “ Organizations: University, Fashion Institute of Technology, City College, Fordham University, The New School and Columbia, Columbia, School of Professional, School of Social, Yankee, New, Louis Armstrong, Low Library, Hamilton Hall, Financial Times Locations: New York City, Israel, N.Y.U, Gaza, Queens, Morningside, Hamilton, , Columbia
Columbia has canceled its main commencement event in the wake of campus protests. AdvertisementColumbia is canceling its main commencement event in the aftermath of protests against Israel's war in Gaza that roiled the campus and ended in dozens of arrests. Columbia said it came to the decision based on feedback from students, and the changes would not impact travel plans for families. Advertisement"Our students emphasized that these smaller-scale, school-based celebrations are most meaningful to them and their families," the university said in a statement. AdvertisementOn Monday, Emory University announced it was moving commencement activities off-campus due to safety concerns.
Persons: , Columbia, Robert Kraft Organizations: Columbia, Service, Ivy League, Lawn, Baker Athletics, Jewish, Associated Press, Emory University Locations: Lawn, Gaza, Columbia, Israel
During all of the years that the Olympics gave out medals in arts, not just athletics — and if you didn’t know about that, the rest of this article may hold more surprises — the pinnacle came in Paris, 100 years ago this summer. The gold medal sculpture at the 1924 Paris Olympics was by a Greek artist named Costas Dimitriadis. His nude, arching, 7-foot “Discobole” (Discus Thrower) was for weeks displayed prominently in the Grand Palais. Two years later, before “a crowd of light-frocked women and straw-hatted men,” as The New York Times reported, the prized sculpture, cast in bronze, was planted just outside the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York’s Central Park.
Persons: Costas Dimitriadis, Organizations: Palais, New York Times, Metropolitan Museum of Art Locations: Paris, Greek, New
Olga Fikotova Connolly, who won a gold medal in track and field for Czechoslovakia in the 1956 Melbourne Olympics, watched Harold Connolly of the United States win one the next day, and, in March 1957, married him as the highlight of a storybook Cold War romance, died on April 12 in Costa Mesa, Calif. She was 91. She died in her son Jim’s home, where she had been receiving hospice care, Ms. Connolly-Freund said. The governing body European Athletics said Olga Connolly had been the last living female gold medalist from the Melbourne Games. Her competitive record as a discus thrower was exceptional: five Olympic Games (four representing the United States as an American citizen), five American championships and four American records. Harold Connolly, a hammer thrower from Massachusetts, competed in four Olympics.
Persons: Olga Fikotova Connolly, Harold Connolly, Merja Connolly, Freund, Jim’s, Connolly, Olga Connolly Organizations: Czechoslovakia, United States, Melbourne Games, Olympic Games Locations: Costa Mesa, Calif, United States, American, Massachusetts
Receiving a first Olympic medal is supposed to be a momentous and exhilarating occasion for every athlete but not Alysia Montaño. “A stab in the gut, in the heart, really,” is how she describes her supposed moment of triumph. In the days after learning that she could be awarded a bronze medal, Montaño says that her emotions oscillated from joy to sadness to something akin to grief. Savinova celebrates her winning gold at the London Olympics, a title of which she was later stripped. Montaño being awarded her bronze medal from the 2013 world championships in 2019.
Persons: vacantly, , ” Montaño, – Mariya Savinova, Ekaterina Guliyev, Ekaterina Poistogova, Pamela Jelimo, Montaño, Stu Forster, Savinova, Guliyev, Olivier Morin, huff, , Adam Nelson, Mustafa Abumunes, , wouldn’t Organizations: CNN, Doping Agency, London Olympics, Getty, Athletics Integrity Unit, Turkish Athletic Federation, London, Doha, Clif, ” CNN, International Olympic Committee, US Olympic, Paralympic, New York Times, Nike Locations: Cleveland, American, London, Russia’s, Turkey, AFP, Qatar, Los Angeles, Burger, Paris
A high school athletics director was arrested after a deepfake of the school's principal was shared online. The deepfake recording imitated Eric Eiswert making racist and antisemitic remarks. AdvertisementA Maryland high school athletics director, Dazhon Darien, has been arrested and charged with stalking and theft after an AI deepfake audio recording of the school's principal, which included racist remarks, was shared online. AI deepfakes are a growing concernPolice used forensic analysis to determine that the recording was made using AI. There are also fears that AI deepfakes could threaten free and fair elections as it becomes easier for people to spread misinformation.
Persons: Eric Eiswert, , Dazhon, Eiswert, It's, Johnny Olszewski, Joe Biden, White Organizations: Service, Pikesville, School, New York Times, Pikesville High, Police, Authorities, FBI Locations: Maryland, Dazhon Darien, Baltimore, Darien, Hong Kong, New Hampshire
Raine was an early investor in DraftKings — which helped establish the US sports-betting sector — and has been investing at a rate of about three companies a year. Raine is looking to take stakes in leagues with rights they can monetize in various ways and invest in growing, founder-led companies. Raine says college sports still hold a big opportunity for outside investors, even if the structure of college athletics adds complexity. In 2019, Raine helped the Pac-12 Conference explore raising private equity (which it ultimately decided against doing). Raine also helped the PGA Tour raise $3 billion this year through a for-profit entity.
Persons: Joe Ravitch, Jeff Sine's, It's, Raine, Colin Neville, that's, Garrett Gomes, Raine isn't, Banks, JPMorgan Chase, Neville Organizations: Imagine, Business, Apple, Premiere Lacrosse League, RCX Sports, Private, Florida State, Sixth, JPMorgan, CNBC, PGA Locations: DraftKings, Florida
CNN —Reggie Bush is getting his 2005 Heisman Memorial Trophy back after having had to relinquish the award in 2010. “We are thrilled to welcome Reggie Bush back to the Heisman family in recognition of his collegiate accomplishments,” Michael Comerford, president of The Heisman Trophy Trust, said in a statement. We are so happy to welcome him back.” Michael Comerford, president of The Heisman Trophy Trust, in a statement on Wednesday. In a post on Instagram, Bush wrote, “No one can take from you what God has for you,” along with a picture of his Heisman Trophy. Bush will also be invited to future Heisman Trophy ceremonies and USC will receive a replica trophy.
Persons: Reggie Bush, Bush, ” Michael Comerford, , Reggie, Marcus Cassel, Chris Carlson, ” Bush, Johnny Manziel, , Vince Lombardi Organizations: CNN, Heisman Trust, Heisman, Trust, University of Southern, UCLA, USC, Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, College, NCAA, Athletic, NFL, Twitter, New, New Orleans Saints, Miami Dolphins, Detroit Lions, San Francisco 49ers, Buffalo Bills, Saints Locations: Heisman.com, Instagram, University of Southern California, New Orleans
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFormer TD Ameritrade CEO Joe Moglia: Our economy is in good shape, inflation is under controlJoe Moglia, former TD Ameritrade chairman and CEO and Coastal Carolina University chair of athletics, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the state of the economy, impact of geopolitical tensions, the Fed's interest rate outlook, future of college sports, and more.
Persons: Joe Moglia Organizations: Coastal Carolina University
CNN —Aaron Boone has been tossed from an MLB game 35 times since becoming New York Yankees manager in 2018, but his most recent ejection on Monday was certainly unique. Moments later, Boone was tossed when Wendelstedt heard a shout directed towards him – despite the offending words appearing to come from a fan in the stands and not the Yankees manager himself. You got anything else to say, you’re gone, OK?”The cameras then cut to a frustrated – but crucially silent – Boone who appeared to stand down. Per MLB, Wendelstedt conceded postgame that Boone “probably, you know, is not the one who made the comment,” but doubled down on his reasons for the ejection. Aaron Boone runs the Yankees.
Persons: Aaron Boone, Hunter Wendelstedt, Boone, he’d, Wendelstedt, , , ” Boone, Hunter, ‘ Hunter, , Oakland’s Esteury Ruiz, Carlos Rodón, John Tumpane, Ruiz, ” Wendelstedt, you’re, – Boone, Boone –, Mike Stobe, You’re, jeers, Boone “, Aaron Organizations: CNN, MLB, New York Yankees, Yankees, Oakland Athletics, ” CNN, YES Network, New, Miami Marlins Locations: New York
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