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Man in finance: From couch to David Guetta remix

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Man in finance: From couch to David Guetta remix

By Eleanor DoyleRiyah CollinsBBC Newsbeat

Kat Page Megan Boni. Megan's a young woman with long blonde hair and brown eyes. She's wearing a maroon coloured suit and scrunching her face up at the camera.Kat Page

Megan’s viral TikTok has been remixed by DJs including David Guetta, who’s releasing a version on Friday

Here’s a test. Finish the sentence.

“I’m looking for a man in finance…”

If your brain added “with a trust fund. Six-five. Blue eyes”, congratulations. You’re one of the millions of who’s been earwormed by Megan Boni.

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That’s the viral song sample poking fun at the concept of an “ideal man” she recorded back in April that’s taken over TikTok in the weeks since.

Megan, better known as Girl on Couch shared the video with the caption: “Did I just write the song of the summer?”

Forty million views later, it’s inspired hundreds of remixes and parodies, with high-profile names including Billie Eilish’s brother Finneas making their own videos based around the 19-second clip.

DJs, brands and even Singapore’s Ministry of Defence got in on the trend.

Now Megan’s hoping to storm the charts with a single she’s recorded alongside superstar DJ David Guetta.

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But despite what she says in her TikTok, tells BBC Newsbeat she’s not actually looking for a tall banker with a deep wallet.

“I doubt we would work”, she says.

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The 27-year-old New Yorker tells Newsbeat the idea for the meme came out of dating app fatigue.

Bored of complaining about being single, she started jotting down some lyric ideas in her notes app.

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“Dating apps are making dating so much more impossible because they’re really raising everyone’s standards,” Megan says.

“So I was just trying to make fun of girls like myself who complain about being single but then have this laundry list of impossible needs.”

Some people complained that the track objectifies men, but Megan brushes off the accusation.

“I think it’s so funny when these men are like ‘If a guy wrote a song like this about a woman…’

“Guys write songs about women all the time,” she says.

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“It is a joke. I didn’t think a man with these criteria existed.”

Megan Boni Megan Boni pictured in Las Vegas with French DJ David Guetta. Megan reclines on the back of the sofa while David reclines facing the other way on the seat. Megan is a young blonde woman, she wears sunglasses, a brown crop top and white trousers. David is a man in his 50s, wearing jeans and a black and white patterned top. Megan Boni

Megan recently flew to Las Vegas to perform alongside French DJ David Guetta

While Megan says she “couldn’t be less interested in dating”, she also says she’s not too bothered about launching a music career.

Universal Music Group – the label behind some of the world’s biggest stars including Taylor Swift, Harry Styles and Ariana Grande – has offered her a publishing deal.

It means she can make some money off royalties from the song, which she says hasn’t so far been as profitable as some people assume.

“I have made money from it, just not through the uses on TikTok,” she says, which anyone can feature for free.

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Megan now has more than a quarter of a million followers on the app and tells Newsbeat after she posted the original video, “in the span of a week, my life was flipped upside down”.

She says she was also offered a deal to make a full album but decided to turn it down.

“I was like: ‘what makes you think I can write a song? What makes you think I could write an album?’” she says.

“I’m such an unserious person.

“I don’t fit. I’m just not interested in writing music.”

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Instead, she’s happy to just let the song have its moment online.

“The sequel’s never as good as the original,” she says.

“There’s no way that I come out with another two-second song and it blows up as big so I’m not too stressed about doing that.

“So for the summer, I’ll ride the wave of the song and I’ll party.”

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It’s working out pretty well so far for Megan, who recently flew to Las Vegas to perform the track alongside David Guetta and US dance duo The Chainsmokers.

“I keep thinking I can’t get any more excited,” she says. “And then new stuff just keeps happening.”

Once the hype dies down, she says, acting and comedy are what she really hopes to pursue.

“It was never my dream to be a musician,” she says.

“I’m so lucky that this happened but I’m really trying to use it to do something that I love.

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“My dream would be to be on Saturday Night Live. That’s the goal.”

She admits she feels a “little bit bad” about her overnight success though.

“Some artists try to get a record deal their whole lives and I was just sitting on my couch,” she says.

“But that’s how it happens, it’s how the internet works. It’s wild.”

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Finance

Your Savings Account Is Failing: 3 Shifts to Reclaim Your Wealth

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Your Savings Account Is Failing: 3 Shifts to Reclaim Your Wealth

You’ve done everything right, and you’re still losing ground. That’s the sentiment many are feeling, as rising inflation takes bigger bites out of your paychecks when you pump gas, pay your electric bill or go to the grocery store.

It used to be that you could turn to a high-yield savings account to outpace it. Yet, with inflation at 4.20% and not likely to cool soon, most savings accounts don’t earn returns keeping pace with inflation.

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Finance

Hong Kong vows stronger exchange with reforms, bond futures and gold push

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Hong Kong vows stronger exchange with reforms, bond futures and gold push
Hong Kong is pressing ahead with an overhaul of listing rules and the launch of new product initiatives, the city’s deputy finance chief said on Friday as the bourse operator marked 26 years as a publicly traded company.
Speaking at the anniversary ceremony of Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX), Deputy Financial Secretary Michael Wong Wai-lun outlined reforms under review, including optimising weighted voting rights, easing secondary listings by overseas issuers, and expanding flexibility for biotech and specialist technology companies.

“We will continue to work tirelessly and proactively to make Hong Kong even better and stronger as a leading international financial centre,” Wong said.

The consultation period closed last month, and HKEX was now reviewing feedback before finalising the measures, he added.

Wong also welcomed the forthcoming launch of five-year mainland Chinese government bond futures, saying the contract would provide efficient risk-management tools and reinforce Hong Kong’s role as the world’s leading offshore renminbi hub.

He said Hong Kong was building a commodities ecosystem, using gold as a strategic entry point, with plans for expanded storage and refinery capacity and the reactivation of a US dollar gold futures contract.

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Finance

S&P Global improves outlook on city of Houston’s finances | Houston Public Media

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S&P Global improves outlook on city of Houston’s finances | Houston Public Media

Dominic Anthony Walsh / Houston Public Media

Houston Mayor John Whitmire speaks about his proposed budget on May 5, 2026.

One of the “Big Three” credit ratings agencies improved its outlook on the city of Houston’s financial position on Thursday, two weeks after city officials approved major reforms to the city’s revenue flow.

In a news release announcing the “stable” outlook, the agency said the city “made substantial progress in materially reducing its budget gap … through various structural changes.”

S&P Global lowered the city’s outlook in 2024 amid rising public safety costs tied to the more than $1 billion blockbuster settlement with the firefighters’ union, which included immediate backpay and hiked salaries by more than 30% over the five-year agreement. The “negative” outlook signaled the possibility of a credit downgrade, which would raise the city’s borrowing costs.

This year, Houston Mayor John Whitmire’s administration redirected about $100 million in revenue from the city’s water and wastewater utility to the $3 billion general fund, which supports most departments including police and fire. At the same time, the administration moved the more than $100 million solid waste department out of the general fund and into the utility while adopting a $5 monthly fee for garbage customers.

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Altogether, the changes essentially erased the projected deficit for this fiscal year, which runs through June 2027.

Steven David, Whitmire’s chief operations officer, said the improved outlook is “just a validation of the work that Mayor Whitmire has been doing for the past two-and-a-half years.”

“If fiscal stability is a house, we’ve laid the foundation with this fiscal year, and it’s good to see that S&P is recognizing that,” he said.

S&P’s statement included a note of caution. The city’s budget deficit has routinely ballooned beyond what was planned.

In 2026, the administration expected a gap between revenue and spending of about $70 million. The actual deficit exceeded $170 million, although the city’s critical fund balance remained on target.

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“If these deviations from the city’s budget continue, it could weaken our view of the city’s budgetary practices and overall reserves, aligning them more closely with those of lower-rated peers,” the agency said.

City Controller Chris Hollins — Houston’s elected financial official and a vocal critic of Whitmire’s financial policies — said the warnings “show we’re not out of the woods.”

The other “Big Three” credit ratings agencies have not yet announced changes. Fitch maintained a negative outlook, first assigned in 2024, while Moody’s outlook remained stable.

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