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The Women’s World Cup is officially underway, and millions will be watching the teams compete for a $110 million prize pool, nearly quadruple what it was in the last Women’s World Cup in 2019. The increase is largely due to the advocacy around the issue of the sport’s gender pay gap from members of the U.S. Women’s team—like Megan Rapinoe, who is playing her last World Cup before retiring at the end of the year—and players around the world.
But despite the gains, it’s only a quarter of the prize awarded to the Men’s World Cup players last year.
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BREAKING NEWS
Shortly after the NFL approved the sale of his former team, disgraced former Washington Commanders Owner Dan Snyder was issued a $60 million fine after the conclusion of a lengthy NFL investigation into allegations of sexual harassment and financial misconduct. The investigation, conducted by former U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White, substantiated allegations that Snyder sexually harassed a former employee and failed to properly report financials to the NFL, according to a release from the league.
India—the world’s largest exporter of rice—banned all exports of “non-basmati white rice” late Thursday in an effort to ensure enough supply domestically, raising fears it could further threaten global food security. The Food and Agriculture Organization’s index that tracks global rice prices has risen 13.9% in the last 12 months, per data shared by the UN body.
BUSINESS + FINANCE
The Nasdaq had its worst day in five months after major stock losses at Netflix and Tesla drove the tech-heavy index down nearly 300 points on Thursday. Tesla’s stock slid nearly 10% after an earnings report prompted analysts to doubt the automaker’s $840 billion valuation, and Netflix narrowly missed analysts’ second-quarter revenue projections.
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After fleeing China ahead of looming crypto regulations, Binance eventually found a new home in Lithuania, where the massive crypto exchange established subsidiary Bifinity. But outside the oversight of a major financial center, Bifinity was also used to facilitate some of Binance’s more dubious transactions, including the purchase of a $55 million private jet, and some $62.5 million directed to CEO Changpeng Zhao’s personal bank account.
The Federal Reserve launched FedNow after a decade of study and development, which could eventually mean businesses and consumers have near instant access to payments (including paychecks) and money moved between financial accounts. Back in 2017, a group of the nation’s largest banks rolled out its own high speed money transfer system, the Real Time Payments Network, but small banks have been hesitant to sign on, and the amount of money RTP is moving is comparatively miniscule.
WEALTH + ENTREPRENEURSHIP
A fresh round of $270 million in funding for Kim Kardashian’s shapewear line Skims pushed the company’s valuation to $4 billion—adding around $500 million to Kardashian’s fortune. Her net worth now stands at $1.7 billion, according to Forbes’ calculations.
TECH + INNOVATION
Longtime venture capital firm Mayfield Fund is launching a $250 million investment vehicle to back artificial intelligence startups at the seed stage and earlier in order to take advantage of the generative AI wave. “Having participated on web, mobile and cloud, we think AI is an even bigger opportunity and this is going to make humans superhuman,” the firm’s leader Navin Chaddha told Forbes.
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MONEY + POLITICS
PublicSq., an online marketplace for shoppers to buy from companies that support conservative values, went public via a SPAC Thursday. Backed by Donald Trump Jr. and others, the retailer offers arguably the best glimpse at what a parallel economy might look like, where political and religious beliefs determine the brand of soap, pet food and eyeglasses that customers buy.
SPORTS + ENTERTAINMENT
NFL team owners on Thursday unanimously approved billionaire Josh Harris’ purchase of the Washington Commanders, ending a two-plus-decade run for billionaire owner Dan Snyder, whose tenure has been marked by poor performance and multiple misconduct allegations. In the deal expected to close as soon as Friday, Harris’ Blitzer Sports & Entertainment investment group agreed to pay $6.05 billion for the team, which would be the most expensive in league history.
TRAVEL + LIFESTYLE
Workers at the Acropolis in Athens, Greece are striking over being forced to work in heat reaching as high as 113 degrees Fahrenheit. The Greek government shut down the Acropolis over the weekend due to extreme weather, but reopened it Monday, prompting the vote to strike.
DAILY COVER STORY
How ButcherBox Is Killing It With Free Bacon For Life While Rivals Like Blue Apron Unraveled
TOPLINE While food-box companies have mostly faded, ButcherBox has grown to become one of the largest online meat-sellers in America with $550 million in sales since debuting in 2015.
Stock prices of competitors like Blue Apron and Hello Fresh have plummeted. But ButcherBox Founder and CEO Mike Salguero’s $169 monthly subscription did two things his rivals didn’t: as a promotion, he gave away free bacon (or chicken wings, or ground beef), and he shunned venture investment.
ButcherBox began in 2014 in the suburbs of Boston when Salguero started buying beef from farmers in a parking lot. Salguero had figured out how to source meat for his wife, who has the autoimmune disease Hashimoto’s and needed to make sure that the meat she ate was antibiotic-free and grassfed. Salguero realized it was cheaper to buy a whole carcass himself, break it down and sell pieces to friends. When it caught on, he decided to turn it into a business.
Unlike most of its competitors, ButcherBox has been profitable since the start, but not ridiculously so. Last year’s annual EBITDA margin came in at under 5%—on par with the razor-thin profits of the grocery industry.
ButcherBox doesn’t raise animals or slaughter them. The brand buys meat from a handful of big producers like Perdue. ButcherBox packs the subscriber’s monthly choices into a box of dry ice and ships it off.
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ButcherBox now uses its iconic bacon-for-life promotion—as well as similar variations like ground beef for life, wings for a year, salmon for three months—to lure new customers and keep existing or inactive ones. Growth has been leveling off, but existing subscribers are spending more on each box they order—more than $200 on average. Orders grow as ButcherBox adds to its 115 offerings.
Salguero owns 72% of ButcherBox, and based on how competitors are trading publicly, Forbesconservatively estimates his stake at about $175 million.
The biggest challenge ahead, Salguero said, is how to compensate employees that want to cash out at ButcherBox’s latest valuation without blowing the chance Salguero has to maintain control of the business.
WHY IT MATTERS “It wasn’t that long ago that meal kits and subscription food boxes were a thing,” says Forbes Executive Editor Bob Ivry. “It was easy to see why: Dinners could be prepared fresh with customers choosing ingredients and seasoning without the drudgery of schlepping through the crowded supermarket every other day. Different brands, however, took different approaches. So far, ButcherBox’s has worked. As Matt Wadiak, cofounder of Blue Apron, a ButcherBox rival, puts it, because Salguero doesn’t raise or slaughter his own products, the company is performing arbitrage. ‘They’re a marketing organization,’ he says. Maybe that’s the key to success in an industry that was once an investor darling and could be again.”
MORE: Disrupting The Pecking Order: Blue Apron Cofounder Raises $10 Million In Funding To Breed A Better Chicken
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FACTS AND COMMENTS
Netflix reported second-quarter revenue that came up short on expectations, despite adding almost 6 million subscribers. Shares in the streaming platform fell about 9%, but Netflix CFO Spencer Neumann said the company “delivered” on its own projections:
$8.2 billion: Second-quarter revenue Netflix reported Wednesday, shy of the $8.3 billion forecasted by analysts, according to Yahoo! Finance
5.9 million: Number of new subscribers Netflix added in its second quarter, according to the company
‘Winning the streaming wars’: One analyst from Loop Capital said after Netflix shares jumped earlier this week to a 17-month high
STRATEGY AND SUCCESS
Back-to-back rejections in the job hunt are bound to take a toll on anyone’s mental health, but remember that even the most successful people have dealt with something similar. Try consulting with a mentor or career coach for advice, cultivate a network, and don’t dwell too much on the past: focus on your achievements and your best qualities, and it’ll only be a matter of time until you find your next opportunity.
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VIDEO
QUIZ
A grocery store is the latest retailer to roll out a palm scanner so you can check out with a wave of your hand. Which chain tested the feature at stores in California, New York and Texas, and plans to roll it out at more than 500 locations across the U.S.?
A. Whole Foods
B. Costco
C. Trader Joe’s
D. Aldi
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Check your answer.
ACROSS THE NEWSROOM
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The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump has instructed federal health agencies to pause all external communications, such as health advisories, weekly scientific reports, updates to websites and social media posts, the Washington Post reported on Tuesday, citing a dozen current and former officials and sources.
Competition creates two things: Winners and losers. Typically, those results are temporary, and when it comes to the Washington Commanders and Philadelphia Eagles this season, both sides experienced each fate going 1-1 in their two matchups against each other.
In fact, both teams held the fourth-quarter leads in each one, with the Commanders taking the lead into the final stretch in the first game and the Eagles doing the same in the second.
Both teams failed to stave off the other’s comeback as well, leading most to believe Washington and Philadelphia will probably compete in a close matchup this weekend. But not if you ask former Eagles linebacker Seth Joyner.
Dec 22, 2024; Landover, Maryland, USA; Washington Commanders wide receiver Jamison Crowder (80) celebrates after scoring the gaming winning touchdown during the fourth quarter against the Philadelphia Eagles at Northwest Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Peter Casey-Imagn Images / Peter Casey-Imagn Images
“By the way, they don’t stand a snowballs chance in hell in winning here on Sunday. You know that right?” while making a guest appearance on the WIP Morning Show on Sportsradio 94WIP recently. “Make sure you take that, and you play that all damn week, alright?”
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But before any Commanders fans get mad at Joyner for the outlandish comment, remember you’re talking to a wounded person.
Granted, Joyner was selected to two Pro Bowls in his eight seasons with Philadelphia, but before he left for the Arizona Cardinals, then the Green Bay Packers, and finally the Denver Broncos, the linebacker had to wear the loser tag more times than not.
At least when it came to Washington, and especially when it came to the biggest moments in the sport.
You see, in his day, the Eagles actually beat Washington more times than not. But where it mattered most, in the postseason, Joyner’s squads just never measured up.
Having to watch from home as Washington added two Super Bowl titles to the one it already had from just a couple of seasons before he joined the NFL was painful enough. Going one-and-done in the postseason himself in 1988, 89, and 90 is worse. Losing that 1990 playoff game to Washington, well, you can imagine the bitterness that can be born from that type of jealousy.
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Even when Joyner’s Eagles finally won a playoff game in 1993, they immediately fell to the hated Dallas Cowboys, who eventually won the Super Bowl.
You might say Joyner was a good luck charm for the rest of the division, in fact. During his eight seasons in Philadelphia, the NFC East won five Super Bowls – two for Washington, two for the New York Giants, and one for the Dallas Cowboys. None for the Eagles.
Even when Joyner left Philadelphia to play for the Cardinals, the blessings for the rest of the division continued. He spent 1994, 95, and 96 in Arizona, and the Cowboys won two more titles. Really, the hayday of the NFC East is all tied to Joyner’s presence in it, if you think about it.
Seeking a ring of his own, Joyner latched on in Green Bay and lost in the Super Bowl. So he joined the Broncos, the same team that beat his Packers, and contributed five tackles to the team that figured out how to break the ‘Joyner curse,’ just don’t play him.
Really, Commanders fans shouldn’t be upset with Joyner. Nor should the players or coaches. While he lives vicariously through this Eagles roster, just remember all of the times he had to watch burgundy and gold-clad players celebrate while he struggled to get just one postseason win in Kelly green.
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Stick with CommanderGameday and the Locked On Commanders podcast for more FREE coverage of the Washington Commanders throughout the 2024 season.
• Commanders Could Face as Many as 3 PFWA All-NFL Players in the Super Bowl
• Commanders Coach Named Candidate for Cowboys HC Job
• Commanders’ Jayden Daniels Receives Another Honor For His Performance vs. Lions
• Washington Commanders OC Kliff Kingsbury Named GMFB Coach of the Week
Iowa Hawkeyes (12-7, 2-6 Big Ten) at Washington Huskies (13-6, 4-3 Big Ten)
Seattle; Wednesday, 9 p.m. EST
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BOTTOM LINE: Washington hosts Iowa after Sayvia Sellers scored 24 points in Washington’s 87-58 victory against the Purdue Boilermakers.
The Huskies are 10-2 on their home court. Washington ranks ninth in the Big Ten in rebounding with 34.8 rebounds. Dalayah Daniels paces the Huskies with 7.4 boards.
The Hawkeyes are 2-6 in Big Ten play. Iowa ranks ninth in the Big Ten scoring 35.1 points per game in the paint led by Addison O’Grady averaging 8.0.
Washington’s average of 7.8 made 3-pointers per game this season is only 0.5 fewer made shots on average than the 8.3 per game Iowa gives up. Iowa has shot at a 45.8% rate from the field this season, 6.9 percentage points greater than the 38.9% shooting opponents of Washington have averaged.
The Huskies and Hawkeyes square off Wednesday for the first time in Big Ten play this season.
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TOP PERFORMERS: Sellers is averaging 16.8 points, 3.6 assists and 1.8 steals for the Huskies.
Taylor McCabe is shooting 44.9% from beyond the arc with 2.1 made 3-pointers per game for the Hawkeyes, while averaging 7.1 points.
LAST 10 GAMES: Huskies: 6-4, averaging 73.1 points, 30.7 rebounds, 13.7 assists, 6.2 steals and 4.4 blocks per game while shooting 47.7% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 65.8 points per game.
Hawkeyes: 4-6, averaging 72.0 points, 36.5 rebounds, 18.1 assists, 7.5 steals and 3.3 blocks per game while shooting 43.1% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 70.1 points.
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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.