Hey there! Dan DeFrancesco in NYC. I know we are getting close to beach season, but I'm not sure shelling out $14,000 on fake ab surgery is money well spent. Take a look at the pics, and you be the judge.
Hello there and Happy Tuesday, I'm Emilia David, filling in for your regular host Diamond Naga Siu this week.
As an elder millennial living in one of the most expensive cities in the world, I often worry about money. I'm not alone in feeling uncertain about finances, either.
Hey readers. Phil Rosen here. As you might guess about a writer, I love to read.
I've collected hundreds of books over the years, and stacks of paperbacks line the walls of my room. But the most useful knowledge I've learned comes from a very small fraction of those books.
This is the Pareto principle, more popularly known as the 80-20 rule: Roughly 80% of impact comes from 20% of the causes.
So glad to have you back for another round of 10 things in tech. I'm Asia Martin.
This will be my last day filling in for Diamond Naga Siu. My colleague Emilia David will take over for the rest of this week until Diamond Naga returns from her much-needed vacation.
Good morning. I'm Phil Rosen — still recovering from last night's Succession episode. I'm actually writing to you not far from where HBO films many of the scenes in downtown Manhattan (fingers crossed I show up as an extra this season).
Speaking of jobs — Friday was a key day for labor-market data. Today we're taking a closer look.
Do you eat meat, reader? If so, what is your meatball of choice — beef, chicken… mammoth? Yes, you read that right.
Newsletter editor Hallam Bullock here, coming to you from London.
An Australian startup has engineered a giant meatball made from woolly mammoth DNA. Yet, it turns out nobody can taste it because humans could be allergic to the 5,000-year-old protein.
Welcome to Saturday, friends. I'm Phil Rosen, writing to you from New York City.
I'm excited to share this week's conversation with a top strategist and her outlook for 2023 — but first I have a question for you.
Hey there! Dan DeFrancesco in NYC.
Fun fact Friday: Parents in cities, including Eleanor Roosevelt, used to put their children in cages that hung out their windows in order for them to get fresh air.
With the stock market closed today, we decided to shake things up a bit. Today's edition consists of reader-submitted questions.
Markets are closed today but the Opening Bell newsletter rings nonetheless. Phil Rosen here — good to see you.
The main thing to watch today is the March jobs report, which is due at 8:30 a.m. ET.
When markets are open, stocks often move in reaction to the report, but this time around the reaction will have to wait until Monday.
For our day off, we have a shorter edition for you. First, let's check in with Warren Buffett.