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The Summit Brief Finance & Business · Today's edge in wealth & strategy. |
Las Vegas Raiders Valued Above $11 Billion as Ownership Stake Expands
The NFL has approved a plan allowing investors to increase their stake in the Las Vegas Raiders, valuing the franchise at more than $11 billion. The deal gives private equity executive Egon Durban the option to gradually expand his ownership position, reflecting the growing financial power and global appeal of professional sports teams.
The Breakdown:
- Record valuation: Raiders worth over $11 billion
- Ownership shift: New investors gaining larger stakes
- League approval: Deal passed with required team votes
The Angle: Sports franchises are no longer just teams—they're premium assets. The rising valuations highlight how live entertainment continues to attract deep-pocketed investors.
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Above The Fold News & Media · The signal through the noise. |
Robotaxi Outage Leaves Passengers Stranded in Wuhan
A widespread robotaxi outage in Wuhan, China, left passengers stuck in traffic as autonomous vehicles abruptly shut down. The incident marks the first large-scale disruption of its kind in the country.
Former Nepal Prime Minister Arrested Over Protest Deaths
Former Nepalese Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli has been arrested following an investigation into deadly protests led by Gen Z activists last year. A government panel recommended his prosecution over the fatalities.
Michelin-Recognized Chef Axel Oliva Dies at 31
Axel Oliva, the chef behind the Michelin-recognized restaurant Leche de Tigre, has died at age 31. His death was described as tragic, and tributes have poured in from the culinary world.
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The Horizon Where culture meets the edge of tomorrow. |
Candy Craze & Grocery Cuts
Cracker Barrel has gone viral for carrying Lammes Candies Sherbet Mints, a nostalgic treat that has sparked widespread online attention. The retailer has stocked the seasonal favorite since 2007, but recent social media buzz has turned it into a must-have item.
Meanwhile, grocery chain Albertsons is laying off more than 100 employees following the closure of two Texas locations. The move comes amid broader restructuring efforts after multiple store shutdowns in recent years.
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Peak Condition Health & Fitness · Your performance edge. |
Seed Oils: Should You Actually Avoid Them?
Seed oils—canola, soybean, corn, sunflower—are vilified in health circles, but the evidence is more nuanced. Research shows that industrial processing creates oxidized fats and high omega-6 content, which can promote inflammation when consumed in excess. The average American gets 20:1 omega-6 to omega-3 ratio instead of the optimal 4:1 ratio. However, controlled studies show seed oils in moderation don't cause harm—the problem is they're in every processed food, making it impossible to moderate. Context matters: cooking at home with olive oil versus eating fried restaurant food daily.
Prioritize olive oil, avocado oil, butter, and coconut oil for home cooking—these have better omega ratios and heat stability. Limit restaurant and processed foods where seed oils are ubiquitous. Don't stress about trace amounts in salad dressing or occasional restaurant meals—dose makes the poison. Balance omega-6 intake with omega-3s: eat fatty fish 2-3 times weekly or supplement with 2-3 grams of fish oil daily. Read ingredient labels and avoid foods listing soybean or canola oil in the first three ingredients. Seed oils aren't poison, but they're not optimal—replace where easy, don't obsess where impractical.
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The Climb Vertical moves for your mind & career |
The Power of Micro-Commitments: Building Trust Incrementally
Trust isn't built through grand gestures—it's constructed through consistent micro-commitments kept over time. Research from behavioral economics shows that keeping small promises increases perceived trustworthiness by 40% more than occasional big deliveries. Responding within 24 hours, showing up on time, following through on minor commitments—these build trust faster than heroic efforts. Organizational psychologist Adam Grant's research confirms: reliability in small things predicts reliability in big things. Your reputation is the sum of a thousand tiny kept promises, not a few impressive moments.
Start meetings on time and end on time—it signals respect for others' time. When you say you'll send something by Friday, send it Thursday. Return messages within 24 hours even if just to acknowledge and provide a timeline. Under-promise and over-deliver on deadlines by building in buffer time. Keep a "promises made" tracker to ensure nothing falls through cracks. Follow up after conversations with clear next steps. People remember who makes their life easier through reliability more than who occasionally impresses with brilliance. Trust compounds—every kept micro-commitment increases the weight of your word until people stop questioning whether you'll deliver.
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Elevation Essentials Life Systems · Small moves, massive returns. |
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Uncharted Terrain Travel & Exploration · Beyond your current elevation. |
DAY 1 - FIRST LOOK: Valparaíso
Picture a city that climbs 42 hills above the Pacific, where rainbow-colored houses cling to cliffs, street art rivals Banksy, and century-old funiculars haul residents up impossible slopes. Welcome to Valparaíso, Chile's bohemian port city that looks like San Francisco and Lisbon had a rebellious, artistic child. Tourism jumped 64% in 2024, with travelers discovering what poets like Pablo Neruda knew: Valparaíso (locals call it "Valpo") is beautifully chaotic, gorgeously crumbling, and utterly addictive.
This city of 296,000 sprawls along the Pacific coast 75 miles northwest of Santiago, where the port that once rivaled any in the Americas now shares space with art galleries, dive bars, and UNESCO-protected architecture. The Historic Quarter earned World Heritage status in 2003, but gentrification battles authenticity daily. Cerro Concepción and Cerro Alegre Hills overflow with boutique hotels and tourists, while Cerro Bellavista keeps its gritty soul. 15 historic ascensores (funiculars) still operate, some since 1883, climbing hills too steep for cars. This is Chile's cultural capital—a port city that embraced decline and became art.
Tomorrow: Golden age, earthquakes, and resurrection...
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