Quantcast
Channel: Business Insider
Viewing all 66342 articles
Browse latest View live

The trailer for HBO's upcoming Brexit movie starring Benedict Cumberbatch has been released, and not everybody is happy

$
0
0

HBO Brexit film, Benedict Cumberbatch

  • "Brexit," the movie about tactics used in the build-up to the 2016 referendum, will be released in 2019.
  • The film stars Benedict Cumberbatch, who plays Dominic Cummings — the campaign director for the Vote Leave campaign, and the man who "hacked the political system" according to the film's trailer.
  • HBO Films uploaded a trailer on December 14, which can you watch below.

A trailer for "Brexit," a 2019 movie about tactics used in the build-up to the 2016 referendum, has been released by HBO Films and Channel 4. However, not everybody is happy about the movie.

The film stars Benedict Cumberbatch who plays Dominic Cummings, the campaign director for the Vote Leave campaign and the man who "hacked the political system" according to the film's trailer.

The movie will debut on Saturday, January 19, according to Deadline. The website added that HBO says its movie will reveal "the personalities, strategies and feuds of the Leave and Remain campaigns.

"The tactics employed by Vote Leave during the data-driven campaign swayed a historically silent voting bloc that would ultimately decide the outcome of the referendum, as well as affecting future elections around the world."

Watch the trailer here:

Read more: The man behind the official Leave campaign says Brexit is now a 'train wreck'

The launch of the movie has not been warmly received by everybody. In fact, The Observer journalist Carole Cadwalladr is furious about the release. "You are literally interfering in our criminal justice system,"she wrote on Twitter.

Earlier in the year, Cadwalladr ran a story on The Guardian that said "crimes may have been committed by the Vote Leave campaign." Just weeks later, Vote Leave was fined after being found guilty of breaking electoral law.

Posting on Twitter on Saturday, she said HBO is "heroicizing a man in contempt of parliament." She added: "We don’t know the facts still. Because he refuses to tell parliament. But this character with the 'software' is bulls---. The 'physicists' are still unknown. The work was not declared. Electoral commission refused to investigate."

Read more: The 100 coolest people in UK tech, featuring Carole Cadwalladr

"This is such a terrible cynical commission," Cadwalladr said. "And me tweeting about it will only serve to make it 'controversial.' But it's not. It's just grossly irresponsible. We don’t know the facts yet. We need criminal justice not 'drama.' Who needs fake news when you have Cumberbatch."

SEE ALSO: 2 prominent Conservative MPs want Theresa May to work with Jeremy Corbyn to deliver Brexit

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: The inside story behind the Marvel movie you were never supposed to see


People are accusing Amazon of 'ruining' Christmas by sending items without their own boxes, but there's a really easy fix (AMZN)

$
0
0

Amazon

  • Amazon ships larger items in their own boxes.
  • This can cause problems around the holidays if the intended recipient sees the package on the porch.
  • There's an easy fix for most items, however. Customers can click "ship in Amazon box" as they check out.

Amazon is a go-to online destination for many families as they purchase gifts around the holidays.

But shoppers who aren't careful might accidentally spoil the surprise. That's because many larger items — including certain toys, Instant Pots, musical instruments, and other items — don't ship in Amazon's characteristic arrow box, but in their own box with whatever is inside clearly marked on the outside.

These recipients could then potentially see the item, thus "ruining" Christmas, as one Twitter user cited by The Independent put it. 

Luckily, there is a way to avoid that altogether.

When adding an item to an Amazon shopping cart, look for this phrase: "Item arrives in packaging that reveals what's inside. To hide it, choose Ship in Amazon packaging at checkout."

Then, simply do so. Click the button that says "Ship in Amazon packaging." 

It will look like this:

ship in amazon packaging

Then your order will come discreetly in an Amazon box instead. Voilá, problem solved. Doing this is completely free and mostly painless.

There are a few drawbacks and footnotes here. First, you shouldn't do this if you don't need to. There's absolutely no reason to waste another huge layer of cardboard on top of cardboard. There's a reason this item ships in its own package — Amazon has already decided it is safe enough. Don't create more waste unnecessarily.

Read more: Amazon is giving shoppers more time than ever before to place orders with free shipping in time for Christmas as the war for customers rages

Also, this isn't going to work for everything Amazon sells. There simply aren't boxes big enough to package everything Amazon sells in its own box. It's impractical.

So there you have it. Check a box and make sure Christmas isn't ruined this year.

SEE ALSO: Amazon's likely multimillion-dollar disaster on Prime Day proved it's not immune from embarrassment

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Almost 80% of the textbook industry is dominated by 5 publishing companies that make books so expensive most students skip buying them

I went to NYC's biggest luxury watch show, and the most memorable part wasn't the $1.8 million diamond watch or the $182,000 piece they let me try on

$
0
0

WatchTime NYC 2018

  • WatchTime New York is the biggest luxurywatch show in NYC.
  • It features exhibits by many of the biggest and most respected names in the luxury watch business, including Bovet, Montblanc, MB&F, and Breguet.
  • I know very little (read: almost nothing) about watches, but I decided to check it out.

I'll preface this by saying I know very little about watches. I have a $100 Skagen that I've been wearing every day since I got it for Christmas two years ago and that, aside from some waterproof stopwatches I wore as a teenager, is the extent of my watch ownership.

But, as the executive life editor for Busines Insider, I'm fascinated by the endless trappings of luxury, even the ones on our wrists, so I decided to check out WatchTime New York, NYC's biggest luxury watch show.

The late October show is a two-day day event in midtown Manhattan. This was its fourth year running, and it was co-hosted by watch publication WatchTime and luxury blog and Instagram account Watch Anish.

It's a testament to the buzzy energy at the show, and to the attentiveness of the PR team that was showing me around, that I didn't feel completely lost.

Here's what it's like inside NYC's biggest luxury watch show.

WatchTime New York is a two-day event. It's the biggest luxury watch show in NYC, and for the fourth year running, it was held in Gotham Hall, a couple of blocks from Bryant Park in midtown.



I showed up for the event after work at around 7 p.m. on Friday, by which point the show had already been running for about two hours.



I wasn't sure what the attire was, so I wore black jeans and a black turtleneck, thinking I couldn't go wrong. A doorman let me into the building, where I was able to check my coat and backpack.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

How the Trump administration looked at the end of 2017 and how it looks at the end of 2018

$
0
0

Trump admin 2x1

  • The Trump administration has seen an unprecedented level of turnover.
  • President Donald Trump's White House saw more firings, resignations, and reassignments of top staffers than any other young administration in modern history during its first year. 
  • This trend continued into 2018 and nearly a dozen people in top positions were fired, resigned, or shifted to another job. 

President Donald Trump's White House saw more firings, resignations, and reassignments of top staffers than any other young administration in modern history during its first year.

This trend continued into 2018, and Trump's White House once again looks decidedly different than it did 12 months ago. 

Trump has claimed he only hires the "best people," but his track record suggests otherwise. 

Read more: 21 scandals that rocked the Trump administration in 2018

In the past 12 months alone, the Trump administration has seen nearly a dozen top officials be dismissed, resign, or change positions: Hope Hicks resigned as White House communications director amid multiple controversies in February, Rex Tillerson was fired as secretary of state in March, Mike Pompeo shifted from being CIA director to becoming secretary of state in April, VA secretary David Shulkin was fired in March, H.R. McMaster was ousted as national security adviser in April, scandal-plagued EPA administrator Scott Pruitt resigned in July, US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley abruptly resigned in October, White House counsel Don McGahn left his position in a frustrated hurry this past October, Attorney General Jeff Sessions resigned at the request of the president in November, and John Kelly's departure as White House chief of staff was announced in December (with no replacement named).

Read more: John Kelly is out — here are all the casualties of the Trump administration so far

The graphic below shows how much the Trump administration has changed between the end of 2017 and the end of 2019. 

 

SEE ALSO: US gun laws, Thai cave divers, and the price of beer around the world: What 2018 looked like in maps

DON'T MISS: This graph shows 90% of political donations from Google workers went to the Democrats

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Anthony Scaramucci claims Trump isn't a nationalist: 'He likes saying that because it irks these intellectual elitists'

WHERE ARE THEY NOW?: Everyone who's fled or been fired from the Trump White House

$
0
0

Omarosa Manigault

  • Trump's White House has seen a number of high-profile departures since the earliest days of the administration.
  • Scott Pruitt, Gary Cohn, Omarosa Manigault Newman, Hope Hicks, and Steve Bannon are only a few of the people who have left.
  • Some Trump administration alumni have gone back to their roots, while others have embarked on totally new ventures.

 

President Donald Trump's White House has a doozy of a turnover rate.

The Brookings Institution reports that 62% of top-level White House positions — excluding the cabinet — have seen turnover under Trump as of December 2018. Nine cabinet members have also left the administration in Trump's first two years of office, the same number of secretaries who left Obama's cabinet throughout his eight year term.

Some of these top advisers were fired. Other officials decided to leave on their own, for various reasons. For example, chief of staff John Kelly recently announced his intent to resign after months of conflict and strife between him and Trump.

Either way, many commentators have pointed out that sieve-like nature of the White House seems to speak to a turbulent environment. That's a characterization which Trump himself has disputed. "There is no Chaos, only great Energy!"he tweeted.

So what happens to the people who leave? What sort of roles have Trump administration alumni been able to pick up once they exit the White House?

It's too early to tell for most recent departures, like Kelly and Jeff Sessions. Former officials like Reince Priebus and Dina Powell have returned to their private sector roots. And still others are embarking on totally new ventures.

Here's a look at where all of the White House's high-profile departures are today, from most to least recent departures:

SEE ALSO: John Kelly is out — here are all the casualties of the Trump administration so far

Jeff Sessions is out as attorney general.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions submitted his resignation on November 7 after nearly two years in the position, with Trump announcing that Matthew Whitaker, Sessions' Chief of Staff, would serve as acting attorney general.

Trump had frequently lambasted Sessions for recusing himself from overseeing special counsel Robert Mueller's probe into Russian interference in the 2016 election. 

"You know, the only reason I gave him the job is because I felt loyalty," Trump told Fox News' Ainsley Earhardt in an August interview. "He was an original supporter." Trump lamented that he "put in an attorney general that never took control of the Justice Department."

While Sessions has not announced his future plans, both Politico and Fox News reported he's eyeing a 2020 run for his old US Senate seat in Alabama, currently held by Democrat Doug Jones, who was elected in a December 2017 special election. 

 



Don McGahn's next move is unclear

Former White House counsel Don McGahn left the administration in late October following a turbulent 21 months in the White House.

The New York Times reported in August that McGahn voluntarily gave 30 hours of testimony to special counsel Robert Mueller's team investigating Russian interference in the 2016 election and whether Trump obstructed justice as President. 

It's not clear what McGahn, a former partner at Washington DC corporate law firm Jones Day and Federal Election Commission commissioner, will do next.



Scott Pruitt was in talks to consult to coal mining companies.

Former EPA administrator Scott Pruitt resigned in July amid several federal ethics investigations into his lavish spending habits, his suspected conflicts of interests with lobbyists, and for reportedly enlisting his official government staff to carry out his personal errands.

In September, The New York Times reported that Pruitt was in talks to take on a new role independently consulting for Kentucky-based coal mining company Alliance Resource Partners, whose chief executive is a Republican donor. 

While all Trump administration officials are bound to ethics pledges to not lobby for special interests within five years of leaving their government job, Pruitt's proposed consulting firm would reportedly not involve improper lobbying. 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

21 scandals that rocked the Trump administration in 2018

$
0
0

trump white house 2x1

  • The Trump administration has provided no shortage of controversy and scandal in 2018.
  • From Trump reportedly referring to several nations as "s--thole countries" and multiple cabinet members implicated in ethics scandals, it was an eventful year for the White House and the administration broadly.
  • Here are the 21 biggest scandals that roiled the Trump administration in 2018. 

It's been a long and eventful year in the administration of President Donald Trump, with nearly every day bringing with it a new controversy or scandal. 

Between the release of two tell-all books that described the West Wing as dysfunctional, five cabinet members either ousted or mired in scandal, and several bombshell revelations in special counsel Robert Mueller's probe into Russian interference, there's been no shortage of scandal. 

Here are the 21 of the biggest scandals that rocked the Trump administration in 2018:

Michael Wolff's "Fire and Fury" left aides scrambling to do damage control.

In early 2018, a controversial tell-all book about the Trump administration written by  Hollywood Reporter columnist Michael Wolff raised tensions among White House staffers as they tried to minimize the damage.

Among the book's most salacious allegations were that former White House advisor Steve Bannon called Trump's oldest daughter Ivanka "dumb as a brick" and his son Donald Jr. "treasonous," that Trump repeatedly tried to have sex with his friends' wives, and that "everyone around him" questions his intelligence and fitness for office.

While the book's claims were treated with cautious skepticism by other members of the media, Trump slammed Wolff and blamed "weak libel laws" for the book's allegations.

 



Staff secretary Rob Porter resigned after his two ex-wives accused him of domestic violence.

Rob Porter, a White House staff secretary and right-hand man to chief of staff John Kelly, resigned in early February after two of his ex-wives came forward with allegations of domestic abuse, sending the West Wing into chaos. 

Many of Porter's White House colleagues stuck by him even as the women came forward with disturbing accounts of physical assault, photographs of black eyes, and protective orders they filed against Porter. The allegations were considered serious enough to deny Porter a security clearance, according to reports. 

While Kelly publicly stated he was "shocked" by the claims, multiple news reports asserted the White House was aware of the allegations for months before they became public. 

 



The Washington Post reported that Trump referred to a number of nations as "s--thole countries" in a meeting.

In a bipartisan meeting with members of Congress, Trump reportedly referred to nations including Haiti, El Salvador, and a number of African nations as "shithole countries," and lamented why the US wasn't seeing more people immigrate from places like Norway.

The remarks garnered heavy backlash from figures in Washington and the media. 

"I don't know how to break this to you, but I think the president might be racist," Trevor Noah, host of "The Daily Show,"said.

"Sir, they're not shithole countries," joked "Late Show" host Stephen Colbert. "For one, Donald Trump isn't their president."

 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The 6 breakout Republican stars of 2018

$
0
0

TAMPA, FLORIDA - NOVEMBER 02: U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham attends an event with Republican gubernatorial candidate Ron DeSantis, at Hillsborough Victory Office on November 2, 2018 in Tampa, Florida. DeSantis is running against Democratic challenger Andrew Gillum to be the next Florida governor. (Photo by Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)

  • Republicans lost the majority they held in the House of Representatives for the first time in eight years.
  • But several Republicans broke through the political turmoil and gained significant notoriety in 2018.

Republicans did not have a banner year, losing dozens of seats in the House after the 2018 midterm election results were finally tallied.

But a handful of Republicans broke through the party's big losses to make a name for themselves or experience a massive shift in their reputation among conservatives. 

Here are some of the GOP's biggest breakout stars of 2018.

SEE ALSO: Republicans and Democrats agree: Trump can't just do what he wants with NAFTA

Dan Crenshaw

Republican Dan Crenshaw, a former US Navy SEAL, won the House race in Texas' 2nd congressional district in November.

Crenshaw became one of the most widely-known new Republicans running in 2018 after becoming the subject of a joke on "Saturday Night Live," in which Pete Davidson mocked his eye-patch. Crenshaw lost his eye while fighting in Afghanistan.

Davidson and Crenshaw ultimately made up by allowing the incoming freshman congressman to roast him on the next episode of the NBC show. But Crenshaw made a lasting impression to become a breakout GOP star.



Liz Cheney

Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney has served in Congress since 2016 but gained new notoriety in the aftermath of the GOP's poor performance in the 2018 midterm elections.

House Republicans elected Cheney chair of the entire conference — a position her father, former Vice President Dick Cheney, had held during his time in Congress.



Lindsey Graham

Sen. Lindsey Graham has been relatively well-known for years. But in 2018, Graham became a virtual pit bull for President Donald Trump and his agenda in the Senate, allowing him to shed his reputation of being a "RINO" (Republican in name only).

Graham unloaded on Democrats during the contentious hearings for then-Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, changing the tone and pace of a pivotal moment in the Senate.

The result of Graham's new attitude has been laudatory praise from Trump and his allies in the Republican Party, along with winning access to the president's ear on key issues.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

From the Adamses to the Clintons: The most influential US political families in history, ranked

$
0
0

bush family portrait

Yes, the United States is a democracy. However, this doesn't mean it doesn't have its own powerful family dynasties. 

Four families in America have had two members serve as U.S. presidents, giving them prime slots in the history books, but also making Americans wonder how they did it. That's why we have ranked the 11 most powerful and influential political familes in the U.S. by taking into account their historical legacy, net worth, current influence, and potential to continue producing political heirs.  

SEE ALSO: The 23 Most Impressive Dynasties In America Today

1. The Bushes

The Bush family is one of two families in American history that produced two presidents — the late George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush.

George Sr., the son of Connecticut Senator Prescott Bush, was a congressman, diplomat, CIA director and vice president before winning the presidency in 1988. His eldest son, George W., went on to win 12 years later. In 2016, H.W.'s son Jeb, former Florida governor, ran for president too, ultimately losing the Republican primary. Combined, George Sr. and wife Barbara Bush were worth an estimated $25 million. But the family, overall, is worth an estimated $400 million. Currenty, George P. Bush, Jeb's oldest son, is serving as Texas land commissioner, setting him up as the leader of the fourth generation of Bush politicians. 



2. The Kennedys

The Kennedy family is, perhaps, the most recognizable political dynasty in American history. Patrick Joseph Kennedy, the first Kennedy to run for office, was elected to the Massachusetts state legislature in 1884. Ever since, the Kennedys have been a mainstay in American politics, producing the 35th president, John F. Kennedy, as well as a number of senators, representatives and ambassadors.

Forbes estimates that the top 30 members of the Kennedy family, combined, are worth $1.2 billion. Joseph P. "Joe" Kennedy III, the grandson of former U.S. Attorney General and Senator Robert F. Kennedy, is currently serving his third term as Massachusetts Representative. 



3. The Adams

The Adams family was the first in American history to produce two presidents. John Adams, one of the nation's founding fathers and its second president, first served as vice president to George Washington. Together with his wife and advisor Abigail, John Adams raised son John Quincy Adams to become the 8th president of the U.S. John Quincy's son Charles Adams served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and unsuccessfully ran for vice president in 1848. His son, John Quincy Adams II, also served in the Massachusetts state house before unsuccessfully running for governor multiple times in the 1860s. Currently, the only member of the Adams family that remains politically involved is John Donley Adams, a Virginia lawyer who unsuccessfully ran for Virginia Attorney General. 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The Michael Cohen controversy reached a climax as he was sentenced to 3 years in prison after pleading guilty and implicating Trump — here's a full timeline of events

$
0
0

michael cohen timeline 2x1

  • President Donald Trump's former longtime lawyer Michael Cohen has pleaded guilty.
  • It marked the climax of the Cohen controversy.
  • Here's the full timeline of events.

President Donald Trump's former longtime lawyer Michael Cohen has been sentenced to three years in prison after pleading guilty to a list of federal crimes he committed while employed by the president. Cohen's sentencing culminates a months-long controversy surrounding his fraudulent conduct during the 2016 election. 

During his December 12 sentencing, Cohen apologized for his actions and said he acted out of "blind loyalty" to Trump. Days earlier, on November 29, he pleaded guilty to lying to Congress about his involvement with the construction of the Trump Tower in Moscow.

Earlier this year, on August 21, Cohen cut a deal with federal prosecutors and pleaded guilty to five counts of tax evasion, one count of making a false statement to a financial institution, and two counts related to campaign-finance violations. Cohen said under oath that Trump directed him to violate campaign-finance laws just before the 2016 presidential election to boost his candidacy.

The latter two charges were in connection to payments to the former Playboy model Karen McDougal and the porn actress Stormy Daniels to silence their allegations of affairs with Trump.

As Cohen said he committed the campaign-finance violations "at the direction of the candidate" and with the "purpose of influencing the election," there were audible gasps in the reporter-packed courtroom in lower Manhattan courtroom.

The federal prosecutors Cohen struck a deal with said they had evidence corroborating Cohen's admissions, stemming from records obtained from him that included audio tapes, texts, phone records, emails, witnesses with knowledge of the transactions, and records from The National Enquirer.

Later in the week, The Wall Street Journal reported, federal prosecutors investigating Cohen granted immunity to Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg and American Media Inc. CEO David Pecker, who struck the deal with McDougal.

Cohen faced 65 years in prison, but the deal narrowed that sentence down to a much more palatable three years.

Lanny Davis, one of Cohen's attorneys, told Business Insider after Cohen pleaded guilty that Cohen felt "pain for his family" that he could go to prison but relief that the plea deal was done. Cohen's also not done opening up on what he knows about Trump, Davis said.

"This is the time he knows he's going to jail, and he feels liberated that he can finally speak his mind about his concerns about Donald Trump without a criminal lawyer telling him to 'be quiet' because 'you'll upset the prosecutors,'" he said.

Moving forward, all eyes are on what happens next, particularly for Trump.

"The plea, under oath, establishes that the president was a co-conspirator in the campaign violations to which Cohen pleaded guilty," Philip Allen Lacovara, who served as counsel to the special prosecutors investigating President Richard Nixon's role in the Watergate scandal, told The New York Times.

Before Nixon resigned from office, a grand jury named him an unindicted coconspirator. Lacovara said Trump had "technically" become that as well.

Though Cohen implicated Trump in multiple felonies, it appears highly unlikely Trump will be indicted in this instance — at least while he is still in office.

Here's the full timeline of events in the Cohen investigation:

 

SEE ALSO: Democrats are still incredibly cautious about discussing Trump's impeachment even after 2 of his top aides have been convicted

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Anthony Scaramucci claims Trump isn't a nationalist: 'He likes saying that because it irks these intellectual elitists'

What to do first with your holiday bonus

$
0
0

banker champagne

  • More than half of American employers gave their employees bonuses last holiday season.
  • If you're expecting a bonus this year, one financial planner suggests using 80% of it to pay off debt and increase savings, and 20% to spend however you like. 

It's bonus season.

According to a survey of 500 US businesses by recruiting agency Accounting Principles, 63% of employers spread holiday cheer via check at the end of 2017, gifting workers an average cash bonus of $1,797.

If you're expecting an end-of-year or holiday bonus, Katie Brewer, CFP and founder of financial planning firm Your Richest Life, suggests making a plan for the money before it appears in your account.

Generally, Brewer told Business Insider, you should commit 80% of your holiday bonus to "serious money," using it to pay off debts, increase savings, and top off retirement funds. The other 20% can be fun money, she says.

Read more: 11 signs you're about to get a holiday bonus

It's easy to think of a dozen uses for your "fun money." But what about that 80% you're dedicating to building wealth? Where should you start?

Below, we've put together a flow chart to help you figure out where your serious money can make the most impact. The chart assumes that you're making regular payments toward any debt and are without extenuating circumstances, like an expected end-of-year medical bill or other urgent charge to which you've already committed your bonus.

what should you do first with your holiday bonus graphic

SEE ALSO: The 7 dumbest things you can do with your end-of-year bonus

DON'T MISS: How much to tip everyone in your life for the holidays, from your landlord to the mail carrier

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Tim Cook's estimated net worth is $625 million — here's how he makes and spends his money

Tourists are flooding Asian cities, and 15 of their favorite hotspots now rank among the most-visited in the world

$
0
0

Tokyo

  • Fifteen of the 20 most popular cities in the world for tourists are in Asia.
  • That's according to Euromonitor International's annual list of the biggest cities for international tourism released last week.
  • The cities were spread out over several countries, including China, India, Thailand, Japan, and Turkey.

Asian cities are dominating the global tourism scene.

Euromonitor International released its annual list of the most popular cities for international tourists last week, and Asian cities took an impressive 15 of the top 20 spots.

The market-research firm looked at 600 total cities and ranked them based on the number of foreign tourists they saw, using travel data from 2017 and partial-year data for 2018.

Topping the list for the eighth consecutive year was Hong Kong, which received nearly 30 million tourists this year. The top Asian cities were spread out over several countries, including China, India, Thailand, Singapore, Japan, and Turkey. 

Read more: The 31 most popular cities in the world for travelers

The only non-Asian cities to make the top 20 were London, Paris, New York City, Rome, and Prague.

Read on to see the Asian cities that proved to be the biggest tourism hotspots of the year. You can also check out the list of the 31 best cities for tourism worldwide and the top tourism draws in North America.

Here are the cities that made the cut:

SEE ALSO: The 31 most popular cities in the world for travelers

DON'T MISS: France has been the most-visited country in the world for more than 20 years in a row — but experts think it's about to lose its crown

15. Mumbai, India

Overall rank: 19

Projected arrivals in 2018: 10,670,100



14. Guangzhou, China

Overall rank: 18

Projected arrivals in 2018: 9,392,000



13. Taipei, Taiwan

Overall rank: 17

Projected arrivals in 2018: 9,783,300



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Your grandparents' idea of a 'good job' was probably based on a salary and benefits — and 50 years later, things haven't changed all that much

$
0
0

good job definition 4x3

  • Business Insider spoke to more than a dozen people at different stages of their lives and careers, and surveyed 1,000 more, about what a "good job" means to them.
  • We found good jobs in the US today are characterized by things as basic as health insurance and a retirement account — and as complex as personal fulfillment.
  • Sometimes a good job can simply be one that pays enough to afford you the freedom not to think about money in your next job.
  • As people age, they typically realize that prestige is less important — and company culture is more important — than they realized.
  • But almost any job can be a good job if you put in the effort to mold it to your particular wants and needs.

Annafi Wahed left her job at a consulting firm in 2016, to work on Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign.

When she approached her boss to give her two weeks' notice, he thought she was joking.

"I was up for manager that year; I was making six figures," Wahed, now 28 years old, told me. Her boss "couldn't fathom" that she was giving it up to go "knock on doors," and was suspicious that she was instead switching to another job in finance.

But as soon as she announced her departure, Wahed said, she knew she'd made the right decision. "It felt like the weight had been lifted off my shoulders."

Wahed went on to discover that she had more than just a passing interest in politics. Even after the campaign was over, it excited her in a way that the financial world never really had. Today, Wahed is the founder of The Flip Side, a daily news digest that summarizes political analysis from conservative and liberal media. On the side, she works as a data analyst for a nonprofit organization.

Wahed and I scheduled a phone call for 9 a.m., and when she answered, she said she'd just woken up, having stayed up late working on a project for The Flip Side. But she wouldn't trade her current lifestyle for something more traditional or less stressful, she said — this is her passion.

I spoke to Wahed (who went to my high school and was two years behind me), and more than a dozen other people at different stages of their lives and careers, as part of an investigation: What is a "good" job today? And while I didn't come up with a definitive answer — that depends heavily on factors such as a person's age and skill level, and whether they have kids — I did begin to see some unifying themes.

The definition of a good job has changed over time

Perhaps unsurprisingly, this exploration of what a good job means might have looked very different 50 years ago.

Rebecca Fraser-Thill, the director of faculty engagement in the Bates Center for Purposeful Work at Bates College and a career coach with the Pivot program (I was one of her coaching clients in 2017), said previous generations of workers wanted security and stability from their employers. Today's workers don't necessarily expect that — instead, they want a sense of personal fulfillment, whether that comes from one job, two jobs, or a job and a side hustle.

Read more: From harvesting honey to cleaning animal skulls — here are 7 of the most unique side hustles

The declining prevalence of pensions has played a big role in shaping employees' expectations from work: According to a 2014 report from the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, the number of American workers with a defined benefit plan (i.e. a pension, which provides a specific amount of money in retirement) decreased from 62% in 1983 to 17% in 2013.

Results from a Business Insider survey of 1,000 in early December suggest that today's young workers aren't operating under any delusions about how much security their employers can provide them. Respondents ages 18 to 29 were 19 percentage points less likely than the average respondent to say a pension is essential to a good job. Respondents over 60, on the other hand, were 13 percentage points more likely.

And while it's been a long time since pensions were standard practice, even a decade ago, this article might have turned out differently.

Brie Reynolds, a career coach and the career specialist at FlexJobs, told me that after the 2008 economic downturn, people realized their jobs might not last forever. As a result, Reynolds said, they started to think about how they wanted work to fit into their overall life. That is to say, work was no longer the biggest focus. Indeed, in the Business Insider survey, the third most popular choice for essential aspects of a a good job was work/life balance (74%).

Read more: Top execs in banking, retail, and tech are saying they don't practice work-life balance — because they found something better

annafi wahed

Money and benefits are still a priority for many

The same Business Insider survey, which asked people for the factors they consider essential to a good job, highlighted three popular aspects: health insurance (87%), paid vacation (75%), and a 401(k) or other retirement account (73%).

Salary is especially important for today's recent college grads, who are often saddled with massive student debt. The average student loan debt for Class of 2017 graduates who borrowed money was $39,400, according to a report from Student Loan Hero.

Wahed readily admitted that her work at the consulting firm was "not what got me up in the morning. What really only got me up was paying off my student loans and making good money." At the time, not having a full-time job and continuing to wallow in debt just didn't seem like options.

A bonus just for you: Click here to claim 30 days of access to Business Insider PRIME

"I'm a first-generation immigrant," she told me. She remembered moving to the US with her mother at eight years old, struggling through ESL classes in elementary school. "Part of me was definitely like, 'I need a steady job. I can't just go around bumming through life after college.'"

Wahed said she "absolutely would not have taken this step [joining the Clinton campaign] at 22," when she'd just graduated from Bryn Mawr. "I had student loans to pay off; I had very little professional experience," she said, outside of an internship she'd done at FDIC.

Yael Rosenstock was similarly motivated to pay off her student loans before she explored her passions and interests. After she graduated college, Rosenstock, also 28, took a job teaching in Argentina; she was offered a full-time teaching position there, but declined and returned to New York City instead.

"My student loans were really high and [New York] was the only place I could think of where I could make enough money to actually pay them," she told me. Rosenstock moved in with her parents and started taking odd gigs — babysitting, organizing homes — before she landed a job in programming at a university center (she's since been promoted to associate director). Within two years, she had paid off her student loans in full.

Read more: A 10-step plan to paying off student loan debt, from someone who repaid over $40,000

Rosenstock is heading to a PhD program in health behavior, with a specialty in sex education, next year, and she said she's somewhat worried about giving up the comfortable salary and benefits she received at the university. But she's committed to pursuing her own business; on the side, she's been running Kaleidoscope Vibrations, LLC, which focuses on adult sex education and body positivity. And now that she's in a more financially stable place, Rosenstock feels ready to take the leap into academia. Her ultimate goal is to run her own business and teach on the side.

yael rosenstock

Sometimes a good job is one that pays enough so money isn't your top priority in the next job

But two-thirds of Americans aren't college graduates, and only a sliver are working for global consulting firms.

I spoke with Fred Goff, the CEO of Jobcase, or "LinkedIn for blue collar workers," and he told me that many people in the US just need a job and a paycheck. It's not that they don't want the same things out of work as their better-educated or higher-skilled peers, like prestige and personal fulfillment. It's more that they don't necessarily have the luxury to wait for those things to materialize.

Read more: The founder of 'blue collar LinkedIn' shares his best advice for succeeding without a bachelor’s degree

Still, over the course of my reporting, I noticed some important similarities among people at all income, education, and skill levels. Namely, sometimes a good job is one that pays enough now for you to prioritize something other than a paycheck in your next job.

Wahed and Rosenstock felt they had to pay off their student loans — and get some experience on their resume — before they could realize their dreams. Meanwhile, many Jobcase members see a good job as one that pays enough so they can start thinking about factors such as company culture and the ability to make an impact on society.

Goff summarized it this way: If your current job isn't ideal, you can use it as a launching point for getting one that is, for example by getting a reference from your manager or gaining in-demand skills. "Even if this is just, 'I need a paycheck right now,'" Goff said, "you also should just pause and say, 'But is this also something I can leverage into something better?"

Since speaking with Goff, I've been thinking a lot about whether this mindset might contribute to some amount of unhappiness: You're always looking toward the next best thing, the job that's "great" as opposed to just "good." Or might this mindset instead make a certain type of lifestyle more palatable, because you know there's a light at the end of the tunnel? Or both?

Sometimes, the "leveraging" Goff cited only happens in hindsight. A few people I spoke with said they wouldn't be on the career path they're on now if not for a less favorable job in their past.

Less than a year ago, Alysa Ain, in her early 30s, was working at a New York City law firm, feeling unfulfilled and unable to keep up with the extreme demands on her time and energy. Ain recently applied to graduate programs in clinical social work: Her goal is to help professionals who are stressed and unhappy. Thinking about this future career helps her "not regret" her time in corporate law, she said.

Similarly, Bernadette Bielitz, a volunteer with AARP, said that in her next role, she wants to do something around community engagement, helping employees address caregiving issues. This desire stems directly from her own difficult experience taking care of her elderly parents while working full-time.

Company culture is typically more important than people realize at first

Over the summer, Dane Holmes, Goldman Sachs' HR head, told a group of Goldman interns that the people you work with matter even more than the specific job you're doing. It's something to keep in mind, Holmes said, when you're choosing your next job.

Goff, for his part, places the people you work with at the top of the "hierarchy" of professional needs. That is to say, it matters most to your satisfaction, but you need to have the luxury to choose a job where you like your coworkers.

Sometimes, a positive company culture can simply mean honest management, which Goff labeled the No. 1 thing everyone, regardless of skill level, wants out of work. In other words, managers should state upfront what the job, compensation, and upward mobility look like. If it's a minimum wage job for 20 hours a week, fine — but your employer shouldn't change that on you a few months down the line.

And more than half of respondents in the Business Insider survey said flexibility is essential to a good job, with women 13 percentage points more likely to do so.

In some cases, flexibility is offered to an almost comical extent: Earlier this year, I profiled Hubspot, which is one of the best tech companies to work for, according to Glassdoor. One woman I spoke to got permission from her manager to work "remotely," while she followed Justin Timberlake around on his US tour.

And while work/life balance is traditionally seen as an issue relevant to parents of young kids (or to mothers, as the case may be), in reality it affects a broader swath of the working population. Before Bielitz's parents passed away a few years ago, she was caring for them while holding down a full-time job. Bielitz told me she was reluctant to talk to her managers about the tumult in her personal life, out of fear that she would lose her job.

"I remember taking calls from my bosses in hospital rooms. I look back and my mother's dying," Bielitz said. "I shouldn't have been taking any calls."

rebecca frasier thill

Prestige may become less appealing as you get older

A common theme I noticed among the people I interviewed was that prestige can become less attractive over the course of a career. That might be simply because you can always say, "I worked at Google," or "I worked at Goldman," and benefit from the company's reputation, even if you're no longer employed there. But it might also be the case that people quickly become disillusioned about how glamorous big-name companies really are.

Read more: Everyone wants to work at Google — but we found out how 15 ex-Googlers knew it was time to quit

Ain, the lawyer transitioning to social work, told me that she initially applied to law school because she felt like her parents expected her to have a professional career. And when she got into Harvard, she was excited by the idea of doing something prestigious.

Once she'd graduated and joined a top law firm, Ain was disheartened by the lack of fulfillment she felt and by the all-consuming nature of work. She signed up for career coaching with Fraser-Thill and realized that the "relationship aspect" of work — i.e. having meaningful interactions with other people — was important to her. Not long after, she decided to pursue a degree in social work.

"Prestige is definitely not important to me anymore," Ain told me. 'I've just seen how empty it is." When she was younger, Ain said, she was interested in proving to other people that she was smart and capable. Now, however, "prestige is last on the list of things that are important about a job."

Even salary has taken on less importance in her mind. Ain said she's mostly concerned with living comfortably and not feeling anxious about money, as opposed to living extravagantly.

Josh Druce, 35 years old, had a similar experience. Druce worked for a series of big banks before realizing the role wasn't for him. Today he's the sole employee for private credit fund Loan Ranger LP. It's the "least glamorous organization" he's ever worked for, but also the "happiest I've ever been," Druce said.

He admitted that working for a small business seemed risky at first — so risky that he's pretty sure he wouldn't have done it if he'd had kids. But having made the change, Druce said, "I now have so much more control over my fate, my compensation, and what impact I have on the world."

Prestige might be something different for individual positions, too. The Business Insider survey found that 65% of respondents see "opportunity for advancement" as essential to a good job. But that doesn't necessarily mean climbing the corporate ladder, advancing from individual contributor to people manager to top executive. If you've read any books or articles on management lately, you're likely familiar with the idea that the traditional career path is all but dead.

Libby Leffler, for example, a former Googler and Facebook executive, previously told me that a linear career trajectory doesn't really exist anymore. Instead, she and other Facebook employees talk about the idea of a "jungle gym," where you hop from one role or industry to the next instead of climbing the corporate career ladder. Leffler said that, in her own career, she's always taken roles where she can learn something new — even if that meant making a lateral move.

Almost any job can be a good job if you 'craft' it to be

Career experts like to talk about the importance of "job crafting," a term coined by Amy Wrzesniewski, a Yale professor who has spent years studying how people make meaning out of their work. One of Wrzesniewski's early papers on the topic described some members of a cleaning crew at a hospital who crafted their job to be more meaningful by doing things that weren't listed in their job descriptions, like spending time with patients who seemed upset.

Fraser-Thill mentioned it during our interview, and said that most people who are fulfilled by their work have stayed in a particular role or field for a while and "melded it to fit the various elements of what they need."

Still, she said, job crafting is harder — and less common — than it sounds. "It's easier in some ways to be like, 'I'm just going to leave this job and go find another one' than it is to sit down with your supervisor and say, 'Hey, I really need or want these particular elements. Is there anything we can do about that?'"

To be sure, Fraser-Thill added, your boss won't be inclined to help meet your needs unless you're a high-performing employee and an asset to the organization. That is to say, a good job doesn't always come easy. It often takes a lot of, well, work. But that effort can pay off big, not solely by making your job more personally fulfilling. It can also empower you to feel like you — not your manager, not your bank account, not The Man — are in control of your career.

SurveyMonkey Audience polls from a national sample balanced by census data of age and gender. Respondents are incentivized to complete surveys through charitable contributions. Generally speaking, digital polling tends to skew toward people with access to the internet. SurveyMonkey Audience doesn't try to weight its sample based on race or income. Total 1,037 respondents, margin of error plus or minus 3.11 percentage points with 95% confidence level.

SEE ALSO: People say if you love what you do, you'll never work a day in your life — but CEOs and experts caution that could be dangerous advice

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: The true story behind the name 'Black Friday' is much darker than you may have thought

I visited a tiny NYC nightclub that has a $150 cocktail and was designed to look like a water tower, and it didn't take long to see why it's a hotspot for models and influencers

$
0
0

water tower bar

  • I visited The Water Tower in Brooklyn, New York, a brand-new rooftop lounge and nightclub designed to look like a water tower.
  • Cocktails start at $20 — and one special white truffle-infused beverage costs $150, while a grilled-cheese sandwich will run you $70.
  • Although the views were stunning, and the space was beautiful, I don't see myself ever going there again because of the high prices.

One of New York City's newest bars is perched on top of a Brooklyn hotel and designed to look like one of the many industrial-looking water towers that dot the borough's rooftops.

The Water Tower, which opened in November 2018, is super-exclusive: It's reservation-only and seats only 45 people. Cocktails at the club, which is open from 10 p.m. to 4 a.m. and features a rotating set of international DJs, start at $20 — and one specialty drink, infused with white truffles, will cost you $150. 

The food menu includes items such as a $70 white-truffle grilled cheese, an $80 seafood platter, and caviar service ranging from $95 to $525. 

Berton Rodov, the club's creative director, said they aim to cultivate a specific vibe at The Water Tower.

"We have a fun, diverse crowd," he told me when I went to check out the club one afternoon. "Honestly, we try to curate the experience here, being that it's a small space, and it's the most luxurious extension of this brand."

But, he added, that's "not saying you have to be rich to come in." He said the crowd tends to be, "cool kids, models, people just here to have fun," and they "try to look out for locals, too."

After visiting the club one early December afternoon, I can't say I was entirely convinced that their target audience isn't just rich people.

Here's what The Water Tower looks like inside.

SEE ALSO: I visited New York's new Playboy Club, where Playboy Bunnies serve drinks in their iconic costumes and members pay up to $100,000 a year — and it wasn't at all what I expected

DON'T MISS: 5 restaurants in NYC earned the highest Michelin rating for 2019 — and 2 of them have topped the list every year since the ranking started

The Water Tower is perched on the rooftop of Brooklyn's Williamsburg Hotel, which already includes an outdoor bar and a pool.



It was built as an "homage" to the iconic water towers that dot many Brooklyn rooftops.



Rooms at the Williamsburg Hotel start at around $200 per night, according to its website.

Source: The Williamsburg Hotel



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

An Israeli startup with ties to America's most popular hummus brand says it made the world's first lab-grown steak — a holy grail for the industry

$
0
0

Aleph Farms steak 1

  • The Israeli company Aleph Farms aims to make cuts of environmentally friendly meat that resemble the real thing using animal cells, also called "lab-grown" or "clean" meat.
  • Aleph has now created a prototype steak, the first produced publicly in the world, the company said on Wednesday.
  • While several companies have made prototypes of lab-grown meats, none are available in restaurants or grocery stores.
  • Aleph got its start with help from an Israeli research institute and an incubator that is part of the food giant that owns Sabra — the most popular hummus in America.

For the first time in its roughly two-year history, an Israeli startup claims to have achieved a key step toward the holy grail of the lab-grown-meat industry: turning animal cells into the delicate and sinewy tissue of steak.

Aleph Farms, which got its start with help from an Israeli research institute and an incubator that's part of the food giant that owns Sabra — the most popular hummus in America — said on Wednesday that it had produced the world's first lab-grown steak.

Based on photographs and video, the thin but clearly steak-like cut of beef appears to be a big milestone toward eventually making meat without slaughter that is ready for people to eat.

"The smell was great when we cooked it, exactly the same characteristic flavor as a conventional meat cut," Aleph's CEO and founder, Didier Toubia, told Business Insider.

But the true contribution to the lab-grown meat field, he said, was the steak's texture.

"It was a little bit chewy, same as meat. We saw and felt the fibers when we cut it with a knife."

A holy grail in the lab-grown-meat world

Aleph Farms steak 2If there were a holy grail in the world of real meat made without farm animals, it would be steak.

While many companies make plant-based burgers, a handful of startups are trying to make real, environmentally friendly beef and chicken from animal cells — bypassing the farm animals. None, however, have released a product consumers can buy in stores or restaurants.

The Silicon Valley-based startup New Age Meats let Business Insider taste its lab-grown-sausage prototype in September; the vegan egg and mayo company Just (formerly Hampton Creek) claims to have made prototype chicken nuggets; and the Bill Gates-backed startup Memphis Meats said it produced the world's first chicken strips from animal cells last March.

Read more:We tasted the first lab-grown sausage made without slaughtering any animals — here's what it was like

But none has publicly achieved the goal of replicating the texture, shape, and mouthfeel of savory, chewy sirloin.

That's because crafting a burger, meatball, or any other product that combines several ingredients with ground meat or seafood is much easier than mimicking the complex texture and flavor of a steak or a chicken breast.

"Making a patty or a sausage from cells cultured outside the animal is challenging enough — imagine how difficult it is to create a whole-muscle steak," Toubia said in a statement.

The challenge of going from cell to steak

aleph steak 3 cookingExperts and venture capitalists are convinced that meat made in labs is coming, and it's poised to disrupt a $200 billion industry. But they acknowledge that getting the products out of the lab and into restaurants will take time.

Read more:Silicon Valley VCs are betting lab-grown meat could be just as big a deal as Uber was for taxis and have 'huge disruptive abilities' to a $200 billion industry

Rather than spending time trying to create meatballs or nuggets, Aleph headed straight for the goal of a steak. That's a goal the company has had since the outset and one it may be uniquely poised to tackle thanks to its foundations in regenerative medicine.

Shulamit Levenberg, the dean of the Technion Israel Institute of Technology's biomedical engineering faculty, serves as Aleph's chief scientific officer, and Neta Lavon, an experienced stem-cell researcher who developed cell-therapy products from stem cells for diabetes and the neurodegenerative disease ALS, serves as Aleph's vice president of research and development.

Instead of growing only one or two types of animal cells on a flat surface, Aleph grows four types of animal cells in three dimensions. The company also claims to be growing them in a medium that is free of fetal bovine serum, the rich cow-based liquid that's currently the lab standard for nourishing cells. 

Toubia said each of the thinly-sliced steaks they made as part of this prototype took 2-3 weeks to produce and cost $50.

"We're the only company that has the capacity to make fully-textured meat that includes muscle fibers and blood vessels — all the components that provide the necessary structure and connections for the tissue," Toubia told Business Insider in May.

Aleph is calling its prototype steak a "minute steak," because it takes just a couple of minutes to cook, Amir Ilan, the chef of the Israeli restaurant Paris Texas and the person who prepared the steak on video, said in a statement.

Aleph was cofounded by the Technion Israel Institute of Technology and an incubator called The Kitchen, which is part of Strauss Group. Strauss owns Sabra hummus and distributes Cheetos and Doritos in Israel as part of an agreement with Pepsi.

Watch a chef prepare Aleph's first steak prototype:

SEE ALSO: The company behind America's favorite hummus has funded an under-the-radar effort to make lab-grown steak

DON'T MISS: We tasted the first lab-grown sausage made without slaughtering any animals — here's what it was like

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Why Harvard scientists think this interstellar object might be an alien spacecraft

The man who helped build Silicon Valley's premier education startup is diving into the antiaging fight with a fresh $18 million

$
0
0

spring discovery team photo

  • Ben Kamens, the first hire and lead engineer of Silicon Valley education platform Khan Academy, founded a new startup called Spring Discovery, which is dedicated to defeating aging and to extending life.
  • Spring told Business Insider it raised $18 million from venture firms including First Round Capital (backers of Square and Flatiron Health) and General Catalyst (backers of Snap and e-commerce site Jet).
  • The new funding puts the startup on the map within the $850 million antiaging field for the first time.
  • Spring aims to hasten the scientific-discovery process for therapies designed to reverse aging using machine learning and hands-on research at an expanding lab in San Carlos, California.

For a 35-year-old, Silicon Valley startup founder and ex-Khan Academy engineer Ben Kamens has a rather intimate relationship to disease.

Since he was a teenager, Kamens has been taking insulin to stay alive. Kamens, who has Type 1 diabetes, relies on the drug to do the work traditionally accomplished by a healthy pancreas. Each injection helps ferry the sugar from food into his body's various cells, steadying his energy levels and preventing him from falling into a coma or dying.

Living with the condition also gave him an appreciation for what it means to be healthy. And that awareness spurred him to create a startup called Spring Discovery, which is dedicated to finding therapies designed to beat diseases like his own.

"Aging is the single greatest risk factor for some of the worst diseases on Earth," Kamens told Business Insider.

Indeed, as we get older, the risk of many diseases — from cancer to heart disease to Alzheimer's — skyrockets. Age is also a risk factor for Type 2 diabetes, which most often develops after age 45. Kamens sees his company as an engine whose job is to shed light on what changes in our cells and tissues as we age so we can discover new therapies that reverse those changes.

By combining a team of engineers trained in machine learning and artificial intelligence with scientists whose backgrounds include stem-cell biology, regenerative medicine, genetics, neuroscience, and dermatology, Kamens believes they'll make discoveries more quickly.

Read more:The best ways to counter the negative effects of aging and live a long time — starting right now

Until recently, Kamens' antiaging startup remained fairly quiet. With only $4 million in funding, it paled in comparison to BioAge Labs, which has raised $11 million, and Google spin-off Calico. But the most recent round brings Spring to $22 million in total funding.

The fresh $18 million comes chiefly from First Round Capital, the venture firm behind startups like Square and Flatiron Health, and General Catalyst, which backed Snap and e-commerce site Jet. Other new funders include Beijing-based ZhenFund, which joins existing big-name backers like Laura Deming's Longevity Fund and boutique Silicon Valley venture firm Felicis.

The quest to live longer and better has given us a handful of tools

Rhesus MacaqueIn Silicon Valley, aging is considered a collective battle. Dozens of startup founders with diverse backgrounds have told Business Insider that they believe defeating aging is our generation's prime directive.

Funding in the field is at an all-time high: So far this year, investors have poured $850 million into the antiaging field, according to a recent CB Insights report. Before 2016, almost no one was investing in antiaging research, the authors of the report said.

Studying what causes aging and then designing therapies that could stop it is incredibly tough. Humans take a long time to grow frail, and that's a reality that includes the researchers who are trying to beat it.

Read more:Tech elites are paying $7,000 to freeze stem cells from liposuctioned fat as a 'back up' for a longer life

So instead of studying only people, researchers also analyze human cells, along with a host of animals ranging from insects to mice to monkeys. In those creatures, scientists have been able to successfully slow the aging process using a handful of rough techniques.

That's helped generate what Kamens likes to call "an unignorable amount of evidence" that we can slow the biological processes of aging in animals using those techniques, which include the following:

Read more: A controversial startup that charges $8,000 to fill your veins with young blood is opening its first clinic

The problem is that these tools don't illuminate the true causes of aging or show us much about how to beat it.

"All of these interventions are pretty raw — they're crude — and oftentimes no one knows why they're getting the results they're getting," Kamens said.

What Spring Discovery brings to the table

happy coupleKamens' leadership and advisory teams include top-flight scientists from universities like Harvard University, Stanford University, and the University of California at Berkeley, as well as researchers from Google and pharmaceutical giants like Amgen.

With the new money, Spring is expanding its laboratory in San Carlos, California, Kamens told Business Insider. The space is currently equipped to run full experiments on biological materials including human cells and mice. Kamens is also planning to hire roughly 20 new team members over the next two years, roughly tripling their current staff.

Kamen's advisers include Elad Gil, the serial entrepreneur behind genetics startup Color Genomics, along with Sasha Kamb, the head of neuroscience discovery at Amgen, and Y Combinator partner Sam Altman. His leadership team includes biologists from Berkeley and senior engineers from Google and the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative.

In addition, Silicon Valley startup prodigy Deming of Longevity Fund, the only venture fund in the Valley that's entirely devoted to antiaging, helped train Kamens and some of his team by way of her own longevity-accelerator program.

"Laura was a huge source of inspiration," Kamens said. "She changed my life."

Read more:40 AND UNDER: The Silicon Valley biotech stars who are backing startups aiming to cure disease, prolong life, and fix the food system

Despite their star-studded credentials, Kamens acknowledged that aging research happens slowly and that his team has a lot of work to do. He views their efforts in aging as akin to the early work done to illuminate the causes of diabetes.

At first, when scientists had no idea what caused the disease, a team of researchers simply took out an animal's pancreas. Then they added it — piece by piece — back to its body until they realized that it was the organ's inability to make insulin that was causing problems.

Studying aging is a bit like studying diabetes back then, he said.

"We all see the potential to make real progress," Kamens said, "and we're speeding towards it as fast as we can."

SEE ALSO: The best ways to counter the negative effects of aging and live a long time — starting right now

DON'T MISS: Tech elites are paying $7,000 to freeze stem cells from liposuctioned fat as a 'back up' for a longer life

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: What happens to your brain and body when you procrastinate too much


This graph shows 90% of political donations from Google workers went to the Democrats

$
0
0

Tech v Trump (Jake Kanter's thumb — please do not use)

  • More than 90% of the political donations made by Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix, and Google staff went to the Democrats, figures dating from 2004 show.
  • Staff at Google's parent company Alphabet were the biggest benefactors to Democratic candidates and causes, according to the data from GovPredict.
  • The findings come as Google CEO Sundar Pichai will appear before Congress for the first time on Tuesday.
  • US President Donald Trump and other prominent Republicans have criticized what they see as bias at powerful tech firms and are threatening anti-trust probes.

The political donations made by staff at the world's biggest tech firms have been revealed in data seen by Business Insider.

BI worked with GovPredict, the political data firm backed by prestigious Silicon Valley tech incubator Y Combinator, to uncover donations made by employees at the FAANG firms: Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix, and Google. 

The data is drawn from campaign filings and covers a 14-year period. It only measures political contributions made by employees and doesn't reflect company-level donations to candidates. Facebook, for example, donates to candidates at a company level through its own Political Action Committee (PAC.)

GovPredict found that workers at these tech giants have backed the Democrats to the tune of millions of dollars, while donations to the Republicans have been paltry in comparison.

In fact, more than 90% of the $40 million donated by big tech employees to political causes since 2004 has gone to the Democrats.

Staff at Google's parent company Alphabet were collectively the biggest funders of Democratic candidates and causes. Employees donated $16.3 million to the party, which was nearly $10 million more than employees from the next biggest funder, Amazon.

Democrats had a near-monopoly on donations from staff at Netflix, accounting for 98% of worker contributions to political parties.

Tech political donations 04–08

The findings come at a delicate time for Silicon Valley. US President Donald Trump and other prominent Republicans have criticized what they see as bias at powerful tech firms. Trump is also looking at anti-trust proceedings against Amazon, Facebook, and Google.

The president said in August that Google search results were "RIGGED" against him, while last month, he asked his Twitter followers to "check out how biased Facebook, Google and Twitter are in favor of the Democrats."

Google, in particular, has been a lightning rod for anger. Trump has repeatedly targeted the company, as have Republicans, including House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy.

Read more: A report on Alphabet employee political donations could light a fire under Trump's war on Google

Google CEO Sundar Pichai will appear before Congress for the first time on Tuesday, when he gives evidence to the House Judiciary Committee. He is expected to face tough questions about search results, potential antitrust issues, and Google's plans to launch a censored search engine in China.

The biggest year of donations from Alphabet staffers to the Democrats came in 2016, when staff spent $6 million trying to keep Trump out of office. In fact, all of the tech firm employee donations hit a high in 2016, except Amazon, GovPredict found. Workers at Jeff Bezos' company donated their peak of $3 million to liberal causes in 2012 when Barack Obama secured a second term.

Tech political donations 16

Ari Ezra Waldman, director of the Innovation Center for Law and Technology at the New York Law School, said there is "zero" evidence to support the theory that Google is fixing search results against the Republicans — and donation patterns do not change that.

"What comes up on search results on Google, for example, is the product of Google's highly complex and proprietary algorithm, which is sensitive to what other people click on, share, and so forth," he said. "So, if critical articles about Donald Trump are coming up first, that just means that critical articles about Donald Trump are being shared more, clicked on more, and searched for more."

Google, Apple, Facebook, and Netflix declined to comment. Amazon did not respond to requests for comment.

GovPredict analyzed Federal Election Commission filings, state and city campaign finance portals, and the Internal Revenue Service. It examined election contributions made by tech staff by tracking the various subsidiary names of their companies used in the filings. 

GovPredict then categorized, as Democrat or Republican, the unique committees to which employees made donations. Most were labelled by the Federal Election Commission, while on others GovPredict had to make its own call.

Former Harvard graduate Emil Pitkin launched GovPredict at the Y Combinator demo day in 2015. The company is also said to have $120,000 in seed funding from Y Combinator, which has backed startups such as Airbnb, Reddit, and Stripe.

SEE ALSO: Bernie Sanders has received donations from more Amazon workers than Barack Obama over the past 14 years

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: What it takes to drive a 42-foot-long fire truck

How Facebook, YouTube, Pinterest, and other popular apps are upending the e-commerce space (FB, GOOG, GOOGL)

$
0
0

Growth in Share of Retail Site Visits

This is a preview of a research report from BI Intelligence, Business Insider's premium research service. To learn more about BI Intelligence, click here.

Social media is becoming increasingly influential in shoppers' purchasing decisions. In fact, the top 500 retailers earned an estimated $6.5 billion from social shopping in 2017, up 24% from 2016, according to BI Intelligence estimates.

In addition to influencing purchase decisions, social media is a large part of the product discovery and research phase of the shopping journey. And with more and more retailers offering quick access to their sites via social media pages, and shoppable content becoming more popular, it's likely that social media will play an even larger role in e-commerce. 

In this report, BI Intelligence examines the advantages and disadvantages of each platform, and reviews case studies of successful campaigns that helped boost conversion and increase brand awareness. Additionally, we explore how retailers can bring social aspects into their own sites and apps to capitalize on consumers' desire for social shopping experiences.

Here are some key takeaways from the report:

  • Social media is becoming more influential in all aspects of the purchasing journey.
  • Facebook is the clear winner in social commerce, with its huge user base and wide-ranging demographics.
  • However, retailers should have a presence on every platform their target market is on. Each platform will require a different strategy for retailers to resonate with its users.
  • Retailers can also benefit from bringing social aspects in-house. They can do this by building their own in-house social networks, or by embedding social media posts into their sites.

In full, the report: 

  • Provides an overview of the top social media platforms — Facebook, YouTube, Instagram — that retailers should be using, the demographics of each platform, as well as their individual advantages and disadvantages. 
  • Reviews tools recently developed by these platforms that help retailers create engaging content.
  • Outlines case studies and specific strategies to use on each platform.
  • Examines how retailers like Sephora, Amazon, and Poshmark are capitalizing on consumers' affinity for social shopping by creating their own in-house social networks.

Interested in getting the full report? Here are two ways to access it:

  1. Subscribe to an All-Access pass to BI Intelligence and gain immediate access to this report and over 100 other expertly researched reports. As an added bonus, you'll also gain access to all future reports and daily newsletters to ensure you stay ahead of the curve and benefit personally and professionally. >>Learn More Now
  2. Purchase & download the full report from our research store. >> Purchase & Download Now

Join the conversation about this story »

Here are the top contenders to replace Ryan Zinke as interior secretary

$
0
0

Ryan Zinke

  • Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke is set to leave the Trump administration at the end of 2018.
  • David Bernhardt, who currently serves as Zinke's deputy, is reportedly expected to take over as acting head of the department in the new year. 
  • But there's a long list of potential replacements for Zinke beyond Bernhardt. 
  • Whoever takes over for Zinke will be in charge of an agency with 70,000 employees that oversees the federal lands that make up roughly 20% of the US and manages the country's natural resources. 

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke is set to leave the Trump administration at the end of 2018, marking yet another departure from a tumultuous White House that seemingly has a revolving door. 

Zinke is leaving amid mounting pressure from ethics inquiries into his dubious spending habits and political activities. 

President Donald Trump has at times struggled to find replacements for top administration officials who've resigned, been fired, or reassigned. This has been evident recently in the administration's embarrassing struggle to attract a new chief of staff to fill John Kelly's shoes

But the president appears to have a longer list of potential replacements for Zinke. 

Read more: Embattled Interior Department secretary Ryan Zinke is stepping down

David Bernhardt, who currently serves as Zinke's deputy, is reportedly expected to take over as acting head of the department in the new year. 

According to Bloomberg, which broke the news of Zinke's impending departure, other possible replacements include: former Rep. Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming; Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes; Nevada Attorney General Adam Laxalt; Idaho Governor C.L. "Butch" Otter; former Nevada Sen. Dean Heller; Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington state; and Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker. 

Trump on Saturday morning tweeted the White House would announce Zinke's replacement in the coming week. 

Read more: How the Trump administration looked at the end of 2017 and how it looks at the end of 2018

"Secretary of the Interior @RyanZinke will be leaving the Administration at the end of the year after having served for a period of almost two years,"Trump said. "Ryan has accomplished much during his tenure and I want to thank him for his service to our Nation."

Whoever takes over for Zinke will be in charge of an agency with 70,000 employees that oversees the federal lands that make up roughly 20% of the US and manages the country's natural resources. 

SEE ALSO: Trump looking at several candidates for chief of staff

David Bernhardt

David Bernhardt is Zinke's deputy. He's expected to take over as acting head of the Department of the Interior this year.

Bernhardt served as solicitor of the department under George W. Bush. 

At private law firm  Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck he represented numerous energy companies, including Halliburton and Samson Resources.



Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes

Utah attorney general Sean Reyes was the first ethnic minority to hold statewide office in Utah.

He's known for leading the charge to defend the state's same-sex marriage ban in 2013 despite a federal ruling that deemed it unconstitutional. 



Nevada Attorney General Adam Laxalt

Republican and former Navy lieutenant Adam Laxalt is currently serving as attorney general of Nevada. He unsuccessfully ran for governor of the state in 2018.

Laxalt's campaign was mired in drama surrounding his interactions with police. The Reno Gazette Journal reported that Laxalt was previously arrested for allegedly assaulting a police officer. 

It was also reported that Laxalt was arrested for driving under the influence in 1997, and racked up eight traffic tickets while living in Virginia and Maryland.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The Air Force just hit a major milestone with the US military's upgraded, highly precise nuclear bomb

How countries around the world are embracing digital disruption in financial services

$
0
0

quarterly global fintech fundingThis is a preview of a research report from Business Insider Intelligence, Business Insider's premium research service. To learn more about Business Insider Intelligence, click here. Current subscribers can read the report here.

Fintech hubs — cities where startups, talent, and funding congregate — are proliferating globally in tandem with ongoing disruption in financial services. 

These hubs are all vying to become established fintech centers in their own right, and want to contribute to the broader financial services ecosystem of the future. Their success depends on a variety of factors, including access to funding and talent, as well as the approach of relevant regulators.

This report compiles various fintech snapshots, which together highlight the global spread of fintech, and show where governments and regulatory bodies are shaping the development of national fintech industries. Each provides an overview of the fintech industry in a particular country or state in Asia or Europe, and details what is contributing to, or hindering its further development. We also include notable fintechs in each geography, and discuss what the opportunities or challenges are for that particular domestic industry.

Here are some of the key takeaways:

  • Most countries in Europe have made some formal attempt to foster the development of domestic fintech industries, with Germany and Ireland seeing the best results so far. France, meanwhile, got off to a slow start, but that's starting to change. 
  • The Asian fintech scene took off later than in the US or Europe, but it's seen rapid growth lately, particularly in India, China, and Singapore.
  • The increasing importance of technology-enabled products and services within the financial services ecosystem means the global fintech industry isn't going anywhere. 
  • Fintech hubs will continue to proliferate, with leaders emerging in each region.
  • The future fintech landscape will be molded by regulatory bodies — national and international — as they seek to mitigate the risks, and leverage the opportunities, presented by fintech. 

 In full, the report:

  • Explores the fintech industry in six countries or states, and identifies individual fintech hubs.
  • Highlights successful fintechs in each region.
  • Outlines the challenges and opportunities each country or state faces. 
  • Gives insight into the future of the global fintech industry. 

Subscribe to an All-Access pass to Business Insider Intelligence and gain immediate access to:

This report and more than 250 other expertly researched reports
Access to all future reports and daily newsletters
Forecasts of new and emerging technologies in your industry
And more!
Learn More

Purchase & download the full report from our research store

 

Join the conversation about this story »

Viewing all 66342 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images