Insight and analysis of top stories from our award winning magazine “Bloomberg Businessweek”.
Music business pioneer Ghazi Shami takes us on a journey from his youth falling in love with the buzzing Bay Area music scene, to taking a tech job in Silicon Valley, to combining those worlds as an engineer who founded Empire, a wildly successful music distribution company. In this episode, we hear how Ghazi opened his own recording studio at the age of 18, bringing fresh ideas to an industry he would eventually shake to its core by distributing the debut album of Kendrick Lamar.
California Set for Another Round of Deluges; Monday Will Be Big
Iran Cuts Gas Exports to Turkey by 70% Citing Fault, Turkey Says
World Bank to Warn of Global Recession Risk in Economic Outlook
Sri Lanka Forces Banks to Markets, Caps Surplus Liquidity Facility
Charting the Global Economy: Core Inflation in Europe Hits a Record
Billionaire Jack Ma Is Giving Up Control of Ant Group
Last Year Was Deadliest Year on Record for Police Violence in the US
War in Europe Draws Investors to Drone, Battlefield AI Makers
Dethroned ‘SPAC King’ Thinks Musk Will Take Starlink Public This Year
NYC Schools Ban ChatGPT, Citing Fears About Safety and Accuracy
Erdogan Hints Turkey’s Election Could Come Earlier Than Scheduled
Somalia Claims Al-Shabab Extremists Seek Talks for 1st Time
Damar Hamlin’s Toy Drive Gets $85,000 Fantasy Football Boost
Jack Ma Is Spotted in Thailand in a Rare Public Appearance
Dodgers Cut Pitcher Trevor Bauer After Suspension Reduced
China’s Deep-Pocketed Tourists Are Staying Home, For Now
Another World War Is No Longer Unthinkable
One Way the Speaker Fiasco Was Good for Republicans
Thanks for the Tanks, But Send the Abrams and Leopard Too
Silicon Valley Can’t Quit Its Pizza Robot Obsession
Markets: Don’t Look Back
The World’s Love Affair With Japanese Cars Is Souring
Last Year Was Deadliest Year on Record for Police Violence in the US
Economics Leaders Vow to Redouble Efforts to Tackle Harassment
The Kitchen Larder Is Making a Comeback
San Francisco Is in Path of California’s Worst Rainstorm Yet
Vancouver Skyscraper Twists Around Zoning Restrictions
NYC Subway Crime Jumps 30%, Defying Surge in Police Patrols
Extreme Acceleration Is the New Traffic Safety Frontier
FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried Pleads Not Guilty. Now What? (Podcast)
Digital Currency Group Closes Wealth Division Amid Trouble
Crypto’s Alpha Male Culture, Explained (Podcast)
A Dutch flag flown upside down in protest against the government’s nitrogen policy on a farm in Hazerswoude, Netherlands.
Curbing the environmental impact of agriculture will put farmers from the Netherlands to New Zealand out of business. They’re resisting.
April Roach,
Tracy Withers,
Jen Skerritt, and
Agnieszka de Sousa
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It took an existential threat to turn a fifth-generation dairy farmer into an anti-government protester.
Bart Kooijman raises 120 cows on 50 hectares in western Holland. If authorities push ahead with plans to halve nitrogen emissions from agriculture by 2030, his could be among thousands of farms that will have to shrink or close.