Liz Truss resigns, and Netflix gives its critics the middle finger.
Nicholas Carlson October 20, 2022 |
Hello, Insiders. Breaking news this morning: UK Prime Minister Liz Truss has resigned after just six weeks in office. It's a stunning turn of events, and a big rebuke to the idea that tax cuts solve every problem, an idea that has dominated conservative parties for decades. Also, it's a reminder that inflation and economic crisis will make life hell for any politician in power — and a scary reality for Biden and the Democrats in the US. Finally, part of me wonders if this is another example of a woman being handed management only when the operation is already a disaster — the so-called "glass cliff." With that, let's get to what else is going on. |
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- Elon Musk said he's "obviously overpaying" in his $44 billion deal to buy Twitter. Here's the latest.
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Bing Guan/Bloomberg/Getty images |
After the United States emerged from the Great Recession, something interesting happened: Cheap real estate and the rise of e-commerce collided, creating a warehousing boom. Since 2011, more than 2.3 billion square feet of new warehouse space has come to market — enough room to comfortably stuff three and a half Manhattans inside. And while it's a world that is kept far from the box delivered to your doorstep, it's creeping closer every year. Over the past seven months, Insider has been poring over maps, scraping data, and speaking with experts and people on the ground to understand how the rise of warehouses is affecting the country. In our major new project, Warehouse Nation, we unpack both sides of the warehousing boom: While it brings new jobs and higher wages to blue-collar workers, it can also severely strain local infrastructure — and the human body. How the warehouse boom changed the way America looks, lives, and works. |
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Are you in the grip of the "workplace industrial complex"? Let's see. Is your boss forcing you back to the office, obsessed with buzzwords like "overemployment," and constantly having worthless meetings — while making your job miserable? Then read on.
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- Netflix is giving its critics the middle finger. A new, more emboldened Netflix emerged as the company reported strong earnings. Taking a victory lap, the streamer took jabs at competitors and defended binge-watching, seemingly signaling to the haters: We know what we're doing.
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- The Great People Shortage is coming. Researchers predict that the world's population will start to slip in the next 40 years due to declining birth rates — and it will cause a massive shortage of workers. What to know about the impending economic chaos.
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- "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia" star Glenn Howerton said Tesla "lost a customer." On a podcast, the actor said he was locked out of his Tesla on Friday night when his key fob broke — and that Tesla support failed to help him start the car. Here's what else he said.
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- A woman who lost 25 pounds without dieting or exercise was told she had IBS — but it was colon cancer. Ashley Teague, now 30, opened up to Insider about her harrowing health experience, saying it took at least six months of advocating for herself to be granted a colonoscopy. Read her story.
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"Working fast is an imperative if you want to keep your job." |
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