Plus: Exclusive Hollywood club, and China's protests.
Nicholas Carlson, November 28, 2022 |
Hello, Insiders. I've been glued to footage of people pouring into the streets in China to protest COVID lockdowns. They can be heard shouting "No to COVID tests, yes to Freedom." Protesters are holding up blank white sheets of paper — a new symbol of defiance against the Communist Party. It's the country's biggest protest since Tiananmen Square in 1989. Amid the chaos, a BBC journalist was handcuffed while covering protests in Shanghai — and a BBC spokesperson says he was "beaten and kicked by police" during the arrest. Here's what to know about the protests. Now, let's get to today's other top stories. If this was forwarded to you, sign up here.
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- LIVE: The best Cyber Monday deals. Our expert Reviews team is scouring the internet to bring you all the biggest discounts. View them here.
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- Many of Donald Trump's legal problems are coming to an end as he launches his third presidential run — but the biggest risks remain. Here's what to know.
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- Miami nightclub owners are struggling after losing top-spending crypto clientele in the wake of the FTX implosion. More on that here.
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Employees are applying for jobs at other companies just to force their own employer to give them a raise. Over the past year, in the midst of a nationwide hiring frenzy, employees have realized that being loyal to their employers doesn't pay. And now, senior correspondent Aki Ito reports, they're taking matters into their own hands. More and more candidates have begun applying for jobs with no intention of jumping ship, recruiters have found. Instead, they're just looking to land an offer that they can use to score a raise from their current employer. Employers, not surprisingly, hate that people are using job offers as bargaining chips. If you weren't serious, hiring managers are complaining, you shouldn't have wasted our time. And the bosses scrambling to put together counteroffers are grumbling: Where's the loyalty? Employees are clapping back: Loyalty isn't free. Read the full story here. |
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The man worked for Paris-based consultancy Cubik Partners (not pictured). Britt Erlanson/Getty Images |
- A man won the legal right to not be "fun" at work. The man, who worked at a Paris consultancy firm, was fired after refusing to embrace the company's "fun" values, which included "excessive alcoholism" and "promiscuity," per a court filing. Inside one man's fight for the right to not party.
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- Elon Musk belongs to an exclusive Hollywood club that forbids members from taking pictures. Members of the San Vicente Bungalows face penalties for being on their phones, and guests are required to place opaque stickers over their phone cameras when visiting the club. Everything we know about the haven for Hollywood A-listers.
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- "I lied to my brother to reunite with him after 30 years apart." Wanting to know more about her dad, who died in 2011, this author created a story to meet up with her younger brother — and it brought them closer together. Read her story here.
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- A Twitter worker got fired the day before Thanksgiving — and not even being pro-Musk could save him. Engineer Ikuhiro Ihara supported Elon Musk's "Twitter 2.0" vision of "hardcore" working, but was shocked when an email landed in his inbox to say his employment was being terminated. Here's what Ihara told us.
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- You can achieve financial freedom without a big salary. That's according to Ali and Josh Lupo, who graduated with $102,000 in student loans. But thanks to "house hacking," they are now on track to retire before 40. Here's how they did it — and their top three tips.
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"A Florida woman is suing Kraft Heinz for $5 million because she says the 3.5 minute prep time on its microwavable Velveeta Shells & Cheese is misleading." |
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Artists in China have been making colorful puppets for 2,000 years. It is one of the oldest forms of entertainment, but today, few still do this folk art, and artists worry about its future. Watch the full report. |
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This edition was curated by Nicholas Carlson, and edited by Hallam Bullock, Lisa Ryan, and Jordan Parker Erb. Get in touch: insidertoday@insider.com. |
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