Welcome to the new Sunday edition of Insider Today! I'm Matt Turner, the editor in chief of business at Insider. If you're receiving this email for the first time, hello! It's a pleasure to be in your inbox. I've been publishing this newsletter for several years now, taking readers behind the scenes of our reporting in tech, finance, the economy, healthcare, media, and more. I've now joined forces with Nicholas Carlson's daily newsletter. You'll get the most fascinating stories of the day from him, Monday through Saturday. And I'll be in your inbox each Sunday with a weekly roundup. Let me know what you think at insidertoday@insider.com. — Matt Turner On the agenda today: But first: Lara O'Reilly, our senior correspondent covering the advertising industry, looks ahead to the Super Bowl. |
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DISPATCH Today's "Celebrity Bowl" |
Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images |
While most of you will be tuning in to Fox Sports later to watch the Eagles take on the Chiefs, I'll be focused on the commercials, Insider's Lara O'Reilly writes. The Super Bowl is the annual tentpole event for the US ad industry, with advertisers splurging up to $7 million this year to secure 30 seconds of airtime. The Big Game is usually a fairly good barometer of current culture, economy, and society. And this year, advertisers are … a little nervous. It's highly unlikely we'll see many experimental spots like Coinbase's floating QR code — not least because there aren't any crypto advertisers this year. Instead, most advertisers are opting for tried-and-true techniques. What does that mean in practice? Celebrities. Lots of them. Serena Williams and Brian Cox are repping Michelob Ultra. PopCorners is reviving "Breaking Bad." Snoop Dogg wants to sell you a pair of Skechers. Hellmann's mayo has locked John Hamm and Brie Larson in a fridge, only for Pete Davidson to eat them. You get the picture. My colleague Tyler Lauletta is predicting the Eagles will win Super Bowl LVII. Whatever the result, if last year's Big Game was the "Crypto Bowl," this year's is the "Celebrity Bowl." |
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THIS WEEK'S STORIES A tidal wave of overinflated job titles |
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iStock; George Marks, Sellwell, C.J. Burton/Getty images; Robyn Phelps/Insider |
Inflation is everywhere these days — even in the workforce. Insider's Aki Ito breaks down why grandiose job titles like "senior executive vice president" are suddenly all the rage. According to a new study, early-career job titles have changed drastically in the past few years. Tech roles include "lead" in the title three times more now — and the number of "junior" roles has been cut in half. Why lofty job titles are everywhere you look Read more: |
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Unrest at the highest levels in Goldman Sachs |
There's been a notable decline in morale at Goldman Sachs — and it's gotten to the point where some partners are so concerned that they've discussed how they might get the board of directors to act on it, four people close to the situation told Insider's Dakin Campbell. While it's not clear how widespread this discontent is — Goldman has some 400 partners — some partners are already talking about who might replace CEO David Solomon if it comes to that. Inside the drama at Goldman Sachs Read more: |
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Google's Bard is going to destroy online search |
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Inside Wall Street's gloom-and-doom racket |
iStock; Robyn Phelps/Insider |
"I'll have it for the rest of my life. I am taking supergood care of it and my daughter will have it in the future." |
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MORE TOP READS Startups — hot and cold, & more |
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This edition was curated by Matt Turner, and edited by Dave Smith and Lisa Ryan. Get in touch: insidertoday@insider.com. |
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