ZTE, Italy, Tesla, Soho House, Facebook, Avengers: Infinity War

Marc Ross Daily.png

ZTE, Italy, Tesla, Soho House, Facebook, Avengers: Infinity War

Marc Ross Daily
May 14, 2018
Curation and commentary from Marc A. Ross

Reporting from Alexandria, Virginia

Marc Ross Daily  = Global Business News at the Intersection of Politics + Policy + Profits

Subscribe here
https://goo.gl/bSQKwA

TOP FIVE

✔️ The New world order: Donald Trump goes it alone

✔️ Time for Europe to join the resistance

✔️ US business fears a rapid Trump trade deal with China

✔️ Italy’s populist parties set to pick prime minister

✔️ Tesla moves toward opening factory in Shanghai

ROSS RANT

What CEOs need to learn from Michael Cohen and AT&T

One of my all-time favorite political campaign books is The Selling of the President.

Written by Joe McGinnis, the book covers the story of how Richard Nixon was repackaged and reshaped for the American public as a candidate for president in 1968. Eight years after Nixon’s losing presidential campaign and his lackluster television performance at the Nixon-Kennedy debate, he faced all the old image problems.

Nixon hired then 28-year old Roger Ailes to remake his image. An image that would win at the ballot box, and more importantly, on television. Ailes created television moments that made Nixon, not smart, not knowledgeable, but well-liked. Ailes created television moments that engaged numerous constituents on their terms.

1968 was no time for policy, it was a time for charismatic personality and shared values.

McGinnis’ book makes clear, presidential candidates can be rebranded and remarketed. Television does not expose and demystify the powerful. Instead, it makes personality stronger. Television ensures style is substance.

David Miller, of the legendary political consultancy Sawyer Miller, saw how television and mass communications would change not only candidates but commerce. He wrote in an article for the Yale School of Organization and Management that just like candidates, if done correctly, corporations could use the tools of television and campaign management to ensure market size and good paying consumers.

Miller wrote: “Corporations must recognize that it is now in their long-term self-interest to develop much more democratic relationships with all of their shareholders, community members, and the public at large.”

Miller foresaw how the corporate world was quickly resembling a politician’s world and how a politician relates to constituents. 

As information channels increase, multiply, focus on niches and distinct tastes and thoughts, corporations need to forge an emotional bond with their various constituents - just like a politician.

The only sensible and meaningful way to do is - establish a relationship and commercial transaction based on shared values.

Today’s masters of the universe CEO is poor decision away from disrupting a relationship based on shared values. Corporations can no longer control the flow of information and can lose control of the narrative within hours.

Corporations are under assault from government regulators, reporters, shareholders, and employees all demanding style that supersedes substance. 

CEOs today need to woo their customers, engage regulators, listen to shareholders, reinforce employees, and make their case daily. CEOs need to communicate more often, on more platforms, and more broadly. Sawyer believed CEOs needed to define themselves before someone else set them - just like a candidate who works like they are up for reelection daily.

As all significant institutions continue to lose sway and influence, the pressure on corporations and CEOs to fill this void increases daily.

For AT&T it wasn’t the paying for access, advice, and public affairs expertise which was a bad idea, it was that they paid an individual (Michael Cohen) who was out of step and not in line with the shared values of AT&T’s numerous constituents.

AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson said as much in a memo distributed to employees last week.

“Our reputation has been damaged,” Stephenson wrote. “There is no other way to say it—AT&T hiring Michael Cohen as a political consultant was a big mistake.”

Companies need to sell worthwhile goods and services - this for sure will continue to matter. But the transaction now has an emotional connection as well.

As pointed out in Edelman's 2018 Trust Barometer: "A good reputation may get me to try a product—but unless I come to trust the company behind the product, I will soon stop buying it, regardless of its reputation.

63% of those surveyed agreed with this statement.

The Edelman Trust Barometer provided a clear directive for today’s CEOs - building trust is job one.

Winning commerce of the future will happen when a company is trusted, provides high-quality services and products, and where business decisions reflect shared values.

AT&T hiring Michael Cohen is losing commerce.

It is not essential to much to be smart and knowledgeable, but it is necessary to be well-liked.

GEOECONOMICS

The New world order: Donald Trump goes it alone: The decision to pull out of the Iran deal is the latest example of the administration’s aggressive unilateralism. FT - Gideon Rachman

Time for Europe to join the resistance: US President Donald Trump's decision to withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal marks the temporary suspension of the trans-Atlantic alliance. What now? Spiegel - Editorial

Trump extends lifeline to sanctioned tech company ZTE: WSJ reports, Trump said he was working with Chinese President Xi Jinping to keep ZTE Corp. in business, throwing an extraordinary lifeline to the Chinese telecommunication giant that has been laid low by US moves to cut off its suppliers. The surprise intervention comes less than a month after ZTE was hit with an order banning US companies from selling components to the Chinese business. The US Commerce Department directed companies to stop exporting to ZTE in mid-April, saying the Chinese firm violated the terms of a settlement resolving evasion of US sanctions against Iran and North Korea. Mr. Trump said in a tweet that he is working with Mr. Xi to get ZTE “a way to get back into business, fast. Too many jobs in China lost.” He said the Commerce Department has been instructed to “get it done!”

“I am speechless,” said Kevin Wolf, who oversaw the launch of the ZTE case as assistant secretary of commerce in the Obama administration. “I’m highly confident that a [US] president has never intervened in a law-enforcement matter like this before.”

@joshrogin: What did you get in return? Nothing? Nice deal making. Make China Great Again.


AP: China sends trade envoy to US, welcomes Trump ZTE comments

CGTN: Xi's special envoy Liu He to visit US May 15-19 for trade talks

WP: US penalties against Chinese telecom firm become
bargaining chip in trade talks

Reuters: China's ZTE paid over $2.3 billion to U.S. exporters last year, ZTE source says

US business fears a rapid Trump trade deal with China
: FT reports, American business leaders are increasingly concerned that Donald Trump may strike a rapid deal with Beijing on reducing the US trade deficit and fail to address long-running complaints over China’s caps on foreign ownership and weak intellectual property protection. The fears have surfaced as Liu He, Xi Jinping’s economic tsar, is expected in Washington for trade talks this week following the visit by an American delegation to Beijing this month. “China and the United States are working well together on trade, but past negotiations have been so one sided in favour of China, for so many years, that it is hard for them to make a deal that benefits both countries,” Mr Trump tweeted on Sunday. “But be cool, it will all work out!” “Having the two sides talking this soon after everyone was in Beijing, that is in itself a positive step,” said Erin Ennis, senior vice-president at the US-China Business Council. But “what is going to be key is getting to a point where they are actually talking about the issues.”

Be cool. Don't be all uncool.

What a way to manage the global economy........

From Make America Great Again to Be Cool With It.


Data protectionism: the growing menace to global business: FT reports, China’s digital protectionism is as great a threat as barriers it puts up for physical goods.

Foreign Affairs - Kevin Rudd: How Xi Jinping views the world: Much has been written on Chinese President Xi Jinping’s remarkable consolidation of political power since he took office five years ago. But an equally important question for the international community to consider is how Xi views the world—and what that means for how China will approach it. Because of the opacity of the Chinese political system, this is hard to answer with real certainty. But clear patterns are beginning to emerge. https://fam.ag/2GeFepl

NYT: What keeps Xi Jinping awake at night: As the leader of the world’s most populous country and biggest communist party, China’s president, Xi Jinping, has plenty to worry about, and a new book sheds light on what probably keeps him up at night. The recently released 272-page book of Mr. Xi’s remarks on “national security” includes previously unreleased comments that give a starker view of the president’s motivations than found in most Communist Party propaganda. https://nyti.ms/2KhElyI

Trump, Kim summit in Singapore presents logistical challenges for North Korea: Reuters reports, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's trip to Singapore for talks with U.S. President Donald Trump poses logistical challenges that are likely to include using Soviet-era aircraft to carry him and his limousine, as well as dozens of security and other support staff.  

Italy shakes Europe establishment as political upstarts form pact to govern: WSJ reports, the 5 Star Movement, an eclectic upstart group driven by scorn toward Italy’s ruling elites, on Sunday evening said it had agreed on the outlines of a governing program with the anti-immigration League party, clearing the way for a likely coalition government. The parties said they would slash and simplify taxes while boosting spending on pensions and antipoverty benefits. They were due to present their program on Monday to President Sergio Mattarella, who formally appoints the government.

FT: Italy’s populist parties set to pick prime minister

On the eve of the opening of the US Embassy in Jerusalem, Israel celebrates
: LAT reports, Israelis and foreign visitors anticipate the opening of the U.S. Embassy on Monday in Jerusalem.

Reuters: Israeli forces kill 16 in Gaza protests as anger mounts over U.S. Embassy

Spy talk
: MI5 chief Andrew Parker will warn of the continued threat of attacks on Britain from Islamic State and Russia in a rare speech in Berlin on Monday. 

Reuters: 'Trust me on Brexit', UK PM May says as ministers squabble

Brexit
seen threatening UK links in EU supply chain: Reuters reports, Mandy Ridyard knew Brexit was going to be a challenge for her aviation components firm, but it was still a shock when she heard a French company bluntly ruling out British suppliers from an international bid for a contract in China.

Europe’s antitrust cop, Margrethe Vestager, has Facebook and Google in her crosshairs https://wapo.st/2KWkCGg

BRIGADOON EVENTS

Brigadoon Annapolis | Salon Dinner + Lectures = Sep. 20-21, 2018

Brigadoon Detroit | Salon Dinner = Oct. 11, 2018

Brigadoon Cincinnati | Salon Dinner = Nov. 1, 2018

Brigadoon Scotland 2018 = Nov. 11-13, 2018

More info @ http://thebrigadoon.com

AMERICAN POLITICS

In wide-open 2020 presidential field, Democrats are road-testing messages — and trying to redefine their party https://wapo.st/2KVlI4V

"At stake in the rehearsals is nothing less than the future of the Democratic Party, which has yet to congeal around a positive vision. Party leaders privately talk about the next two years as a potential pivot point for what it means to be a Democrat, like the tumultuous 1968 Democratic convention or the business-friendly realignment that followed President Bill Clinton’s nomination in 1992."

Members of House Freedom Caucus face tough fights in fall elections: WSJ reports, many of the most vulnerable are running with less money in the bank and in districts where their deeply conservative voting records might not be welcome.

Trump keeps up pressure on automakers to generate US jobs: WSJ reports, whatever automakers want to do, one item tops President Donald Trump’s agenda for the industry: more jobs for Rust Belt states that helped elect him. 

LAT: Auto executives got more than they bargained for in lobbying Trump to ease fuel standard

Cities recycle their Amazon pitches to attract new business: WSJ reports, many of the 20 cities shortlisted as sites for the retail giant’s second headquarters are using the multimedia presentations they created for Amazon’s application to pitch to other companies.

ENTERPRISE

Tesla moves toward opening factory in Shanghai.

Didi Chuxing to test driverless cars in California: FT reports, Chinese group looks to catch up with Silicon Valley rivals’ earlier start.

Food makers vow to cut trans fats globally: WSJ reports, the World Health Organization is pressing producers of trans fats to accelerate work to prevent hundreds of thousands of deaths from heart disease each year.

NYT - Editorial: The world doesn’t need trans fats: The World Health Organization is correct that all nations should eliminate the use of these harmful oils in food.
    
Facebook is creating its own cryptocurrency.
    
Apple is on the verge of becoming the first $1 trillion company.

TRENDS

Better, stronger, faster: How a 'bionic' vest is augmenting human abilities at Ford: CBC reports, Ford asked itself a question: if we can't yet give machines human-like intelligence, can we give humans machine-like stamina? The result is a trial of a 'bionic' vest that takes the strain off the arms of people on the assembly line who work for hours on cars passing overhead. http://bit.ly/2wKuQWS

FT Executive Education Rankings 2018https://on.ft.com/2L1ZrTc

"In a ranking notable for its volatility, Kenan-Flagler Business School in North Carolina is remarkably consistent. The school, which is up two places to 10th, has ranked within a six-place range since 2012. Apart from ranking 57th for follow-up, the school is well rated by its corporate clients. It is in the top 10 for six criteria, including value for money, where it came first. “I value our relationship with UNC because they value each one of us,” said a corporate client in the FT survey." 

CULTURE

“Avengers: Infinity War” nearly broke a Chinese box office record and has racked up $1.6 billion in ticket sales worldwide.

Exclusive Soho House wants more members—lots of them: WSJ reports, the London-based private-club company wants to expand globally—and is considering a public stock offering to fund it. https://on.wsj.com/2IDsePu

Golan Heights, Syria, Mexico, AT&T, Pep Guardiola, Trade Tensions, Starbucks

Marc Ross Daily.png

Golan Heights, Syria, Mexico, AT&T, Pep Guardiola, Trade Tensions, Starbucks

Marc Ross Daily
May 11, 2018
Curation and commentary from Marc A. Ross

Reporting from Alexandria, Virginia

Marc Ross Daily  = Global Business News at the Intersection of Politics + Policy + Profits

Subscribe here
https://goo.gl/bSQKwA

TOP FIVE

✔️ Iran fires rockets into Golan Heights from Syria

✔️ Business hates Mexico’s presidential front-runner

✔️ Italian populist parties on verge of deal to govern

✔️ AT&T paid Trump lawyer for ‘insights’ into his boss

✔️ Guardiola eyes 100 points for record-breaking City
 

GEOECONOMICS

NYT: Iran fires rockets into Golan Heights from Syria, Israelis say

Israel strikes Iranian targets in Syria as regional tensions rise
: WSJ reports, Israel’s military carried out strikes against Iranian targets in Syria after it said Iranian forces based there fired rockets at its soldiers in the Golan Heights, raising the risk of a wider regional war.

FT: Israeli aircraft pound Iranian military sites inside Syria

Mahathir seals victory in stunning Malaysia poll win
: FT reports, veteran former PM’s comeback ends ruling coalition’s 60-year grip on power.

Italian populist parties on verge of deal to govern: FT reports, Five Star and League in talks after Berlusconi says he will not stand in the way.

Bloomberg: Business hates Mexico’s presidential front-runner. And he doesn’t care https://bloom.bg/2rrlERw

"Andrés Manuel López Obrador, the nation’s anti-Trump, has a 20-point lead in the polls."

China's specter looms over Modi's Nepal visit: Nikkei reports, Indian PM faces diplomatic hurdles but could win votes back home.

China draws up shopping list of US goods to avoid trade war: WSJ reports, China likely will offer to import more U.S. goods during negotiations in Washington next week as the two sides see one of the best ways to avert an all-out trade war is for Beijing to buy American.

US-China trade tensions increase after import delays: FT reports, Chinese inspectors are delaying imports of US agricultural products, luxury automobiles and even pet food, exacerbating tensions just days before bilateral trade talks are scheduled to resume. Industry executives said Chinese officials had not cited bilateral trade friction for any of the delays, which have been caused by more stringent environmental checks and quarantine procedures. Products affected by the new inspections include Lincoln automobiles — exported from the US by carmaker Ford — pork, apples, logs and pet food.

Telegraph: US exports to China hit record $128 billion

"Forty-nine US states have expanded their goods exports to China over the past decade, with 17 states experiencing triple-digit growth."

How China’s ‘Big Fund’ is helping the country catch up in the global semiconductor race: SCMP reports, low-profile fund is leading national effort to catch up in global semiconductor industry by raising funds and backing semiconductor start-ups and research and development.

AMERICAN POLITICS

FT: AT&T paid Trump lawyer for ‘insights’ into his boss

"I’m crushing it": How Michael Cohen, touting his access to President Trump, convinced companies to pay millions
: WP reports, he pitched potential clients on his close association with the president, noting he still was President Trump’s lawyer, according to associates. He showed photos of himself with Trump and mentioned how frequently they spoke, even asking people to share news articles describing him as Trump's “fixer.”

NYT - Editorial: Trump’s shadowy money trail: Questions about his finances, and about whether his campaign helped Russia hack the 2016 election, need to be asked in the same breath.

Cohen got millions for insider access outside White House: NYT reports, through a secretive shell company, Michael Cohen, the president’s personal lawyer, was paid by major corporations and a law firm for help navigating Washington in the Trump era.

California is set to become the first state to require solar panels on all newly built single-family houses," effective in 2020.

Bloomberg: ‘Wild West’ Ohio beckons self-driving cars even after Uber death

Scientists: Hawaii volcano could soon spew 10-ton boulders from its summit: WP reports, when the lava level at the top of Kilauea drops to groundwater level, it could trigger powerful explosions that could send debris for miles and unleash torrents of molten rock and toxic gases.

ENTERPRISE

Bloomberg picks Amsterdam for its post-Brexit base.

ZTE says it halted major operations following US sales ban: WSJ reports, Chinese telecom firm ZTE said it halted major business operations, marking the deepest wound inflicted yet in the escalating trade rift between China and the US.

Chinese tech giant may be first victim of new US cold war: NYT reports, the electronics firm ZTE has found success in the American market like few other Chinese technology brands have. Now it is fighting for its life after the Trump administration banned the company from using parts made in America.

China’s ZTE halts operations as US ban bites: FT reports, telecoms group hopes for political solution to crippling sanctions barring US suppliers

AP: Chinese court sentences Anbang founder to 18 years for fraud

Wu Xiaohui, the former chairman of Anbang Insurance Group, had gained a reputation for ambitiously expanding into hotels, real estate and insurance from Canada to South Korea - including New York City’s Waldorf Hotel.

Starbucks: Could it get even more aggressive in China?Barron's reports, Starbucks, which has said it’s aiming for 5,000 shops in China by 2021, could bump that number even higher. "Coffee consumption in China is still a fraction of that of the U.S., but we estimate coffee consumption has grown double-digits over the last 10 years,” UBS analysis, with Starbucks a main beneficiary: The company was responsible for nearly 50% of specialist coffee shop transactions there in 2017, according to UBS data, up from below 35% in 2012.

Uber reveals plans for flying taxi-service by 2023: FT reports, ride-hailing company partners with Nasa to design urban air-traffic control system.

Toyota pours $22bn into R&D as Apple and Google close in: Nikkei reports, CEO calls it a 'fight for survival' as technology reshapes the auto industry.

TRENDS

‘We don’t take cash’: is this the future of money? Tougher for criminals, easier for hackers: what life is really like in a cashless society. https://on.ft.com/2I87s77

CULTURE

NYT: Mormon Church ends century-old partnership with Boy Scouts of America

LAT: 'Law & Order: SVU' inches closer to the record books with Season 20 renewal

SPORT

AFP: Guardiola eyes 100 points for record-breaking City

AFP: Celtics beat Sixers to book
spot in East finals

Highlands Bar & Grill, Post Malone, James Paxton, NASA, Argentina, Iran

Marc Ross Daily.png

Highlands Bar & Grill, Post Malone, James Paxton, NASA, Argentina, Iran

Marc Ross Daily
May 9, 2018
Curation and commentary from Marc A. Ross

Reporting from Alexandria, Virginia

Marc Ross Daily  = Global Business News at the Intersection of Politics + Policy + Profits

Subscribe here
https://goo.gl/bSQKwA

TOP FIVE

✔️ US exit from Iran deal draws criticism from Europe, praise from Israel

✔️ Global trade is already weakening, war or not

✔️ Argentina is in talks with the IMF for a $30 billion credit line

✔️ GOP voters stick to pro-Trump candidates in Senate primaries

✔️ Maryland seeded #1 in both men's, women's lax tournaments

GEOECONOMICS

Iran deal: Trump pulled the US out of the Iran nuclear deal and will reinstate an array of economic sanctions on Tehran.

BG: US exit from Iran deal draws criticism from Europe, praise from Israel

What comes next? Trump didn’t offer specifics on how he would replace the deal or rein in Iran.

Killing the Iran deal was only the first step: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sees Trump as a partner for broader regional change. 
Bloomberg - Zev Chafets

National Review - Editorial: Out of the Iran deal: Trump is pulling out of the Iran deal. This is to his great credit. Once again — leaving the Paris accords and moving the US embassy to Jerusalem also come to mind — the president has resisted pressure from the Europeans and the great and good in our country in order to make a decision in keeping with our interests.

WSJ: Global trade is already weakening, war or not: Slower global trade—particularly when paired with higher oil prices and rebounding inflation—bodes ill for industrial firms such as Caterpillar, Deere and Japan’s Komatsu. Caterpillar has already warned that its first quarter results were likely the “high watermark” for the year."

Argentina is in talks with the IMF for a $30 billion credit line.

FT: Life in Emmanuel Macron’s inner circle. Lots of reform, little sleep and a population to persuade: inside the president’s first year. https://on.ft.com/2jEsmA6

The Independent: Support for Ireland staying in the EU hits record high of 92%, latest poll shows

FT: Job cuts at trade department test claim of ‘global Britain’ after Brexit

"Liam Fox clashes with Philip Hammond over staff reduction in emerging nations"

BBC: Peers call for UK to remain in European Economic Area

"The House of Lords has backed calls for the UK to effectively remain in the EU's single market after Brexit."

When is Irish whiskey not Irish whiskey? Maybe after Brexit https://bloom.bg/2jNWzwV

Japan seeks its economic mojo in the stuff that makes the stuff: NYT reports, recision parts and behind-the-scenes technology could play a major role in the country’s effort to shake itself out of its slow-growth doldrums.

Japan - South Korea - China: Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s Tokyo summit with leaders from China and South Korea — the first in seven years — represents a diplomatic triumph in Abe’s quest to settle stubborn disputes over territory and past wars.

Trump’s tough tactics prompt east Asia thaw: FT reports, three-way summit between China, Japan and South Korea leaders promises closer relations

Reuters: China's trade surplus with US widens to $22.19 billion in April

AP: China cutting US soybean purchases in face of tariffs threat

FT - Charles Parton: Hackneyed language hampers the West's ties with China
: Please, when it comes to the West's relations with China, can we stop talking about the Thucydides Trap, the Golden Era, Belt and Road and “a shared future for mankind”? Such terms are dangerous. https://on.ft.com/2IonrBh

“Google the ‘Thucydides Trap’ and you get 73,000 hits. Conferences are held on it.” 

AMERICAN POLITICS

Walking around money: The shell company used by Trump lawyer Michael Cohen to pay off porn actress Stormy Daniels received about $500,000 last year from a business linked to a Russian billionaire who is close to Putin.

AT&T made four separate payments to Cohen's company totaling $200,000 in late 2017 and into early 2018 to "provide insights into understanding the new administration."

Real Clear Politics averages:

Congressional job approval: -56% (that is: 73% disapprove, 17% approve)

Trump job approval: -8 (that is: 52% disapprove, 44% approve)


OH-GOV: Richard Cordray won the Democratic nomination and will face GOP nominee Mike DeWine.

Dayton Daily News: Ohio US Senate race: Jim Renacci wins GOP primary, will face Sherrod Brown this fall

GOP voters stick to pro-Trump candidates in Senate primaries: Bloomberg reports, Republicans wrapped up three crucial US Senate primaries in West Virginia, Indiana and Ohio on Tuesday by nominating candidates who embraced President Donald Trump, while Democratic voters rejected insurgents from the left to stick with the party’s mainstream.

Newsom under attack in California governor debate: Politico reports, California’s crowded field of major gubernatorial candidates battled in a televised debate for the first time Tuesday, exchanging barbs over sanctuary cities and #MeToo issues — and saving some of their toughest blows for the Democratic frontrunner, Lt. Governor Gavin Newsom.

ENTERPRISE

Paywalls: Bloomberg, Vanity Fair, Wired, Business Insider and The Atlantic have launched new paywalls within the past year.

"on-demand access to information and entertainment has also become a consumer trend that is likely helping news outlets get consumers cash in."

7 days: Sam’s Club and Walmart announced on Monday that their pharmacies would provide only a seven-day supply of opioid medications to some customers in an attempt to stymie the nationwide opioid crisis.

Self-driving 57x: Goldman Sachs predicts that the now-$5 billion ride hailing and ride sharing business would grow to $285 billion by 2030 provided that self-driving car technology proceeds on pace with their forecast.

Uber and NASA are teaming up to create commercial flying cars by 2023. 

Glassdoor has agreed to sell itself to Japan’s Recruit for $1.2 billion.

Best Buy's new look: Best Buy is rebranding, with a new logo, website and ads that depict its employees as caring, friendly listeners who can solve your electronics problems.

"Best Buy is tapping its own 100,000 blue-shirted employees as the stars of its new marketing campaign."

Slack now has 8 million daily active users and 3 million paying subscribers.

Facebook has named new leaders for some of its main divisions, including the core social network, WhatsApp and Messenger, in the biggest management reshuffling since the company's founding. The company also unveiled a new initiative to explore the use of blockchain.

Facebook quietly rolled out policies on "issue ads," or ads addressing topics ranging from abortion to guns, that will have to be approved and labeled before publication on the social media site.

5 more Nike executives are out amid inquiry into harassment allegations: NYT reports, at least five more top managers are leaving the world’s largest sports footwear and apparel company after an investigation into complaints of harassment and bias. The departures follow six others.

The 13 best Warren Buffett quotes from the Berkshire Hathaway meeting https://for.tn/2I407tm

TRENDS

HBR: Having your smartphone nearby takes a toll on your thinking http://bit.ly/2IrQpQE

"In recent research, we investigated whether merely having one’s own smartphone nearby could influence cognitive abilities. In two lab experiments, nearly 800 people completed tasks designed to measure their cognitive capacity."

CULTURE

Post Malone has nine songs in the top 20 of the Billboard Hot 100.

I have no idea who Post Malone is.

Highlands Bar & Grill in Birmingham was named America’s most outstanding restaurant at the James Beard Foundation Awards.

Urban discourse: The University of Toronto has announced it will open a new School of Cities on 1 July. 

SPORT

MLB in London: New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox are set to play three games in June 2019 at London’s Olympic Stadium.

Maryland seeded No. 1 in both men's, women's NCAA lacrosse tournaments

M's James Paxton first Canadian ever to toss no-hitter in Canada: ESPN reports, James Paxton looked up at the 20,000 Canadian fans cheering for him and pointed to the giant maple leaf tattoo on his right forearm. Paxton became the first Canadian to throw a no-hitter in his home country, pitching the Seattle Mariners to a 5-0 win over the Toronto Blue Jays on Tuesday night.

Wayne Rooney courted by DC United.

US gives assurances to FIFA over travel for 2026 World Cup: AP reports, The United States has moved to assure FIFA that there will be no discrimination around entry to the country if it ends up as one of the hosts of the 2026 World Cup. The North American bid has faced questions about the impact of attempts by Trump to implement a ban on travel to the country by residents of six majority-Muslim nations.