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Sunday, 14 June 2026

The biggest scandal in college sports is brought to you by a Texas judge


The biggest scandal in college sports is brought to you by a Texas judge

MS NOW · 16 hours ago
by Keith Reed · Opinion



If there were anything like justice in college sports, Brendan Sorsby would never play another down of football. It’s a tough thing to say about someone only 22 years old, and under most circumstances, I’d never argue that misdeeds should end an athlete’s career before they hit the professional ranks.

But Sorsby, Texas Tech’s star quarterback, isn’t an average college kid who made a mistake. He bet at least $90,000 on sports — including on games involving the Indiana Hoosiers when he was on that team’s roster as a freshman in 2022. For obvious reasons, the NCAA frowns upon such behavior and rightly issued a permanent ban when it discovered what Sorsby did. Sorsby says he’s been diagnosed with a gambling addiction.


Sorsby says he’s been diagnosed with a gambling addiction.

But on Monday, retired Texas judge Ken Curry, appointed to the case after another judge recused himself, gave Sorsby a pass with a temporary injunction that will allow him to play this season. Curry reasoned that the injunction was necessary to avoid “probable, imminent and irreparable injury” to the quarterback’s college football career. But the judge is mischaracterizing the consequences of Sorsby’s actions as injury.

Those who have watched college football scandals over the decades should be especially incensed by the judge’s ruling that Sorsby should play. His transgressions are exponentially worse than those of Reggie Bush, who was forced to forfeit his Heisman Trophy in 2010 for rules violations he allegedly committed while at the University of Southern California, and exponentially worse than Ohio State University’s Terrelle Pryor, who was suspended for receiving free tattoos and selling his memorabilia. Granted, those punishments were imposed in a bygone era when the NCAA still stood on the farce that players, the labor in its multibillion-dollar enterprise, were amateurs and all but forced them to the black market to profit from their work.

Those infractions from Bush and Pryor were metaphorical misdemeanors relative to the near-treasonous offense Sorsby committed against the NCAA. The integrity of the games, or at least the appearance thereof, are crucial for the association’s survival. Thus, its strict prohibition against gambling and its promise of a kind of death penalty (a lifetime ban) for athletes who gamble anyway.
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Online sports betting for some is a near-fatal gamble: Report October 27, 2025 / 07:54

Sorsby acknowledged a gambling addiction, a serious mental health issue that warrants professional treatment, and to his credit, he reports that he recently sought a 35-day rehab at an inpatient clinic in Arizona. Gambling addiction can cause immense harm to the afflicted and those around them. It’s also a compulsion whose victims often relapse, which isn’t something someone in Sorsby’s position can afford, even once.

It’s not something the NCAA can afford, either. In this instance, the NCAA saw a problem — the starting quarterback at a Power Conference school has a gambling problem that makes him vulnerable to compromise — and it took that problem out at the knees. Sorsby, who is discussed as a rising NFL prospect, had every right to try to enter the league’s supplemental draft or to seek a free agent tryout. Obviously, any NFL general manager with common sense would think long and hard before adding him to the roster, which means he’d be risking not being able to play in college or the pros. But such are the wages of his sin. The predicament he put himself in doesn’t warrant the judge forcing the NCAA to let him play after he flouted its rules and violated the integrity of its sport.

To the extent that he’s seriously contrite, Sorsby deserves credit for taking accountability, which he did in a social media post last month. But contrition doesn’t erase consequences, and accountability often demands them. Yet here we have a judge forcing the NCAA to let Sorsby play alongside other young men who have every right to question their teammate’s motives. Other college programs have responded by vowing not to play any games against Texas Tech.

Sorsby embodies two overlapping problems involving sports and gambling: the increasing prevalence of gambling addiction among young adults, teenagers and even preteens and the seemingly growing number of instances of athletes themselves betting on games. Just last week, an arbitrator ruled that NBA free agent Terry Rozier must forfeit most of his $26.6 million salary for the 2025-26 season after he was alleged to have taken a bribe to withdraw from a game early when he was playing for the Charlotte Hornets. Rozier has pleaded not guilty to the gambling accusations.

If Sorsby ever makes it to the NFL, one wonders how he will fare in a league that prohibits its players from gambling but has rich partnership deals with FanDuel, DraftKings and Caesars Entertainment, its “official casino sponsor.” In the pros, nobody even pretends there’s a wall between the action on the field and the action the sportsbooks are taking in real time. Fans will be in the stadium, not just watching but placing bets. Whichever team signs Sorsby would be gambling too: that he won’t repeat the same offenses that put the NCAA and Texas Tech in a negative spotlight.


The post The biggest scandal in college sports is brought to you by a Texas judge appeared first on MS NOW.

Thursday, 11 June 2026

Has the chic luggage race peaked?

 Has the chic luggage race peaked?

Stack of Rimowa suitcases

VCG/Getty Images

The next trendy suitcase better have a built-in television or some other ridiculous feature, because the market is getting crowded.

Sign of the times. The popular DJ John Summit made an Instagram post in which he kicks, throws, hammers, and lights his Rimowa suitcase on fire—ostensibly because he’s fed up after pieces from the luxury brand broke down on him. Then the comments section took off:

  • “We’ve been summoned,” wrote Away, the startup that kicked off the modern-day case race in 2015. More affordable than Rimowa and Tumi, but prettier than Samsonite, Away reached a $1.4 billion valuation in four years and opened the D2C suitcase floodgates.
  • “Please let me send you some @beis luggage,” the actress Shay Mitchell commented. She founded Béis in 2018. One of its latest collaborations was with Rare Beauty, Selena Gomez’s cosmetics brand.
  • Tumi and Samsonite also chimed in on Summit’s post. Samsonite owns Tumi, having bought the brand for $1.8 billion in 2016—the same year that LVMH bought airport status symbol Rimowa.

Overall, legacy brands like Samsonite, Tumi, and Rimowa still command the baggage carousel, but the new players are making inroads. “We’re all fighting to steal market share from Samsonite, which owns 25% of the market, and LVMH, which owns another 10%,” the co-founder of July, an Australian luggage brand, told Fast Company. One of the latest upstarts to vie for some cargo space is Casetify, a phone case company that launched its first suitcase in 2024.

Sunday, 7 June 2026

Elon Musk loses case over OpenAI’s future

 Elon Musk loses case over OpenAI’s future

Photo collage showing Elon Musk on the left in greyscale looking dejected, with Sam Altman on the right looking hopeful in shades of blue.

Morning Brew Inc, Photos: Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto, YOSHIKAZU TSUNO/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

Yesterday was the biggest win for Team ChatGPT since a clueless professor neglected to run final papers through an AI detector. In a snap conclusion to a three-week trial, the jury tossed Elon Musk’s lawsuit against OpenAI and its CEO, Sam Altman, that asserted Altman “stole a charity” by converting OpenAI from a nonprofit lab to a for-profit entity.

The jury decided that Musk had missed the three-year statute of limitations to file the case since OpenAI became for-profit in 2019, and Musk sued in 2024. The judge accepted the jury’s finding and immediately dismissed the case.

In a post on X, Musk vowed to appeal, calling the decision a “calendar technicality.” Meanwhile, an attorney for OpenAI told reporters outside the courthouse, “It’s not a technical decision, it’s a substantive one.”

Dirty laundry

Musk, who helped found OpenAI, claimed he was swindled out of his $38 million early investment in OpenAI because his co-founders later shed its nonprofit status and enriched themselves as its valuation ballooned. The suit also named OpenAI’s biggest corporate backer, Microsoft, as a co-defendant.

Altman’s defense argued that Musk wasn’t deceived, since he was part of discussions about converting OpenAI into a for-profit entity in 2017, shortly before he left the lab because his bid to get “total control” of it failed. The defense claimed Musk went to court only after founding his own competing AI startup, xAI.

While the verdict was a decisive win for Altman, revelations from the trial made both sides blush:

  • OpenAI co-founder Ilya Sutskever told the company’s board Altman “exhibits a consistent pattern of lying,” according to his testimony to the court.
  • Musk obtained the secret diary of OpenAI co-founder Greg Brockman, in which Brockman wrote that Altman gave him an equity stake in his family office behind Musk’s back—which Musk suspected was a way to buy loyalty.
  • Altman testified that Musk proposed folding OpenAI into Tesla and separately floated passing control of it to his children.
  • Former OpenAI board member Shivon Zilis, who testified in the case, is the mother of four of Musk’s children and was accused by OpenAI of passing information to him.

They’ll soon compete on Wall St…with OpenAI reportedly prepping to IPO by 2027, while Musk’s xAI is set to go public as part of the massive SpaceX IPO planned for as early as next month.

Friday, 5 June 2026

John Travolta Gets Cannes Award as 'Grease' Icon Gets Honorary Palme d'Or

John Travolta Gets Cannes Award as 'Grease' Icon Gets Honorary Palme d'Or

John Travolta Cries as Cannes Surprises Him With Honorary Palme d’Or: ‘This Is Beyond the Oscar’

CANNES, FRANCE - MAY 15: John Travolta accepts the Honorary Palme Award onstage during the 79th annual Cannes Film Festival at Plage Macé on May 15, 2026 in Cannes, France. (Photo by Aurore Marechal/Getty Images)
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John Travolta got a major Cannes surprise ahead of the world premiere of his directorial debut “Propeller One-Way Night Coach” when the festival presented him with an honorary Palme d’Or, which is the Cannes equivalent of a lifetime achievement prize. Travolta was shocked and overwhelmed by the surprise honor, holding back tears while saying: “This is beyond the Oscar.”

“Surprise complétement!” an emotional Travolta exclaimed in French as the crowd erupted into rapturous applause. “I can’t believe this. This is the last thing I expected.”

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Turning to Cannes director Thierry Fremaux, Travolta added, “You said this would be a special night, but I didn’t know it would mean this.” Fremaux responded: “We knew!”

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“This is a humbling moment, so thank you Thierry from the bottom of my heart,” Travolta continued. “When I met with you in November, I had no expectation that my film would be accepted. And when Thierry said it was not only accepted but it was making history because it would be the first film ever accepted that early, I cried like a baby because I just couldn’t believe it. Because in my opinion, you are the most discerning person in the movie industry. I was just happy to be here! I never expected this. Thank you so much.”

Travolta, who has been nominated for the best actor Oscar twice, attended Cannes this year to premiere “Propeller One-Way Night Coach,” his Apple-backed film based on his 1997 children’s book of the same name. The autobiographical family movie — which he called the “most personal film he’s ever done” — unfolds in the golden age of aviation as a young airplane enthusiast Jeff (Clark Shotwell) and his mother (Kelly Eviston-Quinnett) set off on a one-way, cross-country odyssey to Hollywood. The movie also stars Travolta’s daughter, Ella Bleu Travolta.

Following the screening of the hour-long film, Travolta strode back onstage for a conversation with Fremaux, where he discussed how his love of aviation was born in his childhood. Travolta said he cried when Fremaux told him he’d selected the film for Cannes five months ahead of the festival — even though Apple had already acquired the film.

“Why this film exists and actually why I exist as an artist is because of that group of people right there,” Travolta said, pointing to his family in the crowd. “My oldest sister, Ellen, was really this character, the lead in this film. But it’s really a mixture of my sister and my mother because they both influenced me so deeply, and they were responsible for all my hopes and dreams, and they watched me make them come true. So this is just a little taste of my origins and what it was like to be me when I was little. So I hope you enjoyed it. It means the world to me that you’re here.”

Cannes announced before the 2026 festival started that Peter Jackson and Barbra Streisand would be receiving honorary Palme d’Or statues on the opening and closing nights of the festival, respectively. But Cannes has gotten into a habit of giving out at least one surprise honorary Palme each year, with Denzel Washington getting awarded last year ahead of the world premiere of “Highest 2 Lowest.”

Travolta’s prior history with the Cannes Film Festival include screenings of “Pulp Fiction” (1994), “She’s So Lovely” (1997) and “Primary Colors” (1998). Tarantino’s “Pulp Fiction” won the Palme d’Or, while Travolta’s co-star Sean Penn was awarded the best actor prize for “She’s So Lovely.”

“Propeller One-Way Night Coach” starts streaming May 29 on Apple TV.

The biggest scandal in college sports is brought to you by a Texas judge

The biggest scandal in college sports is brought to you by a Texas judge MS NOW · 16 hours ago by Keith Reed · Opinion If there were anythin...