RG Richardson City Guides

RG Richardson City Guides
Interactive city travel.

Sunday, 31 May 2026

Ten Commandments of Beercan Racing

 Ten Commandments of Beercan Racing

Rob Moore was only 58 years old when he succumbed to lung cancer on January 6, 2012. He was among the 20% of lung cancer victims with no history of smoking. During Rob's short tenure on the planet, he covered a lot of ground, and was both active in the sport and a popular contributor at the Latitude 38 publication.

Rob believed strongly that sailboat racing should be competitive and fun, and to encourage participation at all levels. To facilitate this desire, he penned the “Ten Commandments of Beercan Racing" which we annually share in his honor:

I) Thou shalt not take anything other than safety too seriously. If you can only remember one commandment, this is the one. Relax, have fun, and keep it light. Late to the start? So what. Over early? Big deal. No instructions? Improvise. Too windy? Quit. Not enough wind? Break out the beer. The point is to have fun, but stay safe. Like the ad says, "Safe boating is no accident." - Full report

Friday, 29 May 2026

States that have legalized marijuana

 

Twenty-four states and Washington, DC, have legalized recreational marijuana. Ohio is the latest state to do so, with voters approving a ballot measure in November 2023. Forty states and Washington, DC, have legalized some form of medical marijuana.

Thursday, 28 May 2026

Utah is not jazzed about a potential AI data center

 Utah is not jazzed about a potential AI data center

Kevin O'Leary

Gilbert Flores/Getty Images

Plans to build an AI data center that will span 40,000 acres in northwest Utah were approved by county commissioners last week, despite protests from thousands of local residents who believe the project will wreak havoc on the local environment and increase energy costs.

Almost 4,000 people filed complaints against the $100 billion project called Stratos that’s being helmed by Kevin O’Leary, a wealthy vampire and villain in his role in Marty Supreme.

  • O’Leary said Stratos will create 10,000 construction jobs and 2,000 permanent ones. (Business Insider reports that 4,000 construction jobs over 10 to 15 years and 1,350 permanent roles are more realistic.)
  • Environmentalists warn the facility—requiring 9 gigawatts of power, more than the entire state currently uses—could destroy the Great Salt Lake ecosystem and raise temperatures in the area by five degrees during the day and 28 degrees at night.

What’s next? A group called the Box Elder Accountability Referendum is trying to collect 5,422 signatures to trigger a vote in November that would give residents an opportunity to reverse the commissioners’ decision.

Zoom out: Big Tech is spending billions on AI infrastructure, but resistance to data centers is growing, with some states considering bans.

Tuesday, 26 May 2026

Harvard deciding whether to give fewer A’s

 Harvard deciding whether to give fewer A’s

An aerial view of Harvard's campus

Brooks Kraft LLC/Getty Images

A type of inflation unrelated to the price of a Dunkin’ coffee is on the ballot at that one school “in Boston.” A Harvard faculty committee began a weeklong vote yesterday on whether to cap the number of A’s allowed per course in a bid to combat grade inflation.

The measure would limit professors to giving A grades to just a fifth of the class, plus four extra students. A rule that would tie honors to class rank instead of GPA is also on the ballot.

Make A’s great again

The proposed changes come as some faculty and external critics—including the Trump administration—say that A’s becoming more common than nepo babies on Ivy League campuses eroded the grade’s value as a marker of excellence.

  • A’s accounted for 60% of grades awarded to Harvard undergrads last year, compared with 25% in 2005.
  • Last year, 55 Harvard students tied for the school’s top GPA award, an honor that used to be clinched by one or two students per year.

Proponents of A austerity say it’ll motivate students to work harder, while making it easier for employers and grad schools to gauge their performance. But many undergrads and some faculty oppose mandated A scarcity, claiming it’ll pit classmates against each other and hurt Harvard students’ competitiveness.

Big picture: Supporters hope a grading overhaul at Harvard will spur other top schools to curb grade inflation.

Sunday, 24 May 2026

Can AI help therapists shrink their workloads?

 Can AI help therapists shrink their workloads?

Therapist with patient

Unsplash

AI has caused a lot of anxiety in recent years, but can it maybe help treat it, too? Some mental health professionals have been holding space for that possibility, cautiously integrating AI into their work routines. Or, as they might put it, taking baby steps toward adoption, while being mindful about safe boundaries.

Patient care: Administrative work is an obvious place to start. A lot of paperwork—like updating records, transcription, keeping track of appointments, and billing insurance companies—can be aided or automated by AI, freeing up therapists to spend more time actually talking with patients.

Therapy speak

Whether they want to or not, therapists have also had to adapt to patients using AI chatbots. According to a recent KFF poll:

  • About 1 in 6 adults has used AI tools for mental health information or advice.
  • The rate is even higher among younger adults, Black and Hispanic adults, and people who are uninsured.

After all, since Covid, experts worry that there aren’t enough qualified therapists to keep up with demand, and chatbots are cheaper and available 24/7. But Freud droids can miss a lot, like nonverbal cues and subtle mood shifts, and can also encourage unhealthy—or sometimes even unsafe—thoughts or behaviors.

Per the Washington Post, there are at least a dozen lawsuits alleging wrongful death or serious harm against OpenAI, after ChatGPT users were hospitalized or died by suicide. To stay safe, many professionals recommend using AI tools in tandem with human support.

An important reminder: “Therapy is not a legally protected term,” Vaile Wright, the senior director of the office of health care innovation at the American Psychological Association, told The Washington Post. Make sure to properly vet the products and people you’re trusting with your mental health.

Friday, 22 May 2026

The rise of beta blockers as an anti-stress tool

 The rise of beta blockers as an anti-stress tool

Robert Downey Jr.

Rich Polk/Getty Images

Y’all.

As one red carpet interviewer joked at last year’s Academy Awards, “numb is in.” The comment came during a conversation with actress Rachel Sennott, one of many celebrities who have recently sung the praises of beta blockers, an adrenaline-blocking blood pressure medication that’s being prescribed off-label to help make stressful events more manageable.

The Kardashians arguably popularized the trend. Discourse around beta blockers, or more specifically, propranolol, went mainstream after a 2022 episode of The Kardashians in which Khloé said she sometimes took beta blockers that were prescribed to her mom for anxiety (disclaimer: they should only be taken as prescribed). Since then:

  • Robert Downey Jr. said he took a beta blocker before presenting at the Golden Globes in 2024, and Dan Levy did the same to host the Emmys.
  • The drug was discussed on an episode of Amy Poehler’s podcast, Good Hang, where influencer Paige DeSorbo pitched Poehler on its benefits.

Odds are, you or someone you know is taking them, too—propranolol prescriptions are up nearly 40% over the past decade, according to NHS England data obtained by The Observer. The biggest spikes came from girls and women ages 12 to 23.

This isn’t like the Limitless pill. Beta blockers only calm the physical symptoms of stress and anxiety, not the racing thoughts, so they aren’t considered a proper substitute for anti-anxiety or antidepressant medications, like SSRIs. And don’t plan on cliff jumping, either. Since the drug slows your heart rate, it can make you feel light-headed or tired, especially if you’re exercising.

Thursday, 21 May 2026

Social media’s Big Tobacco moment

 Social media’s Big Tobacco moment

Teen girl staring at phone

Getty Images

It’s official: brain rot from doomscrolling has replaced tooth decay from candy as the top concern for parents. Worried adults are holding social media companies’ feet to the fire as US teens’ scrolling time exceeds five hours a day, on average, and evidence mounts that apps are behind the deterioration of youth mental health.

One recent study found that 18- to 24-year-olds who reduced their social media usage to an average of half an hour a day experienced lower rates of depression, anxiety, and insomnia. Many teens don’t need adults to tell them they have a problem: In 2024, 48% of teens ages 13 to 17 said social media has a negative effect on them, up from 32% in 2022, per Pew Research Center. Even many tech CEOs say they restrict their kids’ social media usage.

But...some researchers say there’s still not enough evidence to conclude that social media causes mental health issues, noting that young people who already have poor mental wellbeing could be more prone to scrolling excessively.

Big Tech faces the music

The purveyors of the platforms known to cause the teen glass-eyed stare were dealt some courtroom defeats recently:

  • A California jury ordered Meta and Alphabet to pay $6 million in damages to a woman who suffered depression and anxiety while using their platforms as a teen. The jury found that the platforms were intentionally designed to hook young users.
  • New Mexico recently won a case against Meta, which was fined $375 million for misleading users about the risks of its platform for children and failing to protect kids from child predators on its platforms.

Legal experts say the verdicts create precedents that could lead to a cascade of lawsuits that would bite into Big Tech’s profits.

No phone, no problem

On top of their legal troubles, social media companies are now seeing their products yanked out of young users’ hands in the US. Phones are now banned in schools in 27 states, as well as in several major districts, including New York City.

Meanwhile, some countries have decided they want kids to touch grass 24/7. Australia became the first country to ban social media usage for kids under 16 last year, with Austria and Denmark preparing similar measures. Dozens of other countries are considering their own bans.

Big picture: Losing their young audience would be as painful for tech companies as the feeling of an iPad kid finding himself locked out of his device. Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, YouTube, TikTok, and X made $11 billion selling ads that targeted kids and teens in 2022, according to an estimate by Harvard School of Public Health researchers.

Wednesday, 20 May 2026

Wordle is getting a TV show

 Wordle is getting a TV show

Illustration of a TV remote and Wordle tiles

Niv Bavarsky

A five-letter word for the puzzle’s next destination: TELLY. A Wordle game show is set to air on NBC next year, the New York Times announced yesterday, marking the gaming company’s publication’s latest bid to expand its business beyond news.

Billed as fast-paced and family-friendly:

  • The half-hour-long, cash-prize show will be co-produced by NYT, the notorious giggler Jimmy Fallon, and a division of NBCUniversal.
  • It’ll be hosted by Today co-anchor Savannah Guthrie, a longtime Wordle fan who did a behind-the-scenes feature on NYT Games last year. Filming on the new show was delayed from March to this summer amid the initial search for Guthrie’s mother, Nancy, who remains missing.

A first for NYT: The publication has previously worked with cable and streaming services to make documentaries and a series inspired by its Modern Love column, but it has never before gotten involved with primetime entertainment on a major broadcast network. The financial terms of the NBC deal weren’t disclosed.

Game on: After NYT bought Wordle in 2022 for low-seven figures, the popular puzzle almost instantly attracted “tens of millions” of new users to the news publisher. Since then, NYT has expanded its thriving Games unit, which has helped shield it from the pain of broader declines in news consumption.

Tuesday, 19 May 2026

Italian food brand accused of ‘tomato fraud’

 Italian food brand accused of ‘tomato fraud’

Canned tomato wearing a black mask as a disguise in a Cento can.

Niv Bavarsky

These tomatoes are catching so much heat, they’re at risk of becoming perfectly blistered. A lawsuit filed in California this week accuses food manufacturer Cento Fine Foods of committing “tomato fraud” by deceiving customers about the legitimacy of its canned San Marzano tomatoes.

Like authentic Champagne and Parmesan cheese, official San Marzano tomatoes can only come from one specific region in Italy. The premium fruits are ideal for saucemaking, but horrible for punishing a bombing comedian, because they have a thicker tomato wall, fewer seeds, and lower acidity than your run-of-the-mill produce. Sales of this specific tomato are regulated by Il Consorzio di Tutela del Pomodoro San Marzano DOP, but Cento uses a third-party agency called Agri-Cert:

  • Cento said it stopped working with the official Italian group to certify its tomatoes a decade ago over labeling rules.
  • The lawsuit claims that Cento was removed by the group for counterfeit labeling, and that the “certified” label on the company’s cans and website trick customers into thinking the tomatoes have the more rigorous DOP certification.

Cento called the allegations meritless. The company released a statement saying that it defeated a similar lawsuit lobbed against it in 2019 and would do so again.

Monday, 18 May 2026

Fighting AI deepfakes (Taylor’s version)

 Fighting AI deepfakes (Taylor’s version)

Taylor Swift trademarking two sound marks and an image

Andreas Rentz/Getty Images

Taylor Swift has filed three unique trademark applications to protect her voice and image from use in unauthorized deepfakes. It’s a new legal maneuver designed to give celebrities more protections against AI, though it has yet to be tested in court.

How would the trademarks defend against unwanted AI slop?

  • Swift moved to trademark two audio clips where she speaks her name, which falls under a lesser-known category called “sound marks.” That has historically been reserved for things like Netflix’s “tu-dum” sound and the giggle of the Pillsbury Doughboy.
  • The other filing is an image of Swift on stage in a sequined outfit and with a pink guitar.
  • The theory is if someone generates AI content with her voice or a similar image, Swift would have more standing in court if she filed a lawsuit against its creators.

The bar for violating a trademark is creating something that’s “confusingly similar,” kind of like The Rock’s action movies or The Bachelor contestants.

What about copyright? AI creations can be made without lifting a voice from a copyrighted song recording. These new types of spoken-word trademarks, which have also been filed by actor Matthew McConaughey, attempt to plug the gulf that allows deepfakes to flourish.

Sunday, 17 May 2026

Most people lose money on Polymarket

 Most people lose money on Polymarket

Illustration of a person losing money on Polymarket

Niv Bavarsky

If you’ve wagered your mortgage that MrBeast will be the next president of the United States, perhaps reconsider. According to a Bloomberg analysis, nearly every Polymarket trader either loses money or makes little to no profit:

  • More than 100k accounts lost $1,000 since the start of 2025—twice the number of accounts that made at least $1,000.
  • In aggregate, traders lost $131 million.
  • The tiny number of accounts that make lots of money appear to be mostly bots, Bloomberg noted.

A separate study found that since 2022, 69% of traders lost money, while three-quarters of total profits were won by only the top 1% of users.

Saturday, 16 May 2026

Social media scams cost Americans over a $2.1 billion

 


Friday, 15 May 2026

Get out jail cards

 US reportedly dropping charges against Indian billionaire Adani. According to the New York Times, the Justice Department is set to drop corruption and fraud charges against Gautam Adani as soon as this week, after the billionaire hired a new legal team led by one of President Trump’s personal lawyers. The attorney, Robert Giuffra, reportedly told prosecutors that Adani, who’s worth $104 billion, would invest $10 billion in the US economy if the charges were dropped. Adani was indicted by the Biden administration in 2024 for allegedly planning to bribe Indian government officials for solar contracts and lying about it when attempting to secure American investments.

Thursday, 14 May 2026

Japan tests humanoid robots to handle airport luggage

 


Wednesday, 13 May 2026

Concerts tours are dying from ‘blue dot fever’

 Concerts tours are dying from ‘blue dot fever’

Jelly Roll, Post Malone, Meghan Trainor and Zayne over empty seats on a Ticketmaster site map

Nick Iluzada

The Pussycat Dolls are the latest music act to cancel swaths of a US arena or stadium tour amid lagging ticket sales. It’s part of a spreading epidemic the industry is calling “blue dot fever,” after the blue dots that represent unsold seats on Ticketmaster’s website.

Others who recently succumbed include Meghan Trainor, Zayn, Jelly Roll, and Post Malone. Trainor and Zayn abandoned all of their US arena dates, while Post Malone and Jelly Roll shut down one-third of their co-headlining US stadium tour. Those venues had more open seats than a 4pm Friday work meeting, but only the Pussycat Dolls publicly blamed poor sales for canceling.

Why so blue? Mainly, everything is more expensive:

  • The average concert ticket price in 2026 is $144, up from $115 last year and $82 in 2020.
  • Meanwhile, the cost of gas has exploded since the start of the Iran war and hurt the profit margins of tours that rely on transportation to get between locations.

Also: There’s stiff entertainment competition this summer from the FIFA World Cup, which is being hosted in North America.

Big picture: Three weeks ago, a jury found Ticketmaster’s parent company, Live Nation, guilty of acting as a monopoly. However, some experts believe that it may not lead to a long-term decline in ticket prices.

Tuesday, 12 May 2026

Half of Gen Z Would Rather Live in the Past

Half of Gen Z Would Rather Live in the Past: Survey
48% of Gen Z is concerned or anxious about AI.
BY MATT NOVAKUPDATED APRIL 24, 2026, 2:24 PM ET

READING TIME 2 MINUTES

© Shutterstock / Prostock-studio
READ LATER COMMENTS (28)

Gen Z doesn’t feel great about the state of the country right now.

Among 18 to 29-year-olds, 80% say the U.S. is on the wrong track, 76% disapprove of how President Donald Trump is handling the job of president, and just 25% expect life for Gen Z to be better than for previous generations, according to a new survey from NBC News.


Gen Z’s attitudes toward technology and history might be among the most interesting insights from the new survey, with nearly half of respondents (47%) saying they’d like to live in the past. That response was more popular than the number of people from that generation who said they’d like to live in the present (38%) and dwarfed those who wanted to live in the future (15%).

It appears that at least some of this longing for the past is rooted in apprehension about emerging technology. 48 percent of respondents said they were either concerned or anxious about AI, either because it would require new skills to keep up or because it could force them to change careers.

Twenty-seven percent said they’re not worried about AI and believe it won’t really affect their jobs. Just 25% said they’re optimistic about AI, believing it will allow them to do their job better.

You see the nostalgia for a previous era in trends emerging, like the retro-style landline phone called the Tin Can, which has gone viral in the past year. And as Bloomberg noted in a recent article about the Tin Can, retro tech is almost being thrust upon Gen Z, as countries like Australia ban social media for kids under 16.

Nostalgia for a previous era obviously isn’t that weird. In fact, by the late 2000s, there were articles being written about how Millennials were pining for the world that existed before the 9/11 terror attacks in 2001. And when boomers flocked to see the film American Graffiti in 1973, set in the early 1960s, they were romanticizing an era that they were either too young to appreciate in the same way or didn’t remember at all. Likewise, in 1993, the movie Dazed and Confused was set in 1976 and, for Gen X, represented a way of life many in that generation wanted to “return” to.

There were also some surprising responses in the new survey when it came to Gen Z’s familiarity with so-called prediction markets like Kalshi and Polymarket. Just 7% said they were currently “investing” in prediction markets. Sixty-seven percent said they were not participating in prediction markets, while 26% had not even heard of them.

Nostalgia isn’t uniform across Gen Z, as you can imagine. Just 33% of young Black adults in the generation said they wanted to live in the past, compared to 52% of whites, according to NBC. That likely has something to do with the prolific and systematic racial discrimination of the 20th century (especially before the Civil Rights Act of 1964) and the existence of chattel slavery in the 19th century.

The survey didn’t drill down specifically on that question. But it seems like a safe bet.

Monday, 11 May 2026

Beef is getting bougie

 Beef is getting bougie

Expensive steak at a supermarket

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

A new study found that proteinmaxxing by gorging on steak tips is extremely effective at slimming down...your wallet. US beef prices have soared in recent years due to cattle herds shrinking to record lows, spurring many carnivores to pivot to the other dominant source of protein—chicken.

As domestic beef production declined 4% last year, wholesale beef prices rose 13% in February from the same month last year, according to government data. The supermarket price tag of a pound of ground beef, aka the go-to for the budget-conscious, reached $6.75 in January, compared to $5.03 two years prior.

Shoppers aren’t the only ones hit with sticker shock: Steakhouses say they’ve been forced to either absorb soaring beef costs to the detriment of their profits, or risk driving customers away with higher prices or reduced portions.

Swapping steak for wings

While surveys show more Americans view meat as important to their diets, they might be starting to cut back on beef. Americans ate 58.5 pounds of red meat on average last year, down from 59.1 pounds in 2024, according to USDA estimates. It projects beef intake will decline 2% this year.

Industry observers say that bargain hunters typically aren’t forsaking cow meat all together, but are instead trading down from filet mignon to value cuts like sirloin. Some are pivoting to chicken, which is 30% to 40% cheaper than ground beef. Tyson Foods reported selling 3.7% more chicken in the last three months of last year, while beef sales dropped 7.3%.

Chicken is top of the food chain…when it comes to fast food. The likes of Raising Cane’s and Dave’s Hot Chicken have had an expansion bonanza in recent years, while burger-centric value chains like Burger King are struggling with declining margins. Meanwhile, McDonald’s recently beefed up its chicken offerings by adding sauce-lathered and seasoned McCrispy Strips to its menu.

Sunday, 10 May 2026

Netflix wants you scrolling clips on your phone

 Netflix wants you scrolling clips on your phone

Netflix

Nick Iluzada

Netflix is finally acknowledging that most people looking to kill time while waiting for the bus would rather scroll 30-second videos than watch The Irishman. The streaming service launched a short-form vertical video feed called Clips as part of an app revamp unveiled in the US and eight other countries yesterday.

While it sounds like Netflix is entering TikTok’s turf, the streamer insists that Clips won’t be the place to witness a day in the life of a 28-year-old who works in private equity in New York. Instead, Netflix’s algorithmic feed serves clips from the shows and movies in its content library to help viewers discover new titles:

  • Eventually, it’ll also feature clips from podcasts, a content genre Netflix has invested heavily into in recent months, as well as live events.
  • The streamer will soon let users choose collections of video genres they want to watch, like romance and reality TV.

Big picture: Netflix says Clips is meant to meet people where they’re at—namely, on their phones—to command their eyeballs when they’re not in front of a TV. Netflix’s streaming rivals Peacock and Disney+ also recently launched vertical video feeds.

A new Rolling Stones album — Foreign Tongues — is on the way | CBC News

A new Rolling Stones album — Foreign Tongues — is on the way | CBC News

A new Rolling Stones album — Foreign Tongues — is on the way

Album will include late drummer Charlie Watts in one of his final recording sessions

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A man singing and pointing upwards, behind him are three other men playing the guitar, and behind them, there is one man playing the drums.
The Rolling Stones perform in New York City at a celebration for the release of their album Hackney Diamonds in October 2023. The Stones are set to release a new album — Foreign Tongues — later this summer. (Evan Agostini/Invision/The Associated Press)

Sometimes, you can always get what you want: On Tuesday, The Rolling Stones confirmed that they'll release a new album, Foreign Tongues, on July 10.

They also released a new single, titled In The Stars.

To celebrate, Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood will attend an album announcement event in Brooklyn this afternoon.

The Stones' last album was 2023's Hackney Diamonds. It was their first album of original material in 18 years — since 2005's A Bigger Bang. It was also their first full-length release since the death of drummer Charlie Watts in 2021. He appeared posthumously on two of that album's 12 tracks.

According to media materials for the album, Foreign Tongues will also include a special appearance from Watts from one of his final recording sessions before his death, as well as contributions from Steve Winwood, Paul McCartney, The Cure's Robert Smith and Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Chad Smith.

"I love doing these recording sessions in London at Metropolis. It was a very intense few weeks recording Foreign Tongues," Mick Jagger said in a statement.

"We had 14 great tracks and we went as fast as we could. I like the room there as it's not too big so you can feel the passion in the room from everyone."

The Stones worked closely with Oscar-winning pop producer Andrew Watt (known for his work with Post Malone and Justin Bieber, to name a few) on Hackey Diamonds, and that relationship continues with Foreign Tongues.

A taste of 'Foreign Tongues'

Speculation surrounding a new Stones' album has been going around for weeks. First, posters appeared around London with the band name The Cockroaches, a pseudonym the Stones have used in the past, along with a QR code.

The code led to thecockroaches.com and a sign-up page. Once users signed up, they received a confirmation message from Universal Music — the Stones' label. Representatives did not provide The Associated Press with comment or confirmation at the time.

Eventually, it lead to a white label, vinyl-only release of the track Rough and Twisted using The Cockroaches name — the first true tease of Foreign Tongues decipherable only by their most dedicated fans.

Then, in the week leading up to their announcement, billboards with the band's iconic mouth and tongue logo began appearing in major cities around the world with the words "Foreign Tongues" in various languages: "Fremmede Sprog," "Vreemde Tongen," "Dayuhang Dila," "외국어," and "Langues Étrangères" among them.

Around the same time, the band's official website was updated to feature video clips stylized to look like surveillance footage of them in the studio.

On Sunday, the band shared a slide puzzle graphic fans believe is the album artwork, depicting a cartoonish collage of the members' faces. And they were correct; it was the official album cover.

There was also a short video clip, just 10-seconds long, that appeared to tease a new song.

Saturday, 9 May 2026

Protein is now in *gestures broadly at everything*

 Protein is now in *gestures broadly at everything*

grocery store shelf with Barilla Protein+

mailcaroline/Adobe Stock

There was a time when if you heard someone mention “protein,” they were wearing a fluorescent tank top and on their way to a GNC at the local mall.

Now, protein is everywhere. There are more powder options and awful-tasting bars available than ever before. It’s emphasized at restaurants and in products you never thought would be a protein source (toaster pastries???). It’s all part of a tectonic shift in culture: Americans are pursuing healthier lifestyles and consuming more protein and fewer carbs.

The protein–GLP-1 connection

The increase in popularity (and affordability) of GLP-1s like Ozempic and Wegovy in the last few years lines up perfectly with the spike in demand for protein:

  • A 2025 Gallup report found that 12% of Americans (~30 million) were taking weight loss drugs, up from 6% in 2024. A separate study said that share was just 2.9% in 2019.
  • The 2025 IFIC Food & Health Survey showed that 71% of Americans have increased their protein intake. Research from Cargill found that, six years earlier, only 48% were upping their protein consumption.

Businesses jumping on the trend: General Mills did $100 million in sales in the US in its fiscal 2024 from its protein cereals alone. PepsiCo—the makers of Doritos Protein—expects the protein category to continue to grow. Meanwhile, a study funded by the beef stick company Chomps found that protein snacks are growing at three times the rate of the overall snacking industry.

Going after the health-conscious: Writing “protein” on a bag of chips or tub of ice cream appears to be working. A 2025 survey from the National Frozen & Refrigerated Foods Association found that 46% of GLP-1 drug users are more likely to purchase a frozen food product if it has high-protein content.

Bottom line: With the prices of GLP-1s coming down, and more pill forms on the way for people who hate needles, the demand for protein may only increase. The expectation is that the global protein market, which was valued at $56 billion last year, will surpass $100 billion by 2034, per research from a food and beverage consultancy.

Friday, 8 May 2026

$50 for a movie ticket

 $50 for a movie ticket

A movie theater seat on a red carpet

Niv Bavarsky

Dinner and a movie? In this economy? We have reached the point where a date night with two movie tickets can run you $100—and that doesn’t even include popcorn. Regal Cinemas recently sold out in mere minutes for $50 tickets to see Dune: Part Three projected in 70 millimeter IMAX film over its December opening weekend, according to the Wall Street Journal, which notes it’s part of a larger premium movie ticket trend:

  • Last year, 17% of film tickets sold were for theaters with bigger screens and better sound (typically at a higher cost), compared with 13% in 2021.
  • Cinema-goers snap up seats in these theaters faster than others, so theater owners are building more of them. By the end of last year, AMC had 517, which is 30% more than the chain had in 2021.

But the WSJ says Hollywood studios aren’t sold on movie theaters going big on screens and prices, fearing that upcharging the most devoted cinephiles could backfire by turning a night at the movies from a bit of fun to a special occasion.

Thursday, 7 May 2026

A sub-2 marathon twofer

 A sub-2 marathon twofer

Sabastian Sawe after the London Marathon

Alex Davidson/Getty Images

Quite the feat. Quite the feet. Two runners officially broke the two-hour marathon mark in London. (Take that, robots!) Kenya’s Sabastian Sawe ran 26.2 miles in 1 hour, 59 minutes, and 30 seconds, shattering the world record by more than a minute. Then, Ethiopia’s Yomif Kejelcha crossed the finish line 11 seconds later—not a bad effort for his first-ever marathon. Let’s hope they both BQ’d.

Sawe and Kejelcha were wearing Adidas shoes, as was the top woman, Ethiopia’s Tigst Assefa, a nice tailwind for the German shoe company, which has been looking to get a leg up in the performance sports market. According to Bloomberg and researcher Circana, the US market for running shoes was up 13% year over year through February, hitting $8.1 billion.

Wednesday, 6 May 2026

Trader Joe's customers sue over coffee's caffeine levels

Trader Joe's customers sue over coffee's caffeine levels
By
Megan Cerullo

April 24, 2026 / 3:27 PM EDT / CBS News
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Some Trader Joe's coffee drinkers are angry they didn't get their caffeine fix, according to a new lawsuit filed against the retailer.

Customers allege in a class-action lawsuit filed in California on Thursday that Trader Joe's deceptively advertised its French Roast Low Acid whole bean coffee, leading them to believe it contained more caffeine than it did.

Four plaintiffs who purchased the Trader Joe's coffee product, sold at the retailer's stores across the country, allege the grocer failed to disclose that the product contained less caffeine than typical coffee products. Plaintiffs allege Trader Joe's falsely advertised its coffee by not indicating low caffeine content.Trader Joe's

It is common practice, attorneys for the plaintiffs claim, to indicate a coffee product's caffeine content only when "some process is used to reduce the amount of caffeine contained therein."

"For example, full caffeinated coffee does not have any special labeling denoting that it is fully caffeinated, but 'decaf' and 'half-caff' coffees are labelled as such," the suit states.

While testing shows that the French Roast Low Acid coffee contained half the caffeine of a regular blend, it was not labeled accordingly, the suit claims, leading consumers to "purchase the product believing that it is fully caffeinated when it is not."

Trader Joe's did not immediately respond to CBS News' request for comment on the lawsuit.
Seeking damages

The suit claims that consumers rely on caffeine to fuel their work and personal lives.

"It is so common that it is now cliché that coffee drinkers depend on the caffeine contained therein to provide them with the energy they need to get through the day. Accordingly, the amount of caffeine in a coffee blend affects a consumer's purchasing decision," the suit states.

A low-caffeine drink would not suffice for regular coffee drinkers, it adds. If they did choose to purchase a "half-caff" product, they would pay less for it, the lawsuit states.

Plaintiffs are seeking damages and for Trader Joe's to stop selling the product through misleading marketing, according to the lawsuit.

Edited by Aimee Picchi

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