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Police seized a Tesla Cybertruck being driven illegally in the UK

The Tesla Cybertruck seized by Bury Police in the UK
The Tesla Cybertruck seized by police in England last week.

Bury Police

  • Police in England last week seized a Cybertruck as they are not legal to drive on UK roads.
  • The Tesla vehicle is not on sale in Europe, and attempts to import it are not going well.
  • The Cybertruck's weight and sharp edges mean it is unlikely to win European approval anytime soon.

The Cybertruck is now regularly seen on US roads β€” but attempts to import it across the Atlantic are not going well.

A modified version of Tesla's electric pickup was seized in the UK on Thursday, with police warning that it's not legal to drive there and could pose a danger to pedestrians and other road users.

The Cybertruck, which appears to have been fitted with a light bar and a custom "Cyberbeast" wrap, was stopped in the town of Whitefield, near Manchester in northwest England.

Authorities confiscated the vehicle after finding that the Cybertruck was registered and insured abroad, which is illegal in the UK.

In a post on X, Bury police warned that the EV did not have a "certificate of conformity," making it illegal to drive on public roads in the UK.

"Whilst this may seem trivial to some, legitimate concerns exist around the safety of other road users or pedestrians if they were involved in a collision with a Cybertruck," police said.

The Cybertruck has become a common sight on US roads since it launched in 2023 β€” but despite arriving in Mexico and Canada last year, it remains unavailable in Europe, one of Tesla's biggest markets.

The truck's sharp edges, which have seen some owners report injuries in the US, likely breach rules in the European Union and UK that prevent vehicles with "sharp external projections" being sold.

The weight of the Cybertruck also poses a barrier for any European Tesla fans looking to ship one across the Atlantic.

The vehicle weighs 8,830 to 9,170 pounds, or between 4.4 and 4.5 tons when factoring in passengers and cargo. That means it's probably too heavy to be driven in Europe with a standard driver's license, experts previously told BI. Most drivers in the UK and EU need a different license for vehicles over 7,700 pounds.

A few modified Cybertrucks have been imported into Europe. Campaign groups have called for the truck to be banned completely after a truck with rubber-padded edges was registered in the Czech Republic last year.

Tesla has not made any announcement about a potential UK or EU launch and there's doubt about potential demand in Europe.

Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment from BI.

Do you own a Cybertruck outside the US? Get in touch with this reporter at [email protected]

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British Airways sues airport handlers for $1.2 million after almost 20 pounds of gold jewelry was stolen

British Airways planes move in and out of Heathrow International Airport February 19, 2014 in London, England.
British Airways was transporting gold jewelry from Bahrain to Chicago.

Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images

  • Almost 20 pounds of gold jewelry was stolen from a British Airways plane in Chicago.
  • Two employees from a ground handling firm were prosecuted over the incident.
  • BA is asking for compensation after a Bahraini court ordered the airline to pay back the jeweler.

British Airways has filed a $1.2 million lawsuit after almost 20 pounds of gold jewelry was stolen from one of its planes.

The airline says it was contracted by Al-Arefi Jewelry to transport the valuable cargo from Bahrain to Chicago in July 2023.

However, after the flight from London to Chicago O'Hare Airport landed, the jewelry was reported missing.

British Airways is suing Ground Services International, which is owned by the Emirati firm dnata and provides ground-handling services at several US airports.

The suit, filed in a Chicago court last October, says two GSI employees have been prosecuted for stealing the jewelry when the plane landed at O'Hare.

As a result of the theft, Al-Arefi brought legal action against the airline.

Last February, a Bahraini court ordered BA to pay the jeweler 153,000 dinars (roughly $406,000.)

BA says it wrote to GSI to request compensation over this, but the latter has refused, resulting in it taking legal action.

The airline says that GSI is in breach of the Standard Ground Handling Agreement because it did not safeguard valuable cargo and has not compensated it.

BA is asking for over $1.2 million, which consists of repaying the Bahraini court's judgment, attorneys' fees over $100,000, and more than $700,000 in consequential losses.

A settlement conference has been scheduled for February 11, according to a court document seen by Business Insider.

Dnata did not immediately respond to a request for comment sent by BI outside US working hours.

Read the original article on Business Insider

BI Davos Diary: How an AI agent was so good it was literally given a seat at the boardroom table

A shot of the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2025 in Davos Switzerland with two men in the foreground
Three men stand in front of the WEF sign at Davos, Switzerland.

FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP via Getty Images

  • Tech and business leaders are in Davos, Switzerland for the World Economic Forum.
  • They've been discussing Donald Trump's inauguration and AI as they wait for the event to begin in earnest.
  • This is what Business Insider is hearing and seeing at the convention of the rich and powerful.

The World Economic Forum in Davos doesn't begin in earnest until later on Monday, but business and tech leaders have already descended on the Swiss mountain resort.

AI and what Donald Trump's presidency will mean are proving hot topics.

Business Insider is on the ground and talking to people. This is what we're hearing.

  • Talk of AI and AI agents is already in full swing here, but Mihir Shukla, CEO of Automation Anywhere, believes this year the conversation is turning from hype to questions about practical realities. "As CEOs here are chasing AI, they find it cool, but the job is to find value," he told BI in an interview. "I know this is cool, but what can I do with it? I think that conversation happens this year."

    Can AI do his job yet? Not completely, but he admitted it could do some. A fun example: His company built a boardroom AI agent and trained it on years of the company's financial information and presentations. "It was able to match patterns that the most experienced people couldn't," he said. It was so good, they even gave the AI agent an empty seat at the boardroom table for dramatic effect. β€” Hugh Langley

  • One hurdle with AI agents: How do companies get paid for their work, and who gets the credit, and more importantly, the revenue, internally? Raj Sharma, EY's global managing partner for growth and innovation, told BI the power of AI agents is forcing the professional services giant to reconsider its commercial model. Instead of just charging clients based on the hours and resources EY might spend on a project, Sharma said with AI agents it can take a "service-as-a-software" approach where clients pay based on outcome.

    The issue isn't just external. Some thought needs to be given to who owns the agents and is responsible for the revenue they bring in. "As much time as we are spending on the technology aspect of these things, the whole commercial model, the risk models associated with that, there's an equal amount of energy, at least companies like ours are spending, to say 'What is the right commercial model?'" Sharma said. β€” Dan DeFrancesco

  • It's a bit warmer than usual in the mountain town this week, with daily highs reaching the mid-to-high 30s. At night, it's only expected to drop to the mid-to-high 20s. (The daily average temperature for the town is typically in the low 20s.) And the famous "suits and boots" look the conference has become known for won't be as necessary this week with no snow forecast.

    All of that is in stark contrast to the US, where the East Coast is dealing with some severe cold weather and a rare snow and ice storm threatens the South. β€” Dan DeFrancesco

A photo of the Promenande at the Davos World Economic Forum, showing a sign saying "India Bharat"
Davos' Promenade is full of emerging economies setting out their stalls.

Spriha Srivastava/Business Insider

  • Walking down the Promenade in Davos Sunday night, I couldn't help but notice something different β€” emerging economies are showing up in a bigger way this year. Last year, India and Saudi Arabia made a splash, staking out prime real estate along this iconic stretch where you're just as likely to bump into a government leader as you are a tech billionaire.

    But this year? The guest list has expanded. Brazil, Indonesia, Mongolia, and Korea have all joined the Davos scene, setting up their own hubs and signaling that they're ready to be heard. I've got meetings lined up with officials from these countries, and I'm curious to hear what's top of mind for them. One recurring theme? Donald Trump's reelection and what it could mean for the developing world. With global capital still flowing largely from the US, there's a lot at stake. Policies shaped in Washington have ripple effects from Jakarta to SΓ£o Paulo. The mood here suggests leaders aren't just watchingβ€”they're strategizing. β€” Spriha Srivastava

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These 8 charts show what bubble-spotter Ivy Zelman thinks will happen in the US real-estate market after the least affordable year since 1984

An aerial view of Summerlin, Nevada
Homebuyers may have more success this year, but the bar is very low.

halbergman/Getty Images

  • Last year was the toughest for entry-level home affordability in four decades.
  • Prospective buyers have reasons to be hopeful, but mortgage rates aren't among them.
  • Here's what top real-estate analyst Ivy Zelman thinks will happen in 2025.

The US real-estate market is bound to have a better year in 2025 after a historically horrible stretch for housing affordability, but those looking for major improvements may be disappointed.

Entry-level home affordability reached a 40-year low last year, according to data compiled by Zelman & Associates, the real-estate research firm led by famed analyst Ivy Zelman.

2024 was the worst year for entry-level home affordability in four decades, according to Zelman & Associates (@zelmanZreport ). Planning to talk with Ivy Zelman about this next week for @BusinessInsider pic.twitter.com/Hvafi23pJT

β€” James Faris (@JamesFaris_) January 17, 2025

Would-be homebuyers were battered by exorbitant property prices and mortgage rates. Although both aspects of affordability improved modestly from peak levels, it wasn't enough to give home sales a meaningful jumpstart.

Younger generations who didn't already own property had it toughest. First-time homebuyers made up less than a quarter of purchases, Realtor.com found β€” the lowest rate since 1981. Housing analysts are likely sick of references to the 1980s, which was one of the toughest times on record for home affordability.

The new year often brings optimism, and 2025 is no different for those hoping to buy a house.

But it may be best to stay patient, based on year-ahead projections from Zelman and her team. Their estimates for mortgage rates, home sales, prices, and supply in a January report indicate that the year ahead will be better in many ways than 2024, though still full of headaches.

Heeding Zelman's calls has historically paid off. Nearly 20 years ago, Zelman was famously skeptical about the housing market. Shortly after came the housing bubble and financial crisis. She also warned of higher home insurance costs this summer due to rising global temperatures, before the devastating California fires that some observers say are climate change-related.

Below are eight charts from Zelman's report showing what's next for US real estate, which includes the housing and rental markets.

1. Mortgage rates stay stuck high
Mortgage rates stay stuck high

Zelman & Associates

Many of last year's upbeat predictions about the housing market, including from Zelman, centered around declining mortgage rates. The 30-year fixed rate had tumbled from 7.8% in late October to 6.6% by New Year's, and analysts said it would fall further as interest rates dropped.

Rates then reversed higher through April to 7.2%, which was a major surprise for Zelman. The unexpected jump in borrowing costs postponed sales, though it looked like a blip once rates trended lower through the summer and into the early fall.

But in the last four months, rates have steadily risen back to highly restrictive levels. The US economy is even healthier than expected, and investors think President-elect Trump will usher in even stronger growth and potentially higher inflation.

Either way, markets are counting on higher-for-longer rates, as is Zelman. She thinks rates will be roughly flat this year and sees the 30-year hovering around 6.7% before slipping to 6.5% in 2026. That means buyers shouldn't hold their breath for lower borrowing costs.

2. Home sales march higher
Home sales march higher

Zelman & Associates

Elevated mortgage rates are a dealbreaker for many buyers and unacceptable for others.

About three-quarters of current owners have mortgage rates below 5%, Zelman's firm found, and over half (56%) are locked into rates lower than 4%. It's no wonder why they're reluctant to swap that rock-bottom rate for a 7% mortgage.

However, those who need to move may decide they can't wait any longer, given that rates may stay near current levels for years.

Both new and existing home sales should rise about 5% next year in a healthy economy, in Zelman's view. A year ago, and last April, she thought sales would surge 8% in 2025, which reflects how higher-than-anticipated rates are weighing on demand.

3. Existing home prices rise at a modest pace
Existing home prices rise at a modest pace

Zelman & Associates

Homeowners are already reluctant to move, so it stands to reason that they'll hold out for higher prices. Properties already on the market should sell for about 3% more than last year, according to Zelman & Associates, though that's below last year's rate and the expected figure for 2026.

4. New home prices inch up
New home prices inch up

Zelman & Associates

A glut of new homes entering the market will keep prices at bay, Zelman and her team say. They expect freshly made properties to sell for 1% more than in 2024, following a year of flat prices.

5. Single-family rent growth stays in check
Single-family rent growth stays in check

Zelman & Associates

On the rental side, Zelman thinks landlords will still score price hikes, though at much lower rates than in the mid- and post-pandemic boom.

Rent growth should fall below 3% for single-family units for the first time in a decade, as rising inventory means that the occupancy rate isn't nearly as stretched as it was a few years ago.

6. Multi-family rent growth remains below-trend
Multi-family rent growth remains below-trend

Zelman & Associates

Rent for multi-family units, which includes apartments, will also stay subdued, Zelman's firm said. Rent in these setups may drift north of 2%, but that's still well below levels from the 2010s.

7. Rent hikes will trail wages again
Multi-family rent growth remains below-trend

Zelman & Associates

The silver lining for renters is that these increases shouldn't break the bank. Wage growth outpaced rent growth last year for the first time since at least the mid-2010s, according to Zelman & Associates, and the trend should continue this year and into 2026.

8. Multi-family supply growth slows but stays strong
Multi-family supply growth slows but stays strong

Zelman & Associates

There's a simple reason why rent growth isn't budging much: tenants increasingly have options since apartment supply is soaring.

Last year saw the ninth-biggest increase in multi-family inventory in the last five decades, Zelman and her peers noted. Over 600,000 new multi-family setups went online in 2024, and while that figure may fall this year, it still should be a big year for apartment construction.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Trump to revoke security clearances of 51 former intelligence officials

Shortly after being sworn in at high noon today, President-elect Trump plans to revoke security clearances of 51 former intelligence officials who signed a letter in 2020 saying emails from Hunter Biden's laptop carried "classic earmarks of a Russian information operation.

  • We're told Day 1 will bring about 200 executive actions of various sorts, including executive orders.
  • Day 1 actions are expected to include declaring an emergency at the U.S.-Mexico border, Jan. 6 pardons, a TikTok reprieve, and executive orders to increase fossil fuel development and reduce civil service protections for federal workers.

Why it matters: The action on security clearances is a Day 1 sign that Trump plans to use his formidable tools of office in his war with what he calls the "intelligence apparatus," which he blames for the "Russia collusion hoax."

  • "The threats have real teeth to them," a transition source told me.

The big picture: During the 75-day transition, Trump's team put a huge focus on prepping a Day 1 barrage to tell the story of "promises made, promises kept" β€” before he's even had a full day in the Oval Office.

  • "I will act with historic speed and strength and fix every single crisis facing our country," Trump said yesterday at a Make America Great Again Victory Rally at Capital One Arena in Washington.
  • "Before even taking office, you are already seeing results that nobody expected to see," he added. "Everyone is calling it the ... I don't want to say this β€” it's too braggadocious. But we'll say it anyway, the Trump effect. It's you, you're the effect. Since the election, the stock market has surged, and small business optimism has soared ... Bitcoin has shattered one record high after another."

Charlie Kirk β€” founder and CEO of Turning Point USA, and one of the most powerful MAGA podcasters β€” calls this "Liberation Day."

  • Steve Bannon, whose "War Room" podcast is powerful with Trump's base, told me it's a "tsunami this time ... flood the zone." Bannon said the fusillade will mean "the media is so overwhelmed with so much activity on so many fronts that it cannot process."

Behind the scenes: John Ratcliffe β€” Trump's pick for CIA director, who served as director of national intelligence during Trump's first term β€” brought up the issue of the 51 former officials at his confirmation hearing last week.

  • We hear Ratcliffe pushed the idea of revoking the security clearances, and Trump loved the idea.

Reality check: A former U.S. official told us that some of the 51 officials are fully retired, and sees the move as largely symbolic β€” "none of these people are going to lose their day job."

LA fires threaten to push Hollywood further away

Hollywood was already drifting out of Hollywood, and the destructive wildfires that have ravaged Los Angeles dealt another blow to the city's attempt at winning back film and TV productions.

Why it matters: The city's biggest economic driver is still recovering from a challenging decade that has already included a pandemic and twin labor strikes.


State of play: LA-based film and TV production had its second worst year in terms of shooting days, according to FilmLA, a non-profit group that hands out filming permits in the city.

  • Last year featured 23,480 shooting days, coming only ahead of 2020.
  • Overall production last year was down 31% compared to its five-year average (not including 2020).
  • Although many studio facilities were relatively untouched by the fires, production was still halted, though some shows have picked back up.

The big picture: Over the past decade-plus, Hollywood has increasingly moved production outside of Southern California to places like Georgia, New York, New Jersey and New Mexico due in large part to generous tax breaks.

  • Many big budget films are also increasingly choosing to shoot outside of the U.S. For example, 2022's "The Batman" was filmed almost entirely in England and Scotland and used Warner Bros.' Leavesden studio in England.
  • Many TV shows choose to film in Toronto or Vancouver to save costs.

What's next: California Governor Gavin Newsom has proposed to double the state's film and TV tax credit from $330 million to $750 million annually. That would take it past states like New York.

  • In December, a new coalition made up of over 30 different local organizations, including studio operators and payroll firms, called the California Production Coalition, formed to lobby the state on how it can stop productions from leaving.
  • President-elect Trump said Thursday that he'd appoint three actors β€” Mel Gibson, Sylvester Stallone and Jon Voight β€” as "special ambassadors" in order to help bring "Hollywood, which has lost much business over the last four years to Foreign Countries, BACK!"
  • It's unclear what the three β€”Β Gibson is also a director β€”Β can actually do to reverse the trend.

Zoom in: Additionally, there are multiple studio renovation projects in various stages of planning and development that could total nearly $3 billion.

  • The morning before the fires started, the Los Angeles City Council approved Hackman Capital's $1 billion proposal to expand the famed Television City studio. Hackman has a separate $1 billion proposal to renovate Radford Studio Center.
  • Warner Bros. is nearly finished with a $500 million renovation of its Ranch Lot and East End Studios is building a $230 million studio in the Arts District.

The bottom line: Given that Hollywood is likely to play a starring role in Los Angeles' recovery efforts, there may be even more incentive now to bring filmmaking back home.

Trump to declare "emergency" in burst of energy orders

President-elect Trump's opening flurry of executive orders will declare a "national energy emergency" to juice higher production and lower consumer costs, an incoming administration official tells Axios.

  • The wave of moves on day 1 or shortly after is also expected to include an executive order to "unleash Alaska's natural resource potential." The order will support liquefied natural gas exports from the 49th state, with an eye toward helping Asia-Pacific allies.

Why it matters: Trump wants to send an instant message of "promises made, promises kept" β€” and signal a much friendlier climate for businesses across the board.

Trump's energy executive actions will create "conditions that facilitate investment, that facilitate job creation, that facilitate the production of America's natural resources, and the result will be lower prices for the American people," an incoming White House energy adviser told us.

  • "National security is a key issue here," the adviser said. "Energy is fundamental to our foreign policy, and reducing American energy production curtails our ability to exercise our foreign policies."

Threat level: Trump's attempted reversal of Biden-era policies could boost U.S. greenhouse gas emissions β€” or at least slow down projected reductions.

Future focus: The power to fuel AI β€” which requires energy-thirsty data centers β€” is top of mind for the incoming White House, which is vowing to "unleash" U.S. energy.

  • The emergency order is expected to focus on electricity generation. U.S. power demand is rising quickly after staying largely flat for the last 15 years.

Friction point: "We're in an AI race with the People's Republic of China and other nations," the incoming energy adviser said.

  • "It's fundamental that we're able to produce the necessary electricity here in the United States so that we can win that race and protect our nation."

The big picture: Trump's team aims to ease construction of fossil-fuel infrastructure, such as pipelines. The new administration also is expected to overturn a suite of Biden-era policies:

  • A major slowdown of oil and gas leasing in the Gulf of Mexico and new bans in other coastal waters.
  • EPA greenhouse gas regulations on power plants, vehicles, and oil and gas infrastructure.
  • A "pause" on new LNG export licenses to major markets.
  • Restrictions on oil, gas and mineral projects in Alaska.

Reality check: Trump's "dominance" agenda will confront market and process barriers β€” and plenty of litigation.

  • U.S. oil output is already at record levels. Tepid global demand growth makes producers in Texas and elsewhere unlikely to flood the market.
  • Gasoline and diesel costs are tethered to oil prices set on global markets, while electricity costs tend to be highly regional and dependent on weather and other forces.
  • Executive orders can make some instant policy. Often they're a symbolic opening of the long, legally fraught bureaucratic slog of formally unwinding agency rules and policies.

The intrigue: It's unclear precisely what the "emergency" declaration and other orders will entail.

  • "We're going to cut the burdensome red tape and bureaucracy that have inhibited our economy for four years now," the incoming energy adviser said.
  • Presidents can use emergency authorities to redirect resources and push the private sector to boost or maintain critical supplies.

Between the lines: The oil and gas industry will cheer Trump's opening moves. But executives are wary of his plans for tariffs, which could raise project costs β€” and spur retaliation from buyers of U.S. exports.

The bottom line: The first moments and days of Trump 2.0 will ignite a U-turn from President Biden's expansive climate agenda.

  • But turning those ambitions into on-the-ground reality is a far longer, trickier task.

How long past presidential inauguration speeches were

Chart: Axios Visuals

President-elect Trump on Monday becomes the second president in U.S. history (after Grover Cleveland) to deliver a second, non-consecutive inaugural address.

Why it matters: Although Trump's first inaugural address was the shortest in modern history, it was memorable for the graphic and violent imagery he used about the country.


  • During his most recent campaign, Trump called his stream-of-conscious oration "the weave," saying he intentionally delves in and out of topics.
  • His rhetoric during the campaign was often violent and included threats to seek retribution against his perceived enemies.
  • President Biden's inaugural address was the longest in modern history since Ronald Reagan's second term in 1985. Biden's speech focused on unity and the resilience of democracy.

Who gave the longest inauguration speech

Zoom out: Every president since George Washington has delivered an inaugural address, per the Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies.

  • William Henry Harrison delivered the longest one at 8,445 words, in 1841. He died a month later of pneumonia, some said brought on by exposure to the elements during his ceremony.
  • Washington's second inaugural address was the shortest, at 135 words. Franklin D. Roosevelt's fourth in 1945 was the next shortest, at 559 words, according to the committee.

Trump inauguration speech 2017

Flashback: Trump's 2017 inauguration speech was widely seen by opponents as radical and divisive. But his first-term focus on immigration and the economy served as a foundation for his second victory β€” and today's Republican Party.

  • He used the term "American carnage" to describe urban poverty, deserted factories, violent crime and a broken education system.

The intrigue: In December, fundraising for Trump's inauguration was set to surpass that of all past ceremonies.

  • Contributions from companies like Meta, Apple, OpenAI, Uber and Amazon have been seen a an effort to build bridges with the incoming administration.

Go deeper: Companies line up to fund Trump's inauguration

All the changes coming to Starbucks this year

A customer wearing a magenta coat and black earmuffs opens the door and walks into a Starbucks store in New York City.
Starbucks is bringing back condiment bars and asking patrons to buy something to hang out in-store, among other changes.

ANGELA WEISS / AFP via Getty Images

  • Starbucks is in the middle of a turnaround effort.
  • The coffee chain is making changes, including some later this month, aimed at improving sales.
  • Here are the biggest shifts, from more free refills to the end of Starbucks' open-door policy.

Starbucks is starting off 2025 with some big changes.

Former Chipotle CEO Brian Niccol took the helm of the coffee chain in September. Since then, Starbucks has announced a series of shifts meant to get customers ordering drinks and food again.

The turnaround attempt comes asΒ Starbucks' sales,Β both in the US and globally, fell during its fourth quarter.

Here are the biggest changes that Starbucks has announced over the last few months:

Starbucks will require a purchase to hang out

Starbucks visitors will have to order something or be with someone who does in order to hang out at one of the chain's stores, starting January 27.

The coffee chain confirmed the change on January 13. It replaces the previous open-door policy, which Starbucks implemented after two black men were arrested in 2018 after one asked to use the bathroom at a Philadelphia store without buying anything.

The new policy, part of the "Coffeehouse Code of Conduct," is meant to "prioritize our paying customers who want to sit and enjoy our cafΓ©s or need to use the restroom during their visit," a Starbucks spokesperson told Business Insider.

Starbucks is offering free refills to more patrons

Another change taking effect on January 27 will allow all Starbucks customers, not just members of the chain's rewards program, to get free refills on many brewed coffees and teas.

Customers can get them by using a clean reusable cup of their own or an in-house ceramic one provided by the chain. They also have to order their drinks in-store, and refills are only available on a beverage during a single visit.

Starbucks' self-serve condiment bars are returning

Starbucks said last year that it would bring back self-service condiment bars in early 2025.

The change means customers will have to add their own milk, sugar, and other condiments to their drinks instead of relying on baristas to do it behind the counter. It will cut the time it takes baristas to serve hot cups of coffee, Niccol said on an earnings call in October.

Rewards members are getting fewer promotions through the app

The days of plentiful buy-one-get-one-free Frappuccino deals appear to be over.

Starbucks has been cutting back the number of promotions that it has offered rewards members through its app, the Wall Street Journal reported in October. It's part of a push to make the coffee chain feel more upscale, the Journal reported at the time.

The change was welcomed by some baristas, who previously said that they were overwhelmed when customers used the Starbucks mobile app to order multiple drinks at once, including through deals such as four beverages for $20.

Do you work at Starbucks and have a story idea to share? Reach out to this reporter at [email protected].

Read the original article on Business Insider

Learning to cook helped me heal after my mother's death

A woman prepares a family meal of chicken and rice.
Β The author (not pictured) reconnected with family to develop her cooking skills and help heal her own grief.

SolStock/Getty Images

  • I always enjoyed my mother's cooking, but didn't learn from her while she was still alive.
  • Returning to Libya helped the me reconnect with family and learn traditional recipes.
  • I feel my mother's presence in my own kitchen as I now have the confidence to cook and entertain.

I was 18 when my mother died. As difficult as it was to process, another tragedy loomed over me, one far less visible to the naked eye β€” I never learned how to cook from her.

Food was the thread running throughout my mother's life. There was fluffy Libyan couscous topped with glowing orange slices of pumpkin for dinner, pink Barbie princess cakes and strawberry jammed pastries for birthdays, as well as platters of her bright mouthwatering lasagna that fed our entire mosque congregation. Libyan rishta kiskas that summoned her archaic pasta maker from the darkness of the kitchen cabinet; There was also her her pastries β€” basbousa, abambar, pasta flora, fruit tart β€” which she crafted for every house party she threw.

In her life, food stretched far beyond nourishment. It was one enormous show of love, one tangible anchor of memory. I reveled in her cooking, but I never took interest in learning. My inability to carry on my mother's culinary legacy caused me to feel I'd colluded in her death in my own way.

A dining table set up for a party with two pies, a tart and other foods along with plates, napkins and other serving pieces.
The last photo of food my mother prepared for a gathering, taken in April 2013, two months before she died.

Courtesy of Nour Naas

A sparse kitchen, and even fewer skills

After the funeral, I moved into the only place I could afford, a rundown apartment unit with not a whisper of a kitchen β€” no sink, no stove, no oven β€” which deepened my distance from food.

With only a thrifted fridge and a cheap electric cooktop I purchased from Walmart, I strove to learn. I would try making tilapia which I season poorly and cooked to shreds. Ultimately, I gave up on the kitchen, haunted by my lost inheritance. I survived off whatever I could unearth at the corner store or the surprise aluminum trays full of home-cooked meals community members dropped off.

A new chance to get it right

At 23, everything shifted when I left California to return to Libya for the first time since my mother's death to be with her family. Still entrenched in grief, being able to finally mourn together enabled me to wholeheartedly approach the kitchen.

I asked my Auntie Leila to teach me how to make couscous, and she happily agreed. It was a favorite dish growing up, one my mother would typically make on weekends. I peeled carrots and potatoes as she seasoned the bubbling lamb stew. My prodding about measurements and cooking times did nothing but elicit her to huff out an age-old Libyan proverb that roughly translates to "my eye is my scale."

It was a bittersweet compensation for all the years I missed with my mother in the kitchen. Though the couscous was not an exact replica of my mother's recipe, it managed to capture the essence of it, giving me the strength to move forward on my own culinary journey.

Finding the confidence to try

Upon returning to California, I cobbled together the best kitchen I possibly could. I splurged on a new fridge, a new cooktop, and thrifted a shelf to store spices. I even procured my first apron, which felt as symbolic as planting a flag atop Mount Everest.

I made dishes from around the world: gochujang chicken, doro wat, Γ§ilbir, and shokupan. At my mother's friends' homes, where I had always sat on the outskirts of their kitchens, I began to invite myself beside them at the stove. I learned their beloved recipes and I taught them the ones I had recently learned. I fell in love with the transformative ritual of kneading, mixing, and stirring. Most of all, I fell in love with how I was transforming, how each dish made my grief easier to carry.

Three, cheese fatayer, prepped and ready to go into the oven.
I started to experiment with many different cuisines as I became more comfortable in the kitchen. Here's cheese fatayer, prepped and ready to go into the oven.

Courtesy of Nour Naas

Years later, I moved out of my unit and into a home fit for the living. The apartment was modest, but it felt like a palace to me, complete with a sink, stove, and oven. I ecstatically hosted my first-ever gathering. As I flitted from one corner of the kitchen to the next to prepare dinner, I felt my mother's gentle presence wrap all around me like I was being guided by her spirit while still making the kitchen my own.

I used to wish for a romantic story of how I learned to cook side-by-side with my darling mother. But the real story, pieced together in her absence, is no less filled with love.

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