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14 easy cookout foods you can make in a slow cooker this Memorial Day weekend

pulled pork sandwiches
Pulled pork sandwiches with barbecue sauce and coleslaw.

Joshua Resnick/Shutterstock

  • If you're entertaining this Memorial Day weekend, set-it-and-forget-it dishes can be a lifesaver.
  • From ribs to pulled pork, these slow-cooker recipes are perfect for summer gatherings.
  • You can also make sides like potato salad and dips in a slow cooker.

Sizzling burgers, blistered corn on the cob, and sweat dripping from your brow as you man the grill β€” this is how many mark the start of summer.

Fifty-eight percent of Americans plan to barbecue this Memorial Day weekend, according to a new WalletHub report, and the average cost of a cookout is expected to be about $31, a 4% increase from last year.

However, while grilling certainly captures the spirit of Memorial Day weekend, slow cookers can make preparing sides and meats much easier, with minimal cleanup and no need to bother with gas or charcoal.

Or at the very least, having a couple of set-it-and-forget-it dishes can help you focus on your grill.

From mouthwatering barbecue ribs to savory pulled-pork sandwiches, these slow-cooker recipes are perfect for any Memorial Day cookout.

For your Memorial Day cookout this year, try making the potato salad using your slow cooker.
a bowl of potato salad with mustard and dill
Potato salad.

ziashusha/Shutterstock

You might not know that you can parboil potatoes in a slow cooker. To do so, chop and cover the potatoes with water, a little salt, pepper, and butter, and cook them until they're fork-tender, usually about six hours on low.

Then, mix the dressing for your potato salad as you normally would, such as mayonnaise, dill, whole grain mustard, and a splash of red wine vinegar.Β 

You can also make a German-style potato salad with bacon, light dressing, and baby potatoes.

Dips, such as this spinach-and-artichoke dip, are also easily made in a slow cooker.
spinach and artichoke dip in a slow cooker
Spinach-and-artichoke dip.

Damn Delicious

"I love to make spinach-and-artichoke dip in my slow cooker," Chungah Rhee, the author of the blog Damn Delicious, told Business Insider.Β 

"You can just free up so much of your time by using a slow cooker and hang out with your guests instead of laboring in the kitchen," Rhee continued. "Especially for side dishes or dips. You put it all together, set the time, and it comes out ready to go."

This set-it-and-forget-it corn-and-jalapeΓ±o dip is creamy and easy to make.
corn and jalapeno dip in a white bowl with bacon on top
Corn-and-jalapeΓ±o dip.

Damn Delicious

"Another favorite of mine is thisΒ corn-and-jalapeΓ±o dip," Rhee told Insider.Β 

The recipe combines many of the summer's best ingredients, from fresh and vibrant jalapeΓ±os to sweet corn.

Buffalo-chicken dip is another quick and easy favorite you can make in a slow cooker.
slow cooker buffalo chicken dip
Slow cooker Buffalo-chicken dip.

Erin McDowell/Insider

One of the benefits of making a slow-cooker Buffalo-chicken dip, like this recipe on Rhee's blog β€” or any other side dish in a slow cooker β€” is that it can be prepared well ahead of time and reheated when you're ready to eat.

Rhee's advice for someone using a slow cooker for the first time for entertaining is actually to start out with a dip or side dish.Β 

"If for some reason it doesn't turn out, because we all know that can happen using an appliance for the first time, it's not detrimental to your dinner party being a success," she said.

Queso can serve a whole party when made in a slow cooker.
slow cooker queso
Slow cooker queso with red onion, cilantro, and sliced jalapeΓ±os.

Erin McDowell/Insider

This creamy queso dip from Martha Stewart uses ingredients like American cheese and pepper jack cheese, a can of evaporated milk, diced tomatoes with chilies, sliced jalapeΓ±os, red onion, and cilantro.Β 

Brisket is perfect for feeding a larger family and can easily be made in a slow cooker.
cut beef brisket on a plate
Beef brisket.

iStock / Getty Images Plus

"Brisket is a natural partner for the slow cooker, as a gentle braise renders it meltingly tender," Kim Laidlaw writes in her cookbook, "Everyday Slow Cooking: Modern Recipes for Delicious Meals."

Laidlaw's recipe for slow-cooked braised brisket includes garlic, onion, dry red wine, carrot, and chicken or beef stock, with a chimichurri sauce.

Pulled-pork sliders are another great way to use your slow cooker for a cookout.
pulled pork sandwiches with coleslaw on a plate
Pulled pork sandwiches with barbecue sauce and coleslaw.

Joshua Resnick/Shutterstock

One of the best ways to use braised and slow-cooked pork shoulder is to make pulled-pork sliders, like this Damn Delicious recipe,Β with all that tender meat.

To elevate the dish, top the meat with barbecue sauce and slaw before sandwiching it between two fluffy brioche buns or potato rolls. You can also use the carnitas to make tacos.

You can also make barbecue ribs in a slow cooker.
barbecue ribs on a serving platter
Barbecue ribs.

David P. Smith/Shutterstock

Nothing screams an end-of-summer cookout like sauce-covered ribs, like Laidlaw's recipe as shared on Cooking by the Book. After cooking them in the slow cooker, place them on a baking sheet in your oven and broil them until they're slightly crispy.

To save space on your grill, you can also make slow-cooked sausages and beer brats in the slow cooker.
bratwurst sausage with sauerkraut and dijon mustard on a bun
Bratwurst with sauerkraut and Dijon mustard on a bun.

Charles Brutlag/Getty Images

Brats with onions, peppers, and garlic simmered in the slow cooker with beer β€” like this recipe by The Magical Slow Cooker β€” are one way to use your slow cooker on Memorial Day.

Top your brats with a bit of sauerkraut and put them on buns for an easy summer dish.

Mac and cheese can also easily be made in a slow cooker.
a wooden spoon of finished mac and cheese
A spoonful of Martha Stewart's slow cooker mac and cheese.

Erin McDowell/Insider

If you're looking to add some carbs to your menu, look no further than a piping hot pot of mac and cheese. Martha Stewart's recipe for mac and cheeseΒ in a slow cooker calls for evaporated milk, three kinds of cheese, and homemade breadcrumbs.

Garlic-and-herb mushrooms are a delicious side dish but can also be used as a burger topping.
garlic herb mushrooms in a black slow cooker
Garlic-and-herb mushrooms.

Damn Delicious

"The recipe for slow-cooker garlic-herb mushrooms is divine and so easy," Rhee said. "Mushrooms made in a slow cooker are truly the best."

Shredded Buffalo chicken goes great on top of salads.
shredded buffalo chicken with lime wedge
Shredded Buffalo chicken.

from my point of view/Shutterstock

One of the best β€” and easiest β€” ways to use your Crock-Pot or slow cooker is by making shredded Buffalo chicken, such as this recipe by The Magical Slow Cooker.

Add seasoned chicken breasts to the slow cooker and cover with your preferred Buffalo sauce. Then add a splash of ranch dressing and a cube of butter, toss your chicken breasts in the mixture to coat fully, and cook until the chicken is shreddable. You can use it for Buffalo-chicken sliders, salads, or tacos.

You can even make Buffalo or barbecue chicken wings using a slow cooker.
slow cooker buffalo wings
Slow cooker Buffalo wings.

Erin McDowell/Insider

You can make any style of wings in a slow cooker, from Asian-style to barbecue and Buffalo wings. Add your wings to the slow cooker, add in your sauce of choice, toss to combine, and let them cook for a couple of hours on high.

To make them crisp up, add a cornstarch and water mixture to your slow cooker. After they're cooked through, broil them for a few minutes in the oven.

Meatballs make a great appetizer for guests and don't require cooking over a hot stove.
meatballs and sauce in a white slow cooker
Meatballs and sauce in a slow cooker.

anewlifephotostudio/Getty Images

Meatballs make the perfect appetizer for parties big and small and are easy to make in a slow cooker.Β 

Place your seasoned, raw meatballs into the slow cooker, top with sauce, and let the slow cooker finish them off, says one recipe by Spend With Pennies. Serve them on their own with toothpicks or stuff them inside toasted sub rolls for a meatball sandwich.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Melania Trump calls AI and social media 'digital candy for the next generation' in rare White House appearance

Melania Trump
"Artificial intelligence and social media are the digital candy for the next generation," Melania Trump said. "Sweet, addictive, and engineered to have an impact on the cognitive development of our children."

AP Photo/Evan Vucci

  • Melania Trump made a rare public appearance at the White House on Monday.
  • Trump praised her for bringing together both sides on revenge porn and deepfakes.
  • The reality, however, is more complicated.

Melania Trump has never been a traditional first lady. But to hear it from President Donald Trump at a White House event on Monday, she also has a rare ability to smash past entrenched partisan divides.

"I'm not even sure you realize, honey," Trump said to his wife in the Rose Garden at the White House. "You know, a lot of the Democrats and Republicans don't get along so well. You've made them get along."

The first lady's purported achievement: Supporting the passage of the "TAKE IT DOWN" Act, a bill to combat revenge porn, including deepfakes generated by artificial intelligence.

Trump signed that bill on Monday. Though most states already have revenge porn laws on the books, it's the first bill that Trump has signed in his second term that touches AI.

Melania Trump's appearance on Monday was a relative rarity. The New York Times reported earlier this month that she had spent less than 14 days at the White House since Trump's second inauguration, and the first lady has long taken a different approach to the role from prior presidential spouses.

She ultimately spoke for less than four minutes, thanking lawmakers and advocates as she decried the impact of new technologies on children.

"Artificial intelligence and social media are the digital candy for the next generation: sweet, addictive, and engineered to have an impact on the cognitive development of our children," she said.

The first lady has sought to put her stamp on the legislation, framing it as a continuation of the children's well-being and online safety initiatives that she undertook during her husband's first term. "Today, I'm proud to say that the values of 'Be Best' will be reflected in the law," she said.

The reality, however, is more complex.

The bill had been making its way through Congress last year, and it was originally supposed to be signed into law before the Trumps returned to the White House.

But after the bill passed the Senate for the first time in December, the legislation was slipped into an ill-fated government funding bill that Elon Musk and hardline conservatives tanked for unrelated reasons.

The spending bill that ultimately passed days later did not include the TAKE IT DOWN Act, requiring lawmakers to go through the whole exercise once again this year.

The bill was also never that controversial, at least on Capitol Hill. While some digital rights advocates raised free speech concerns, only two lawmakers voted against it when it came up for a vote in the House last month.

Meanwhile, it passed the Senate via a "voice vote" β€” meaning no one opposed it, so there was no need to hold a vote β€” in both December and February.

On Monday, none of that was mentioned. The first lady, according to Trump, had taken up an "amazing issue," tackling a problem that's "gone on at levels that nobody's ever seen before."

"Working with our first lady, though, we've shown that that bipartisanship is possible," Trump said. "I mean, it's the first time I've seen such a level of bipartisanship, and it's a beautiful thing to do."

Read the original article on Business Insider

Instagram is offering creators up to $20,000 to bring people to the app

Instagram app logo in front of a purple background and dollar signs

Instagram, Tyler Le/Instagram

  • Instagram is testing a new program that pays creators for driving app traffic and sign-ups.
  • The program, called "Referrals," offers $100 for every new user or 1,000 visits, up to $20,000.
  • The test is limited to US-based creators and is invite-only, Meta told BI.

Instagram's got a new pitch for creators: Get paid for bringing people to the app.

The Meta-owned app has been quietly testing a program that pays creators for driving people to the app, the company confirmed to Business Insider.

The program, called "Referrals," is an invite-only, limited test that pays US-based creators when people visit Instagram or sign up for a new Instagram account from links shared by the creator.

There are two ways creators can earn money, capped at $20,000, from Instagram's referrals:

  1. Some creators will be able to earn $100 for every eligible new user who signs up for an Instagram account.
  2. Other creators can earn $100 for every 1,000 "eligible visits" to the Instagram app.

For instance, Courtney Canfield, a creator who runs an Instagram page for her dog Rambo, was offered the latter.

Instagram's referral program is set to run for six weeks from May through June. Meta is working with a third-party partner called Glimmer to handle the payments, according to an Instagram help center page for the program.

The app is telling creators to share links β€” such as to their profile, reels, posts, stories, and channels β€” "off Instagram," on other websites and apps like TikTok, YouTube, Discord, and Substack, according to a screenshot viewed by Business Insider.

Instagram has faced fierce competition from other apps like TikTok and YouTube. The new monetization test also comes as Meta's broader competition with other social media platforms takes center stage during the Federal Trade Commission's landmark antitrust case against the company.

Instagram has recently been testing a few new ways to incentivize creators to post to the app as it continues to compete for people's attention. Earlier this year, in January, when TikTok was on the brink of a potential ban, Instagram rolled out a "Breakthrough Bonus" for creators coming over from TikTok. Instagram also inked deals with some creators for exclusive-to-Instagram reels content that ranged from $2,500 to $50,000 a month over the course of three months.

Over the past few years, Instagram has also tested several creator monetization programs.

Instagram's not the only social-media platform to incentivize people to bring over new users. Last year, TikTok rolled out a referral program that rewarded people with shopping discounts and other financial incentives for inviting friends to the app, according to The Information.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' would create 'unfettered abuse' of AI, 141 high-profile orgs warn in letter to Congress

Capitol Hill.
Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill," which includes a controversial AI provision, is making its way through Congress.

Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

  • Trump's bill could lead to rampant AI abuse, organizations warn in a letter to Congress.
  • A provision in the bill would prevent states from regulating AI for a decade.
  • The critics argue it risks civil rights, privacy, and accountability.

A group of high-profile unions, advocacy groups, non-profits, and academic institutions are warning that a provision in President Donald Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill" could lead to the "unfettered abuse" of AI.

In a letter to Congress on Monday, 141 organizations called out a provision in Trump's signature bill that would prohibit states from regulating artificial intelligence for a decade. The provision, which Republicans placed into the sweeping tax, immigration, and defense legislation, would be a huge victory for regulation-wary AI companies.

But it would be a nightmare for Americans' civil rights, the groups argued in their letter, which was addressed to Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson and Democratic House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.

"Protections for civil rights and children's privacy, transparency in consumer-facing chatbots to prevent fraud, and other safeguards would be invalidated, even those that are uncontroversial," the letter reads.

"The resulting unfettered abuses of AI or automated decision systems could run the gamut from pocketbook harms to working families like decisions on rental prices, to serious violations of ordinary Americans' civil rights, and even to large-scale threats like aiding in cyber attacks on critical infrastructure or the production of biological weapons," it continues.

And, the letter added, without state-level regulations on emerging technologies, companies wouldn't be held accountable.

"This moratorium would mean that even if a company deliberately designs an algorithm that causes foreseeable harm β€” regardless of how intentional or egregious the misconduct or how devastating the consequences β€” the company making that bad tech would be unaccountable to lawmakers and the public," the letter reads.

The letter's signatories include Georgetown Law's Center on Privacy and Technology, the Southern Poverty Law Center, the Economic Policy Institute, Amazon Employees for Climate Justice, the Alphabet Workers Union, and many others.

The provision would invalidate critical state laws β€” like those already in effect in New Jersey and Colorado β€” designed to protect people from the harms created by AI, like algorithmic discrimination, which can affect everything from housing, policing, healthcare, and financial services, the letter argues.

Those harms include "many documented cases of AI having highly sexualized conversations with minors and even encouraging minors to commit harm to themselves and others; AI programs making healthcare decisions that have led to adverse and biased outcomes; and AI enabling thousands of women and girls to be victimized by nonconsensual deepfakes," the letter says.

Trump's signature bill, which the House Budget Committee moved forward on Sunday, still has to clear a series of votes in the House before going to the Senate, and the bill's AI provision has to meet a high bar to remain in the larger bill.

The White House and a representative for Speaker Mike Johnson did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Microsoft's big event was all about the 'explosion' of AI agents

Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott talks about the growth of AI agent use at the Build 2025 developer conference.
Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott talks about the growth of AI agent use at the Build 2025 developer conference.

Microsoft

  • Microsoft's Build developer conference kicked off Monday with a slew of agentic AI updates.
  • Microsoft's CTO said there's been an "explosion" of people using agents over the last year, with daily active users doubling.
  • The keynote included new agentic features in GitHub, Microsoft 365 Copilot, and appearances from Sam Altman and Elon Musk.

It was all about agentic AI at Microsoft's big developer event on Monday.

"The thing that we've seen over the past year is just sort of an explosion of agents," Microsoft CTO and executive vice president of AI, Kevin Scott, said during the company's Build conference.

Scott added that the number of daily active users of the various AI agents that Microsoft has visibility into "more than doubled" since Microsoft's Build event last year.

CEOs and executives across the tech industry have heralded 2025 as the year of agentic AI, and the Microsoft executive took some time to define what Microsoft means by the term.

Scott described the AI agents Microsoft is building as "a thing that a human being is able to delegate tasks to." AI agents are still in their early days, and Scott said there's still a bit of a "capability overhang with reasoning" at the moment, but they will continue to improve. As that happens over the next year, he said AI agents will get more powerful and cheaper to operate.

'The next big step forward'

Microsoft made a slew of announcements about AI updates and partnerships related to agentic AI during its opening keynote at Build.

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said that the company is working to create a host of tools to help build an open, "agentic web" at scale, including cloud computing tools available through its Microsoft Azure platform. The company demoed multiple new AI features available in Windows, Office, Azure, and other platforms throughout the keynote.

Showcasing Microsoft's new Azure SRE agent for site reliability engineering, which will be embedded in GitHub Copilot, Nadella said agents are all about having a reliable AI "peer" that you can delegate complex tasks to and trust to help remove "pain points" for developers, such as getting woken up in the middle of the night to deal with a website issue.

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella talks about GitHub Copilot's new coding agent at Build 2025.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella talks about GitHub Copilot's new coding agent at Build 2025.

Microsoft

"This is the next big step forward, which is a full coding agent, built right into GitHub, taking Copilot from being a pair programmer to a peer programmer," Nadella said. "You can assign issues to Copilot, bug fixes, new features, code maintenance, and it'll complete these tasks autonomously."

Microsoft also flexed its reach with virtual appearances from a who's who of AI CEOs, including OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, Tesla and xAI CEO Elon Musk, and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang.

Altman made a live appearance virtually to talk about the evolution of agentic AI and the recent launch of Codex, the AI startup's new agent designed to assist programmers with writing code, fixing bugs, and running tests. Altman described Codex as "true software engineering task delegation."

"We've been talking about someday we'd get to a real agentic coding experience, and it's kind of wild to me that it's finally here," Altman said. "I think this is one of the biggest changes to programming that I've ever seen."

"This idea that you now have a real virtual teammate that you can assign work to, that you can say, 'Hey, go off and do some of the stuff you were just doing and increasingly more advanced things,' you know at some point saying, 'I've got a big idea, go off and work for a couple of days and do it,'" the OpenAI CEO added.

The productivity gains can also be significant, Altman said.

"It was amazing to watch over the last few months as we were working on Codex internally β€” you know there's always a few people who are the early adopters β€” and how quickly the people who were just using Codex all day changed their workflow and just the incredible amount they were able to do relative to someone else was quite interesting," he said.

Microsoft announced plans to expand the AI models available through Azure to integrate xAI's Grok 3 and Grok 3 Mini. In a pre-recorded clip, Musk, who once interned at Microsoft, talked with Nadella about his first experiences using Microsoft software as well as Grok's capabilities.

Microsoft also introduced "Copilot Tuning" to create agents using company data. The announcement confirmed Business Insider's reporting from last week that Microsoft was planning to debut a new Copilot designed to "rapidly channel an organization's knowledge into a Copilot that can 'talk,' 'think,' and 'work' like the tenant itself," according to an internal memo. That project was previously called Tenant Copilot internally, the company has since confirmed.

In Satya Nadella's closing comments, the Microsoft CEO said the company is trying to apply AI across the "full stack" of software development and agentic web products, including Microsoft 365 Teams, Copilot Studio, and more.

"Ultimately, though, all of this is about creating opportunity to fuel your ambition," the Microsoft CEO said, pointing to a father who used Foundry to speed the diagnosis of a rare disease affecting his son and a startup in South America that created an app to gamify wellness.

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Elizabeth Warren blasts stablecoin bill ahead of key vote, warning it'll help Trump 'line his pockets'

Sen. Elizabeth Warren
Elizabeth Warren isn't a fan of a stablecoin bill being considered by the Senate.

The Washington Post via Getty Images

  • Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts is railing against a major stablecoin bill in Congress.
  • Warren argued that the legislation, if passed, will "accelerate Trump's corruption."
  • The progressive lawmaker has been a frequent critic of the administration on regulatory matters.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts on the Senate floor Monday said a major stablecoin bill would boost President Donald Trump and his family's cryptocurrency business ventures.

Warren, a former Democratic presidential candidate and the ranking member of the Senate Banking Committee, is on the opposing side of the so-called GENIUS Act, a bill intended to regulate stablecoins β€” a type of currency whose value is tied to another asset.

"The GENIUS Act will accelerate Trump's corruption by supercharging the size of the stablecoin market and the reach and profitability of Trump's USD1," the lawmaker said in her Senate speech. "For the first time in American history, this bill will make our president β€” Donald Trump β€” the regulator of his own financial product."

"Congress should not be making it even easier for him to line his pockets with even more shady crypto cash," she continued. "If Congress does not fix this issue here, today, then it will be aiding and abetting his corruption every time President Trump's stablecoin is used to finance a corrupt deal."

The stablecoin bill once had a bipartisan veneer, with a bloc of Democrats joining Republicans in backing the legislation. But the bill has fallen out of favor with Democrats in the wake of Trump's crypto ventures, including the launch of his own meme coin in January and an upcoming dinner for his coin's top 220 investors.

The top 25 holders of the meme coin are set to attend a reception and a VIP White House tour.

In Warren's remarks, she also contends that the legislation could "directly lead to the next financial meltdown."

Before being elected to the Senate, Warren conceived of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the independent consumer protection agency that the White House DOGE office has sought to dismantle since the beginning of the year.

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US special ops forces want in on AI to cut 'cognitive load' and make operator jobs easier

The right-side and back of a man wearing camouflage and a helmet with a scope on it are seen through blurred out tope-colored bars with a distant mountain landscape in the background. The man's face is blurred out.
It's not just AI in drones and weapons systems. It's back-end paperwork, too.

US Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Bill Guilliam

  • US special operations is using artificial intelligence to reduce the cognitive load on operators.
  • This includes not just combat operations but also paperwork, manual tasks, and data.
  • Various types of AI are already being employed and expanded.

From warfighting to paperwork, US Special Operations Forces are interested in getting in on AI to simplify the work.

The goal for these elite forces, much like it is for regular people working office jobs and using AI to sort data or compile information, is to lessen the overall cognitive load, or mental effort, required for whatever a task may be. A lot of different types of artificial intelligence are being used, and it's only growing.

AI has many potential applications for the US military, from autonomous features in uncrewed systems to AI-enabled targeting to enhanced situational awareness. The Department of Defense is eager to implement this technology to prepare US forces for a high-end technological conflict chock full of data and information.

Future wars could be fought in an environment where decision-making may need to happen quicker than humans alone can do, and that's where military officials see the benefit of AI and human-machine teaming.

With AI, "we can reduce the cognitive burden of our operators," Col. Rhea Pritchett, the program executive officer of SOF Digital Applications, said at SOF Week in Tampa, Florida, earlier this month. Instead of worrying about other things, operators "will take that precious time to critically think about actions that they need to take next to achieve the effect that they want."

Air Force F-16 flies alongside a modified F-16 piloted by an AI algorithm.
AI is seeing a wide variety of applications in the US military, such as the Air Force's X-62 VISTA aircraft, piloted by artificial intelligence.

Air Force photo by Richard Gonzales

AI can sift through massive amounts of data quickly to focus on necessary information in a combat scenario and it can aid in mission planning and command and control functions.

This technology can also be used in battlespace awareness tools "to identify the position or location information of objects, people, and terrain β€” enhancing operator analysis and decision-making capabilities," Pritchett added over email.

These kinds of capabilities are already being developed.

But there are other functions of AI in SOF, and they aren't unlike the way civilians use ChatGPT or other AI-driven platforms for their jobs and personal lives.

That includes paperwork: situational reports, concepts for operations, and forecasting supplies. The tasks that might take an operator a long time to complete and draw their focus away from other aspects of the job.

Back-end work, as Ben Van Roo, CEO and cofounder of Legion Intelligence Inc, put it, could also be aided by artificial intelligence. Such work could include better search functions for analyzing DoD doctrine and understanding elements of specific locations, commands, or job positions.

A member of U.S. Naval Special Warfare Task Unit Europe (NSWTU-E) provides cover during a raid with Cypriot Army Special Forces in Cyprus, September 28, 2021.
Special operations is embracing a wide range of AI types across its jobs.

U.S. Army Photo by Sgt. Patrik Orcutt

One prime example could be using AI tools when entering a new position to quickly get up to speed on the work. When military personnel receive orders for their next job, it can be a lot of work to learn not only the ins and outs of the position itself but also the larger bureaucracy, geographic information, and historical and political context, what their predecessor did, types of weapons and capabilities present, and so on.

That is a bit different than how AI in the military is regularly perceived. "People tend to jump to Terminator," Van Roo said. "Actually, the great majority of it right now is just, people can barely even do their jobs with all these archaic systems."

While there are many possibilities for AI technology in warfighting systems, such as the AI-enabled drones that are demonstrating just how effective this technology can make an uncrewed fighting platform or the AI algorithms being taught to fly fighter jets, there's much that can be done to improve the mundane.

AI has the potential to address some of the headaches and help reform some older technological policies, effectively streamlining the processes. It might even have an application in assessing details for contracts and programs.

"The potential to relieve the cognitive load is extremely high," Van Roo said.

Six small drones fly in an overcast, grey sky.
Autonomous capabilities in weapons systems have raised ethical concerns.

US Army Photo by 1st Lt. Allan Cogan

AI could provide assistance with what some operators might consider the more time-consuming tasks of their job and take a form similar to an AI assistant designed to take notes, gather and review key client data, transcribe meetings, and outline important takeaways.

AI systems are already being used in SOF, Pritchett told BI, including generative machine learning, large language models, natural language processing, and computer vision.

The rise of AI in militaries has been met with skepticism and ethical concerns from experts and officials about its implementation, especially in combat scenarios.

The Pentagon has maintained that its policy on AI will keep a human in the loop for decision-making, though some observers have argued that doing so might not always be possible in a high-speed, data-driven future fight. Some have also cautioned that the technology may end up developing at a much quicker pace than Washington and the Pentagon can regulate it.

Read the original article on Business Insider

My mom helped me land my first post-college job. I initially experienced impostor syndrome, but I needed her connections.

selfie of Jaxon Novack and her mom
The author (left) used her mom's connections to get a summer internship.

Courtesy of Jaxon Novack

  • I used my mom's connections to land a summer internship, which led to a full-time job.
  • I suffered from impostor syndrome, worried I only got the job because of my mom.
  • But my mom only made the introduction; I got the job because of my accomplishments.

When I was considering my summer plans in early 2021, I knew I had to land a great internship as a college student. I debated whether to reach out to the one person I knew who had the most connections. Ultimately, I knew she would help me land the summer internship I needed. So, I asked my mom for help.

My mother has always been my inspiration as a successful businesswoman. She has held many positions in C-suite and executive roles, oftentimes being the only woman with a seat at the table. She is now an entrepreneur and business owner with connections in many industries.

I knew she would have someone I could connect with to find a job related to my field of study: public health. But once I landed the job, I experienced impostor syndrome.

Using my mom's connections helped me

Before I turned to my mother for help, I was plagued with whether I should ask for it. Did it take away from my own success by asking her? Was I earning what I had worked hard for, or just benefiting from her hard work?

Once I was able to get past the mental hurdle and ask for help, my job search quickly began to fall into place.

In my initial application, I listed my mother as a reference, as she worked very closely with the company. I didn't reference our relationship during the interview process or during work. I only brought it up when it was relevant to the conversation, but for the most part, people knew I was there for the same reasons as anyone else: to learn, to contribute, and to gain relevant experience for my intended career.

Even though the connection was made for me, the interview, conversations, and chance to position myself for a summer internship were all on me. I landed my first professional job, which led to a second internship the following summer with a different team at the same company. After those two internships, I scored a full-time role after graduation.

I struggled with impostor syndrome

At first, I struggled with impostor syndrome, thinking I had landed the job only because of my connections. I worried I hadn't actually earned the positions I was given, especially that first internship.

However, my mom repeatedly reminds me that she only made the introduction; the rest was my own doing.

My career trajectory would look very different if I didn't have that initial introduction. I feel that I utilized all of the resources available to me, but that doesn't take away from the accomplishment.

Using your network is an important step in searching for job opportunities

More recently, I have used connections to explore different ways to use a law degree. I had just finished my first year of law school and was panicking over whether I truly wanted to be a practicing attorney.

By speaking to some of my mom's contacts who had gone to law school and gone into different fields, I saw all the different ways that I could apply my law degree beyond being a practicing attorney.

I still use connections from family and friends wherever possible. The job market is hard, and I think everyone should use their network from family, neighbors, and even professors as a tool to get their foot in the door.

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Walmart just made it even easier for everyone else to raise prices

Shoppers in Walmart
Β Walmart said it will raise prices due to tariffs soon.

Brandon Bell/Getty Images

  • Walmart's announcement that it will raise prices due to tariffs has other retailers "delighted."
  • The news gives retailers cover to raise their own prices, experts told BI.
  • Trump's criticism of Walmart sends a warning about discussing price hikes.

Consumers may not be psyched about Walmart's announcement that it's going to raise prices because of President Donald Trump's tariffs, but other retailers are likely breathing a sigh of relief.

Retail analysts told Business Insider that Walmart did other companies a favor with the news, giving them more freedom to raise their own price tags.

"What they are doing is providing air cover for the tens of thousands of retailers β€” extra-large, large, medium, and small β€” all of whom are faced with exactly the same issue, and all of whom are going to be raising their prices," said Mark Cohen, a professor at Columbia Business School and the former director of retail studies at Columbia Business School. Other retailers are, he said, "delighted" about the benchmark Walmart set.

Retailers across the board are contending with rising costs, the experts told BI, but Walmart "leads the market on price," according to the cofounder of the blog Omni Talk Retail, Chris Walton. The country's biggest retailer said shoppers will probably start to see prices tick up at the end of this month and more drastically in June, and those BI spoke to agreed with that timeline.

"We have always worked to keep our prices as low as possible and we won't stop. We'll keep prices as low as we can for as long as we can given the reality of small retail margins," Molly Blakeman, a spokesperson for Walmart, told BI in a statement.

GlobalRetail analyst Neil Saunders wrote in an email that Walmart's honesty about price hikes might open the door for other retailers to have "open dialogues." Yet the honesty didn't come without consequences β€” Trump bashed the company in a Truth Social post, saying Walmart should, '"EAT THE TARIFFS,' and not charge valued customers ANYTHING. I'll be watching."

Representatives for the White House directed BI to Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt's comments on Monday about Walmart, when she confirmed that Trump will be "watching" the company and said he "has always maintained that Chinese producers will be absorbing the cost of these tariffs."

Trump's reaction will likely influence how other retailers manage their own pricing conversations, the experts said.

"Retailers will have learned they need to be very careful β€” and it's very tricky β€” on how they articulate that so as to not wind up on a Truth Social post," Michael Baker, a senior analyst at D.A. Davidson, told BI. "That does add a layer of complication."

He anticipates executives will figure out how to more delicately discuss tariffs on coming earnings calls so as not to anger the president. Walton told BI that other retailers may try to avoid talking about rising costs publicly, and instead let shelf prices speak for themselves.

"President Trump has sent a warning shot that he doesn't like companies talking about price increases related to tariffs," Saunders wrote. "That may make some retailers more hesitant to draw a link, but I don't think it will stop them putting up prices. They will need to financially."

The president has issued not-so-subtle warnings about price hikes before, like when he sharply criticized Amazon for its reported plans to publicize how much tariffs were contributing to rising costs. Amazon said it had no plans to do so on its main site at the time, but experts told BI that the swift reaction sent a "warning signal to other companies" nonetheless.

Though Walmart may be one of the first big box retailers to publicize looming price hikes, it's better positioned to deal with the new tariffs than some competitors. Both Saunders and Baker said the company's scale gives it the ability to offset some of the tariff impact.

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Bernie Sanders warns Shari Redstone 'not to capitulate' to Trump after the head of CBS News resigned

Bernie Sanders appears at a political rally
Sen. Bernie Sanders has led his colleagues in sounding the alarm about Paramount currying favor with the White House to push through its merger with SkyDance.

Nathan Morris/NurPhoto via Getty Images

  • Sen. Bernie Sanders took another swipe at Shari Redstone.
  • The former Democratic presidential hopeful was responding to the latest shake-up at CBS News.
  • On Monday, CBS News CEO Wendy McMahon announced her resignation.

Sen. Bernie Sanders on Monday intensified his pressure campaign on Paramount Global's controlling shareholder, Shari Redstone, following another major shake-up at CBS News.

CBS News CEO Wendy McMahon on Monday announced that she was stepping down, another bombshell development as its parent company, Paramount, potentially explores a settlement of President Donald Trump's suit against the company and "60 Minutes."

"I say to Shari Redstone: Enough is enough," Sanders wrote on X. "Do not capitulate to Trump's attack on a free press. Do not settle Trump's bogus lawsuit against 60 Minutes."

McMahon wrote in a message to staff that was obtained by Business Insider that it was time for her to "move on and for this organization to move forward with new leadership."

"The past few months have been challenging," she said in the message. "It's become clear that the company and I do not agree on the path forward."

Paramount declined further comment to Business Insider.

Sanders, an independent from Vermont, has led his colleagues in pressuring Paramount as the company seeks FCC approval of its merger with SkyDance. He and others have expressed skepticism over Paramount's turnabout from fighting Trump's lawsuit against CBS.

Trump sued CBS for $10 billion for what he claimed was deceptive editing of "60 Minutes'" interview with then-Vice President Kamala Harris ahead of the 2024 election. Trump later amended his claim to $20 billion in damages and added Paramount to the suit.

First Amendment organizations have dismissed Trump's claims, saying that "60 Minutes" was well within its journalistic rights. In April, The New York Times reported that Paramount's board was discussing a potential settlement.

No deal has yet to be reached.

On May 7, Sanders and eight Senate Democrats wrote to Redstone urging her to "make it clear to President Trump today that Paramount will not surrender to his attack on the First Amendment."

Last month, Bill Owens, the longtime executive producer of "60 Minutes," also bowed out. Scott Pelley, one of the show's longtime correspondents, later expressed his displeasure with the situation on air.

"Stories we've pursued for 57 years are often controversial β€” lately, the Israel-Gaza war and the Trump administration. Bill made sure they were accurate and fair β€” he was tough that way," Pelley said during the first "60 Minutes" broadcast that followed Owens' departure. "But our parent company, Paramount, is trying to complete a merger. The Trump administration must approve it. Paramount began to supervise our content in new ways. None of our stories has been blocked, but Bill felt he lost the independence that honest journalism requires."

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A pharma heir gave her former lawyer $10 million. Now her lawyers say she was 'tricked.'

A collage of Erik Bolog, Claudia Engelhorn, and tearsheets.
Β 

Getty Images; Chelsea Jia Feng/BI

  • Lawyer Erik Bolog is a beneficiary of a $10 million "gift" from Claudia Engelhorn, a pharma heir.
  • Engelhorn has said the gift was "alcohol induced," while Bolog says it was legitimate.
  • Engelhorn is suing Bolog and his ex-firm. The firm says it's caught in the middle.

Claudia Engelhorn, a daughter of a German pharmaceutical tycoon, claims she was duped into handing over $10 million to her former attorney Erik Bolog β€” and alleges that his former law firm looked the other way while he pocketed the cash.

The heir has been litigating for months against Bolog and the law firm, Whiteford, Taylor & Preston. The dispute is over the "gift" Bolog says she gave him as thanks for helping her win a $130 million case in MonΓ©gasque and Swiss courts during the pandemic.

Bolog's defense hinges on a three-page document signed by Engelhorn that says she insisted on making the gift and did so without consulting anyone. "You advised (begged) me to hire independent counsel," the document, which was included in court filings, says. "As you have learned over the past several years, I am not easily discouraged and once I have decided to do something, I do it."

Bolog said in court filings that the gift was legitimate and Engelhorn turned on him after he scolded her for what he said was "a racially hateful statement" that she made at a restaurant. He said she told a Black family "that it was nice that they were allowed to eat in restaurants."

One of Engelhorn's lawyers, Tony Williams, says the heir was "tricked" into signing the gift paperwork when Bolog gave it to her one morning while she was vacationing on Cape Cod in Massachusetts. He called the claim about her remark to a Black family "absolutely false."

In an email to Bolog that was included in court records, Engelhorn wrote: "You took an alcohol induced statement for your benefit." Bolog has claimed in court documents that her story shifted.

Williams also said in a meeting that Engelhorn was on the autism spectrum. "She's not a sophisticated investor," Williams told Business Insider. "She's a woman who has spent her life raising a family, and he should've known that. We did say, with her permission, that she's on the spectrum, and we know that she is, and he knew that."

"The whole thing's meshugganah," said Doug Gansler, one of Bolog's lawyers, using a Yiddish word for craziness. "She's a sophisticated businesswoman. She's not someone who doesn't know what she's doing or understand the value of money."

Engelhorn couldn't be reached for comment. Bolog didn't respond to a request for comment.

The existence of the case, which was filed in Baltimore in September, hasn't previously been reported.

Engelhorn's father, Curt Engelhorn, led a German pharmaceutical company that was sold to the healthcare giant Roche in 1997 for a reported $11 billion. Bolog says she's the "life trustee" of an entity called the Mannheim Trust that has paid her $1 million a year and lent her another $30 million.

Williams, meanwhile, said Bolog vastly overstated Engelhorn's fortune. He said the Mannheim Trust, which Bolog said held $500 million to benefit Engelhorn and others, had been divided among three of her children. Only the money from the Swiss case remains for Engelhorn, Williams said, and it's now "substantially less" than $130 million.

Bolog's former law firm, Whiteford, said it had nothing to do with his dealings. The firm said in a court filing it fired Bolog in May 2023 over issues including how he accounted for expenses. (Gansler denied wrongdoing by his client.)

In her lawsuit, Engelhorn said Whiteford bore some responsibility for Bolog's actions. She said billing records showed that other people at the firm were aware of and contributed to the deception.

The firm said in court filings that the other Whiteford lawyers who appeared to have helped draft the gift paperwork were under the impression that Engelhorn wanted to give a much smaller gift to a member of her staff. They say Bolog edited the documents to reroute the money to himself and his family, something Whiteford said it didn't learn about for two years.

The firm didn't respond to a request for comment.

Gansler is a former Maryland attorney general who's now at the white-shoe firm Cadwalader. Another lawyer for Engelhorn, Wes Henderson, is described on his website as "one of the most experienced and knowledgeable car accident attorneys in Crofton," a sleepy Maryland community of about 30,000 people. He also handles legal malpractice cases, the website says. He declined to comment.

Bolog has had various business interests over the years. His main pursuits have been contingency-fee injury lawsuits and a real estate firm called Tenacity that financed tenant acquisitions of their apartment buildings. In 2005, he was listed in Securities and Exchange Commission records as part of a bank's ownership group.

Gansler said Bolog recently moved to California to do plaintiff-side litigation there.

Bolog has had a colorful legal career. In the late 1990s, he helped a Maryland politician get off with a light sentence after she was accused of hiring a contract killer to whack her husband. The trial ended in a hung jury and she later pled no-contest, according to news reports. He was also among a group of lawyers hoping for a payout from a $120 million judgment against Iraq now pending in the US Supreme Court.

He has had gambling debts, though Gansler said he now has none and had no debt at the time he received Engelhorn's gift. In 2019, Harrah's Philadelphia Casino claimed in a lawsuit that Bolog owed $34,000 for a cash advance, and in 2022, a Caesars casino in Indiana sued him for $45,000. Gansler said that the Caesars lawsuit was filed by mistake. The debts in both cases were several years old, and both lawsuits have been resolved.

Engelhorn has had previous legal issues as well.

In 2007, she agreed to let a revivalist preacher named Tommie Zito and his wife live in a $3.2 million six-bedroom Florida mansion for $300 a month. She claimed that he abused her trust and manipulated her into buying the property and letting his family stay there "for a value far below the property's market value." She sued him twice to try to get out of the deal; both times, she lost.

Zito didn't respond to calls and text messages.

Madeleine O'Neill contributed reporting.

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Jamie Dimon opens the door to bitcoin and warns of stagflation in wide-ranging remarks to investors

Jamie Dimon
Jamie Dimon.

Noam Galai/Getty Images

  • JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon addressed various topics Monday at the firm's investor day meeting.
  • He said the bank would allow investors to buy bitcoin, while warning of stagflation.
  • He sounded dour on the economy but hopeful about a regulatory reset.

Jamie Dimon isn't a fan of bitcoin, but he plans to start offering it to clients of JPMorgan Chase, nonetheless.

"We are going to allow you to buy it. We're not going to custody it. We're going to put it in statements for clients," Dimon said Monday at the bank's annual presentation for investors.

"I don't think you should smoke. But I defend your right to smoke," he said in explaining his position.

The bitcoin comments came as the JPMorgan CEO, often considered Wall Street's elder statesman, took the stage to answer questions from investors and research analysts. In the roughly 40-minute session, he touched on various topics, from the economy to what he expected from President Donald Trump's regulators.

Dimon sounded a dour note on the economy, saying he thought the risk of stagflation was "two times" as high as many think and making dire predictions on credit as an investment class.

"I think the worst one for a bank and for most companies is stagflation," he said, adding: "I think the odds of that are probably two times what the market thinks."

He also said the bank had lost some commercial opportunities as a result of Trump's trade war. "We've lost business because of that," he said in response to an analyst's question.

He sounded upbeat, however, when it came to the president's regulatory agenda.

"I think that the secretary of Treasury, the president of the United States, the new head of the OCC, the new head of the CFPB, Michelle Bowman at Federal Reserve, and the SEC have all made it clear that they want to fix some of the things they think are broken," he said. "I think they'll accomplish some of that. Some will take longer than others, but they all want to do it."

He called on regulators to consider lightening regulations for publicly traded companies, which he said had been halved since the 1990s, from 8,000 to 4,000.

"We're driving companies out of the public marketplace because of expensive reporting, litigation, cookie-cutter approaches to boards, compensation, and litigation," he said.

"I would love to be a private company," he added.

Dimon also raised questions about the rapid expansion of investments in credit, including through funds raised to make nonbank loans, or private credit.

"I don't like making forecasts, but I am not a buyer of credit today. I think credit today is a bad risk," he said, adding: "I think that people who haven't been through major downturns are missing the point about what can happen in credit."

As interest rates rise and economic conditions soften, the risk of credit defaults rises, sometimes leaving borrowers strapped for cash and lenders struggling to recoup capital.

Earlier in the day, Marianne Lake, JPMorgan's CEO of consumer and community banking, said the firm was "closely monitoring the whole ecosystem" of lending but not giving up despite warning signs.

"The environment is very challenging for home lending and auto," she said, adding: "but we remain committed."

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Billionaire Barry Diller said Elon Musk's popularity decline was 'swift' since they shared a box at the US Open

Elon Musk attended the men's singles final of the US Open in a black blazer layered over a black graphic tee.
Elon Musk attended the men's singles final of the US Open.

Gotham/Contributor/GC Images/Getty Images

  • Elon Musk was a star at the US Open in September 2024, media mogul Barry Diller said.
  • Diller said the public turned on Musk as his influence over the government grew.
  • The billionaire advised Musk to address government waste with care, not aggressive measures.

Barry Diller said he witnessed Elon Musk's popularity firsthand at the US Open in 2024 β€” but less than a year later, it's a different story.

The public's perception of Musk has had a major shift since Donald Trump won the presidential election, Expedia Group chairman Diller said during Monday's episode of the "On with Kara Swisher" podcast.

The pair sat in the same luxury box to watch the US Open men's singles final match in September, where Diller said he was "amazed" by Musk's celebrity.

"A third of the faces in that audience were looking at him and not at this champ game that was taking place," the 83-year-old said.

He recalled hundreds of people gathering to take pictures and ask for Musk's signature during a break in the game.

Eight months, one election, and a controversial plan to cut government spending later, Diller says an appearance like that wouldn't play out the same way it did last year.

"If today he was in that box, they'd throw tomatoes at him," Diller said. "It's only September to May. I've never seen anything as swift as that."

Neither Musk nor representatives for Expedia Group immediately responded to Business Insider's request for comment.

Musk set out to cut $2 trillion in government spending with his involvement in the White House DOGE office, and he's faced backlash since then in the form of protests and movements like Tesla Takedown. Such resistance has made it harder to execute his plans, he told reporters during an April Q&A session.

"Being attacked is not super fun," Musk said. "Seeing cars on fire is not fun."

Diller, who cofounded the Fox TV network with Rupert Murdoch, previously said Musk has "a form of megalomania" and backed Trump out of bitterness toward the Democrats in October. He doubled down on Monday, telling Swisher that Musk is entitled to his megalomania, but it has its consequences.

"I personally like him," Diller said. "Unfortunately if you are a megalomaniac, your tuning fork ear is lost, and he lost it."

Enter the proverbial tomatoes prompted by Musk's slashes to government spending through DOGE, Diller said.

His advice? Work to eliminate government waste "with a thoughtful, kind hand" instead of a "chainsaw."

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Diddy listed his LA mansion right before he got arrested. The $61.5 million home might be a hard sell.

aerial view of Sean "Diddy" Combs los angeles home
Sean Combs' Los Angeles home has been on the market for more than 200 days.

MEGA/GC Images

  • Sean "Diddy" Combs listed his Los Angeles mansion for sale a week before he was arrested.
  • As his trial proceeds, the house is still on the market with the same asking price: $61.5 million.
  • Cassie Ventura said "freak offs" weren't held there, but its link to Combs might still deter buyers.

Sean "Diddy" Combs is sitting in a Manhattan courtroom, facing off with his sexual abuse accusers at trial.

His mansion in Los Angeles, however, is sitting empty.

Combs listed the 10-bedroom, 13-bathroom mansion in LA's ritzy Holmby Hills neighborhood for $61.5 million a week before his arrest in September 2024Β β€” and it's unlikely to sell anytime soon.

His ex-girlfriend, the R&B singer Cassie Ventura, testified last week that Combs' South Mapleton Drive home was not used for any "freak offs," the dayslong sex performances that the trial centers on. In general, homes priced in the eight-figure range don't fly off the shelves that quickly. Still, most homebuyers are put off by its association with an accused sex trafficker, according to a consultant who specializes in selling homes tainted by murder or other disasters.

"When they buy a home at that price point, they like to brag about it," Michael Tachovsky, a partner at Landmark Research Group, told BI. "P. Diddy's reputation, at the current time, really isn't a positive bragging point for a potential buyer. It can play into perceptions, and when there's a negative perception with a property, it just makes it harder to sell."

Two Los Angeles-area real estate agents reached by Business Insider declined to go on record about Combs' property to avoid any association.

A screenshot of the Zillow listing for Diddy's LA mansion, showing photos of the exterior in daylight and dusk, a big lawn, and a seating area
Combs' mansion, as it appeared on Zillow on May 16.

Zillow

Combs has denied all wrongdoing. The music tycoon has consistently argued that all sexual encounters were consensual. The defense also argues that any violence fell far short of sex trafficking and that his accusers have a financial motive to implicate him.

The listing agent, Kurt Rappaport, didn't return multiple requests for comment by email and phone. A rep for Combs and his lawyer also didn't return requests for comment by email.

The history of Combs' LA mansion

Combs purchased the property on Mapleton Drive in 2014 for just over $39 million, according to Los Angeles County property records.

The main house's architecture excludes European vibes and contains a formal dining room, a wine cellar, a theater that fits 35 people, a kitchen, and a separate catering kitchen. A two-story guest house has bedrooms, a gym, and a recording studio.

The grounds, over 1.3 acres, have an oversize statue of a woman seemingly made from similar material to a disco ball, plus a swimming pool with a waterfall and grotto, a basketball court, a spa house, and an outdoor loggia with a barbecue, bar, and pizza oven.

Other homes for sale on the same street are asking similar prices.

Jack Harris, a real estate agent with The Beverly Hills Estate, has an eight-bedroom listing on Mapleton Drive just a few doors down from Combs' house, priced at $62.5 million.

"You normally can't buy into Holmby Hills for less than $20 million β€” Mapleton being one of the most prestigious streets in Holmby Hills," Harris told BI.

"It's a little pocket that's right between Beverly Hills and Bel Air β€” there's only a handful of streets," he added.

Combs hosted parties at his house, including a 2017 Grammys afterparty.

Law enforcement officers stand behind police tape.
Law enforcement officers raided Diddy's Holmby Hills mansion on March 25, 2024.

REUTERS/Carlin Stiehl

Combs also owns a seven-bedroom, 14,800-square-foot home on Star Island in Miami, where Ventura said in court last week that "freak offs" did take place. He bought the home in 2023 for $14.5 million and satisfied the $18.8 million left on his mortgage in August of 2024 to sure up his proposed bond package.

In March 2024, law enforcement officials seized "narcotics and more than 1,000 bottles of baby oil and lubricant" from his Los Angeles and Miami residences.

A buyer could be drawn to the renovation potential

Real estate investor Steven "Bo" Belmon made a lowball offer of $30 million in November of 2024.

Belmont said in a press release that he planned to renovate.

"I want to remove the stigma and focus on the charming elegance of this remarkable property," Belmont said in the release.

Belmont is no stranger to controversial properties purchased at a hefty discount. In 2024, he bought Kanye West's abandoned Malibu mansion for $21 million, less than half of its original asking price of $53 million.

Tachovsky pointed to other properties where negative events have taken place that sold years after they hit the market for well below the asking price.

The ongoing legal battles will inevitably limit the pool of buyers, he added.

"At the moment, it doesn't sound like anything nefarious happened at the property, but I don't think there's any certainty yet," he said. "When you've got notorious issues, like the Diddy case, that's not a no-name person. That can linger for some time."

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Joe Biden and Jill Biden have been married for nearly 50 years. Here's a timeline of their relationship.

joe jill biden dnc
Joe Biden and Jill Biden.

Andrew Harnik/AP

  • President Joe Biden and former first lady Jill Biden have been married for almost 50 years.
  • Joe had to propose five times before she said yes. They eventually married in 1977.Β 
  • They have been at each other's sides through celebrations and challenges.

Over the course of their nearly 50-year marriage, former President Joe Biden and former first lady Jill Biden have been through a lot together.

They've celebrated triumphant victories such as Joe Biden's two terms as vice president and his 2020 presidential election win. They've also weathered devastating losses such as the death of their son, Beau Biden, and setbacks such as Joe Biden's withdrawal from the 2024 election.

Joe Biden's prostate cancer diagnosis, announced on Sunday, is the latest challenge the couple faces in their lives together.

Joe Biden often refers to Jill Biden as "the love of my life and the life of my love." Here's a timeline of their love story.

1975: Joe Biden's brother introduced him to Jill Taylor Jacobs.
A black and white photo of Joe and Jill Biden in the early days of their relationship.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden in the early days of their relationship.

Office of United States Senator Joe Biden

Joe Biden was a 33-year-old US senator, and Jill Biden, whose maiden name is Jacobs, was a 24-year-old college senior. Both had been married before. Joe Biden's wife and daughter died in a car crash in 1972, leaving him a widower with two sons, and Jill Biden and her husband filed for divorce in her junior year.Β 

"I was a senior, and I had been dating guys in jeans and clogs and T-shirts, he came to the door and he had a sport coat and loafers, and I thought, 'God, this is never going to work, not in a million years,'" Jill Biden told Vogue in 2016. "He was nine years older than I am! But we went out to see 'A Man and a Woman' at the movie theater in Philadelphia, and we really hit it off."

When she got home from the date, Jill Biden told Vogue, she called her mother and said, "Mom, I finally met a gentleman."

1977: The couple married after Joe Biden proposed five times.
Joe and Jill Biden in June 1987.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden at a campaign event.

Getty Images

"I said, 'Not yet. Not yet. Not yet,'" Jill Biden told Vogue of Joe Biden's proposals. "Because by that time, of course, I had fallen in love with the boys, and I really felt that this marriage had to work. Because they had lost their mom, and I couldn't have them lose another mother. So I had to be 100 percent sure."

When she did eventually agree to marry him, they held their wedding ceremony at the United Nations chapel and a reception lunch at Sign of the Dove in New York City. They took sons Beau and Hunter on their honeymoon.

1981: The couple welcomed daughter Ashley.
Joe Biden with daughter Ashley as a young girl
Joe Biden with daughter Ashley Biden.

Bill Ballenberg/The LIFE Images Collection via Getty Images/Getty Images

In a video shown at the 2020 Democratic National Convention, Jill Biden said that Ashley Biden's birth made the family "complete."

June 1987: When Joe Biden announced his candidacy for president, Jill Biden was by his side.
Joe and Jill Biden announcing his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1987
Joe Biden and Jill Biden at an event announcing his presidential run.

Cynthia Johnson/The LIFE Images Collection via Getty Images

He announced his presidential run in Wilmington, Delaware.

September 1987: They presented a united front when he withdrew from the race.
Joe Biden announces his withdrawal from the race in 1987
Joe Biden announced his withdrawal from the race.

Arnie Sachs/CNP/Getty Images

His short-lived campaign had been enveloped in scandal, with allegations of plagiarizing his speeches and exaggerating his academic records from college and law school, The New York Times reported.

"'I made some mistakes,'' he said as he announced the end of his campaign.

The New York Times described Jill Biden's face as "a study in dejection." Jill Biden later wrote about controlling her emotions in her 2019 memoir, "Where The Light Enters."

"As a political spouse, I've found that my stoicism often serves me well," she wrote. "In 1988, when Joe's first presidential campaign started to look bleak, people were constantly looking for cracks in our team. We all felt scrutinized, but I refused to show weakness."

1988: Joe Biden had two brain aneurysms. The couple posed outside the hospital when he was discharged after the first of two operations.
Joe and Jill Biden at Walter Reed Army Medical Center after he was discharged.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden at Walter Reed Army Medical Center after he was discharged.

Pam Price/AP

Joe Biden had a pulmonary embolism later that year as he recovered. In her book, Jill Biden writes about watching as "EMTs carried him down the steps of our house on a stretcher."

January 2007: Jill Biden earned her Ph.D. in education from the University of Delaware. At the graduation, Joe Biden handed Jill Biden her doctorate.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden hug on the campaign trail.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden on the campaign trail.

Mark Wilson/Getty Images

She became Dr. Jill Biden.

July 2007: Joe Biden wrote about his love for Jill Biden in his memoir, "Promises to Keep."
Joe Biden released "Promises to Keep" in 2007.
Joe Biden released "Promises to Keep" in 2007.

Charles Dharapak/AP

"She gave me back my life," he wrote. "She made me start to think my family might be whole again."

2008: Barack Obama chose Joe Biden as his running mate, and the two families developed a close bond.
The Obamas and Bidens during a rally in Springfield, Illinois, in 2008.
The Obamas and Bidens at a rally in Illinois.

EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP via Getty Images

The "bromance" between the two politicians went viral.

2009: Jill Biden held the family's Bible when her husband was sworn in as vice president.
Jill Biden holds the Bible as Joe Biden is sworn in as vice president in 2009.
Joe Biden was sworn in as vice president in 2009.

Brooks Kraft LLC/Corbis via Getty Images

Joe Biden supported her career, too. She made history as the first known second lady to hold a full-time job, teaching English at Northern Virginia Community College.

"As second lady, she was teaching full time for eight years, 15 credits a semester," Joe Biden said in a video shown at the 2020 Democratic National Convention.

"I said, 'I know I can do both jobs,'" she said.

She encouraged students to call her "Dr. B.," The Los Angeles Times reported.Β 

February 2010: On Valentine's Day, Joe Biden surprised her with a tree swing marked with a commemorative plaque on the grounds of the vice president's residence.
The plaque on a tree on the grounds of the vice president's residence reading "Joe Loves Jill."
The plaque on a tree on the grounds of the vice president's residence.

Katherine Frey/The Washington Post via Getty Images

The plaque reads "Joe loves Jill. Valentine's Day 2010."

March 2010: They took diplomatic trips together, such as their visit to Israel.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden arrive in Israel.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden arrive in Israel.

BAZ RATNER/AFP via Getty Images

They took other trips together, such as attending the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver.

September 2012: Jill Biden elicited giggles when she told a crowd in New Hampshire, "I've seen Joe up close."
Jill Biden introduces Joe at a campaign event in 2012.
Jill Biden introduced Joe Biden at a campaign event in 2012.

Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

An ABC News camera panned to Joe Biden, who could be seen laughing good-naturedly at the unintended double entendre as the audience cheered.

"It's in my remarks, really," she said, before continuing with her speech amid chuckles from the crowd.

September 2012: At the Democratic National Convention, Jill Biden spoke about Joe Biden's support for her career and his strength in the face of loss.
Joe Biden embraces Jill Biden at the Democratic National Convention in 2012.
Joe Biden embraces Jill Biden at the Democratic National Convention.

SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images

"After Joe was elected vice president, people started questioning whether I could keep teaching," she said. "Not Joe. He was there standing by my side saying 'Of course you should. It's who you are, Jill.'"

2013: When Obama won a second term, Jill Biden held the Bible again when Joe Biden was sworn in at the inauguration.
Jill Biden looks at her husband as he's sworn in during the 57th Presidential Inauguration in 2013.
Jill Biden held the Bible during Joe Biden's 2013 inauguration as vice president.

Carolyn Kaster/AP

As they had in 2009, they danced together at more inaugural balls.

2015: Tragedy struck when their son Beau Biden died of brain cancer.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden leave the funeral of their son Beau in Wilmington, Delaware.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden at their son Beau Biden's funeral.

Pablo Martinez Monsivais/Pool/Reuters

Still reeling from the loss, Joe Biden decided not to run for president in 2016.

2019: Jill Biden released her own book, "Where The Light Enters," in which she wrote about falling in love with Joe Biden.
Copes of Jill Biden's book "Where the Light Enters: Building a Family, Discovering Myself."
Jill Biden's book.

Johnny Louis/Getty Images

"After the disappointment of my divorce, I never wanted to feel so out of control of my heart again," she wrote. "But in the months that Joe and I were dating, that desire ran up against a new reality: I was falling in love."

April 2019: When Joe Biden entered the 2020 presidential race, Jill Biden became an important voice in his campaign.
Joe and Jill Biden greet supporters and staffers at an event in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 2020.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden at a campaign event in Philadelphia.

Bastiaan Slabbers/NurPhoto via Getty Images

For the first time since 1981, she took a break from teaching to help him on the campaign trail.

December 2019: In an unusual campaign stop moment, Joe Biden nibbled on his wife's finger as she spoke to a crowd in Iowa.
Joe Biden bites Jill Biden's finger as she speaks at a campaign event
Joe Biden bit Jill Biden's finger as she spoke at a campaign event.

Joshua Lott/Getty Images

Jill Biden was gesturing behind herself as she spoke, barely missing Joe Biden's face as he pretended to dodge. Joe Biden then leaned forward while her arm was outstretched and bit down on the tip of her index finger. She appeared to laugh it off.

Jill Biden later reposted a video on X of the hosts of "The View" discussing the moment, where Meghan McCain said, "I thought it was silly, and they clearly still love each other and are playful," and replied, "Guilty, we do still love each other!"

March 2020: Jill Biden fought off protesters, leading Joe Biden to joke, "I'm probably the only candidate running for president whose wife is my Secret Service."
Jill Biden fights off protestors that got up on the stage during a Super Tuesday election night party in Los Angeles, California.
Jill Biden fought off protestors that rushed the stage during a Super Tuesday election night party.

Melina Mara/The Washington Post via Getty Images

"Whoa, you don't screw around with a Philly girl, I'll tell you what," he said after the protesters were removed from the stage on Super Tuesday. "I thought I heard on the news on the way over that the committee in charge of Secret Service decided they have to start providing Secret Service for us. I think that's because they're afraid Jill's going to hurt someone. I tell you what man, I married way above my station."

August 2020: Jill Biden delivered a keynote speech at the DNC from the school classroom in Delaware where she used to teach English.
A screenshot from the livestream of the 2020 Democratic National Convention.
A screenshot from the livestream of the 2020 Democratic National Convention.

Handout/DNCC via Getty Images

"Love makes us flexible and resilient," she said in the speech. "It allows us to become more than ourselves, together, and though it can't protect us from the sorrows of life, it gives us refuge, a home. How do you make a broken family whole? The same way you make a nation whole: with love and understanding and with small acts of kindness."

November 2020: Joe Biden won the presidential election, and called himself "Jill's husband" in his victory speech.
President-elect Joe Biden and Jill Biden wave after Biden's victory speech.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden waved to the crowds after his victory speech.

ANDREW HARNIK/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

"Jill's a mom β€” a military mom β€” and an educator," he said. "She has dedicated her life to education, but teaching isn't just what she does β€” it's who she is. For America's educators, this is a great day: You're going to have one of your own in the White House, and Jill is going to make a great first lady."

December 2020: After a Wall Street Journal op-ed urged her to drop her "Dr." title since she's not a medical doctor, Jill Biden remained proud of her doctorate, and Joe Biden backed her up.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden in an interview with Stephen Colbert.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden in an interview with Stephen Colbert.

CBS

In an interview on "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert," they responded to the controversy.

"That was such a surprise," Jill Biden said of the op-ed. "It was really the tone of it. He called me 'kiddo,' and one of the things I'm most proud of is my doctorate. I mean, I've worked so hard for it. And Joe came when I defended my thesis."

"I got to hand her her doctorate on the stage at the University of Delaware," Joe Biden added.

Colbert jokingly asked if Joe Biden ever wanted to "get out a length of pool chain and go full corn pop" on people who criticize Jill Biden's academic achievements. As he began to answer, she interjected with "No! The answer is no!" Joe Biden then quipped, "I've been suppressing my Irishness for a long time."

January 2020: Jill Biden held the Biden family Bible for Joe Biden's inauguration as president of the United States.
President Joe Biden is sworn in as the 46th president at the 2021 Inauguration
Joe Biden was sworn in as the 46th president of the United States.

Saul Loeb/Pool via REUTERS

The Biden family Bible dates back to 1893. He has used it for his swearing-in ceremonies as a US senator and as vice president.Β 

April 2021: Joe Biden stopped to pick a dandelion for Jill Biden on the White House lawn as they boarded Marine One.
President Joe Biden hands Dr. Jill Biden a dandelion.
Joe Biden handed Jill Biden a flower on the White House Ellipse.

Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images

The then-president and first lady were traveling to Atlanta for a rally in Plains, Georgia, to meet with former President Jimmy Carter and former first lady Rosalynn Carter.

As they were boarding Marine One on the White House Ellipse, Joe Biden bent down and picked a dandelion for his wife. Jill Biden stopped to accept the flower, and she held on to it as she boarded the helicopter.

December 2021: They welcomed a new German shepherd puppy, Commander.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden pet their new dog Commander
Joe Biden and Jill Biden pet Commander.

SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images

The BidensΒ entered the White House with two German shepherds, Champ and Major. Champ passed away at the age of 13 in June 2021, and Major was rehomed due to behavioral issues.Β 

The Bidens also adopted a cat, Willow, in January 2022.

Commander was moved out of the White House in October 2023 after numerous biting incidents.

February 2022: Jill Biden was spotted wearing a corsage from Joe Biden in a sweet Valentine's Day tradition.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden, wearing a corsage, on Valentine's Day in 2022.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden on Valentine's Day.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

While exiting Marine One on Valentine's Day, the then-first lady was photographed wearing a corsage of what appeared to be white gardenias, her favorite flower.

In anΒ interview with People magazine shortly after Joe Biden took office, Jill Biden shared that the corsages began as a Valentine's Day tradition, and that he had surprised her with a corsage of gardenias at the inauguration.

"I don't know when it started β€” a long, long time ago. I think it was for Valentine's Day," she said. "I love gardenias and so Joe would buy me a wrist corsage of gardenias. I wore it to school to teach!"

Joe Biden also shared a Valentine's Day message for his wife.

"You're the love of my life and the life of my love, Jilly. Happy Valentine's Day," he wrote on X.

May 2022: Jill Biden told Harper's Bazaar she and Joe Biden fight over text, or "fext," to avoid arguing in front of their Secret Service detail.
Joe Biden points as Jill Biden stands next to him at the White House
Joe Biden and Jill Biden at a White House reception.

SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images

Jill Biden, who appeared on the June-July cover of Harper's Bazaar, told the magazine that she and Joe Biden fight via text in what they call "fexting" to avoid arguing in front of their Secret Service detail β€” a method they've used since he served as vice president.

In one particularly heated exchange, Joe Biden reminded her that presidential communications like texts and emails are kept as part of a historical record of each presidency.

"Joe said, 'You realize that's going to go down in history. There will be a record of that,'" she told Harper's Bazaar. "I won't tell you what I called him that time."

While they did occasionally "fext," Jill Biden also spoke about supporting her husband's work during his presidency.

"I try to be a support for Joe because I don't know how many people are saying to him, 'That was great. That was brilliant.' I try to be that person for him," she said. "Some days, I see Joe and I'm just like, 'I don't know how you're doing it.' It's the pandemic and then it's the war and then it's the economy and then it's the gas prices. You feel like you're being slammed."

June 2022: They celebrated their 45th wedding anniversary.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden ride bikes in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden rode bikes in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware.

SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images

The Bidens celebrated their anniversary at their beach house in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. During their trip, Joe Biden fell off his bike but quickly got back up and chatted with reporters. A White House spokesperson said that the president did not require medical attention.

April 2023: Joe Biden announced he would run for reelection in 2024.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden walk through the White House.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden at the White House.

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Jill Biden's support was widely regarded as a determining factor in Joe Biden's decision to run again in 2024.

South Carolina Sen. Dick Harpootlian, a former state party chairman and Biden 2020 finance committee member, told Business Insider in 2022 that "Joe Biden wouldn't have run in '20 if Jill Biden had not wanted him to run and he won't run in '24 if Jill Biden doesn't want him to run."

June 2024: Jill Biden defended Joe Biden after his disastrous presidential debate against Donald Trump.
Jill Biden speaks after Joe Biden's presidential debate in 2024.
Jill Biden spoke after Joe Biden's first 2024 debate against Donald Trump.

Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

During the first presidential debate of 2024, Joe Biden spoke with a hoarse voice, offered convoluted answers, and appeared disoriented at times. His poor performance sparked panic among Democrats about whether he should stay in the race.

Jill Biden defended Joe Biden in the face of widespread criticism, telling Vogue that the Biden family "will not let those 90 minutes define the four years he's been president. We will continue to fight."

"When he gets knocked down, Joe gets back up, and that's what we're doing today," Jill Biden said at a New York City fundraiser the day after the debate.

Joe Biden also acknowledged that his age impacted his debate performance, but remained firm in his commitment to stay in the race.

"I know I'm not a young man, to state the obvious," he said during a rally the day after the debate. "I don't walk as easy as I used to. I don't speak as smoothly as I used to. I don't debate as well as I used to. But I know what I do know: I know how to tell the truth. I know right from wrong. And I know how to do this job. I know how to get things done."

July 2024: Jill Biden expressed support for Joe Biden after he withdrew from the 2024 election.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden in the Oval Office.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden in the Oval Office.

EVAN VUCCI/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

On July 21, Joe Biden announced that he was dropping out of the presidential race and endorsing Vice President Kamala Harris.

"While it has been my intention to seek reelection, I believe it is in the best interest of my party and the country for me to stand down and to focus solely on fulfilling my duties as President for the remainder of my term," Biden wrote in a letter posted on social media.

On July 24, Jill Biden posted her first public statement since her husband's announcement.

"To those who never wavered, to those who refused to doubt, to those who always believed, my heart is full of gratitude," Jill Biden wrote in a statement on X. "Thank you for the trust you put in Joe β€” now it's time to put that trust in Kamala."

August 2024: Jill Biden and Joe Biden spoke about each other in their speeches at the Democratic National Convention.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden at the 2024 Democratic National Convention.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden at the 2024 Democratic National Convention.

SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images

The first night of the Democratic National Convention was dedicated to recognizing Joe Biden's legacy throughout his decades of public service.

"Joe and I have been together for almost 50 years, and still there are moments when I fall in love with him all over again," Jill said in her speech.

In his convention speech, Joe Biden said that his wife "still leaves me both breathless and speechless."

January 2025: They attended Trump's second inauguration together.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden greet Donald Trump and Melania Trump at the White House
Joe Biden and Jill Biden greeted Donald Trump and Melania Trump at the White House.

Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

The Bidens greeted Donald Trump and Melania Trump at the White House before heading to the inauguration, which was held in the Capitol Rotunda due to frigid temperatures.

May 2025: Joe Biden's office announced he had been diagnosed with an "aggressive form" of prostate cancer.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden pose for a selfie with their cat, Willow.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden posed for a selfie with their cat, Willow.

Joe Biden via X/Handout via REUTERS

The cancer has metastasized to the former president's bones, Joe Biden's office said in a statement released on Sunday.

"While this represents a more aggressive form of the disease, the cancer appears to be hormone-sensitive, which allows for effective management," the statement read. "The president and his family are reviewing treatment options with his physicians."

On Monday, Joe Biden posted a selfie on X of himself with Jill Biden and their cat, Willow, and thanked well-wishers for their support following his diagnosis.

"Cancer touches us all. Like so many of you, Jill and I have learned that we are strongest in the broken places," he wrote. "Thank you for lifting us up with love and support."

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My mom had one rule for me: 'Don't fall in love and move away.' I now live 5 minutes from her and am full of regret.

Alison Meyer with her daughter on the beach
Alison Meyer with her daughter on the beach.

Courtesy of Alison Meyer

  • I live about five minutes from my mom and have never really left.
  • I dream about living far away in Australia or Mexico, but my anxiety prevents me from leaving.
  • I'm raising my child differently. I hope she doesn't consider my feelings when choosing where to live.

Over breakfast, a friend told me she wished she'd slept around more before getting married. I passed the syrup and nodded, then surprised myself by saying, "I wish I'd moved around more."

I live in Denver, about five minutes away from my mom. And I've never really left.

I went to college an hour away. I traveled a little in my 20s, but never for long, and always with the knowledge that I'd return.

"Don't fall in love and move away" was my mother's one rule before any trip. And I followed that rule.

Never mind that my parents moved away from their small towns in Indiana in their 20s, or that my close friends from high school moved to London and Sydney. Their lives make me feel a complicated mix of envy and awe.

Of course, I've felt the call to move. One of my favorite activities on vacation is to look at homes nearby for sale on Zillow. Cannon Beach, Oregon; Sydney, Australia; Guanajuato, Mexico; even the Twin Cities β€” they're all places I've visited and thought, "I could live here."

But that's not my lot in life.

Responsibility was baked into my childhood

Alison Meyer in Sydney
Alison Meyer in Sydney.

Courtesy of Alison Meyer

Clinically, it might be called "parentification" or "codependence," but I knew it as love.

My dad struggled with mental illness and holding a job. He was exciting but also known to bankrupt us with one manic trip to Williams and Sonoma.

My kid sister had chronic health issues. My mom worked for a nonprofit and, despite her best efforts, we struggled financially.

Being the oldest daughter, I was the one who took myself to school and kept things quiet at home when they needed to be. I sat beside my sister in hospital rooms and explained to teachers why my parents couldn't come to conferences.

Walking on eggshells and anticipating people's needs are what I know.

My parents might have seen my decision to stay as an act of love, but it was also driven by my own anxiety and the gnawing feeling that if I left, my family might fall apart.

I believed my presence would prevent disaster. That by staying nearby, I could keep the people I loved safe.

So I stayed.

Now, I'm a mom myself

My daughter is seven and she's already making plans to leave.

When she grows up, she wants to design a house to live in with her best friend and "lots of cats." She's considering Vail or maybe California.

Like my mother, I also (secretly) hope that my daughter will live near me forever. I even considered delaying her start in kindergarten just to get an extra year with her, but didn't go through with it.

When she grows up, I think I need to be nearby in case she needs me. There's that codependence again β€” but I catch myself.

More than anything, I hope my daughter grows up without my same anxiety and has the peace of mind to leave, if she wants.

I want her to trust that she's allowed to grow out of me and her dad. If she never once considers my feelings when choosing where to live, I'll have succeeded (and hate it).

I regret never moving away, but I have found the silver lining

I attend family dinners and get to watch my nephews grow up β€” not in jarring leaps between holidays, but in the slow unfolding of ordinary days.

I know what they look like when they're sleepy before bedtime or proud from playing a tough soccer game. My kid knows her grandparents, and someone is always around to lend a rake or give a hug.

I didn't move. I bought into the idea that love meant staying close. However, I hope my daughter knows that love knows no boundaries. It can mean building a full and joyful life from anywhere β€” and that I'll be just fine watching her go.

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4 sandal trends that are in this summer and 4 that are out, according to stylists and designers

Black fisherman sandals with gold buckles
Fisherman sandals are back on trend this summer, according to the pros.

Sabelnikova Olga/Shutterstock

  • We spoke to fashion designers and stylists about which sandal trends are in and out this summer.
  • According to the pros, fisherman sandals are making a big comeback thanks to their versatility.
  • On the other hand, lace-up gladiators and chunky platforms are being replaced by minimalist styles.

Summer is almost here, which means it's time to break out your warm-weather wardrobe β€” including sandals.

But before you reach for last year's go-to pairs, keep in mind that some styles are fading while others are taking a step back into the spotlight (hello, '90s revival!).

To help you navigate what's trending now, Business Insider spoke with fashion designers and stylists about which sandal styles are in and which you may want to leave in your closet.

Warm and understated, brown sandals are redefining summer neutrals.
Strappy brown sandals with jeans
Brown shoes can pair nicely with denim.

MFAHEEM FAHEEM/Shutterstock

Brown sandals are stepping in as a softer, more versatile alternative to black this summer, according to Natalie Tincher, founder and principal stylist at BU Style.

She told BI that sandals are becoming popular in "shades from light tan to deep espresso" and "taking a cue from Pantone's Color of the Year, 'Mocha Mousse.'"

These earthy tones pair well with natural fabrics, relaxed tailoring, and minimalist looks, grounding an outfit without overpowering it, the stylist said.

Fisherman sandals are back in a big way.
Black prada fisherman sandals
Leather fisherman sandals can be dressed up or down.

Jeremy Moeller/Getty Images

Offering a stylish balance of structure, breathability, and comfort, fisherman sandals are going strong this summer

"Characterized by their closed toe and interwoven straps, they're ideal for city wear or summer holidays," Hellana Mardasian, personal stylist at Styled by Hellena, told BI. "They suit both tailored and relaxed summer looks."

The stylist recommends looking for fisherman sandals in neutral colors that are made from quality leather for a modern and elevated feel.

Leather slides remain a polished wardrobe staple.
Cream colored leather slide sandals with heel
Some leather slides even have a heel.

Wdnld/Shutterstock

Tincher said leather slides continue to trend as a refined alternative to flip-flops.

"They're incredibly versatile and comfortable, and come in a range of silhouettes β€” some more substantial, others sleek, which makes them a go-to for many of my clients," she told BI.

Sleek leather slides are an easy way to add polish to everything from tailored shorts and resort-inspired outfits to breezy dresses or a classic jeans-and-tee combo, the stylist said.

Raffia sandals can bring an elegant touch to any summer outfit.
Raffia fisherman sandals with floor-length dress
Raffia fisherman sandals are especially on trend right now.

Jeremy Moeller/Getty Images

Celebrated for their breezy texture and artisanal vibe, raffia sandals are another popular summer trend, both Mardasian and Tincher told BI. They blend lightweight comfort and effortless style, making them an easy upgrade for warm-weather looks.

"The woven texture adds dimension and visual interest without overwhelming an outfit," Tincher said.

Mardasian recommends styling them with linen or denim for a polished but relaxed summer outfit.

However, chunky platforms are on their way out.
Chunky leather platform sandals with studs along edge
Chunky platforms used to be super trendy.

Edward Berthelot/Getty Images

Towering flatforms and mega-platform espadrilles are likely to be less popular this season, according to Danielle Yates, fashion designer, stylist, and cofounder of Headcovers Unlimited.

"After a few summers of rolled ankles and cobblestone mishaps, shoppers are gravitating toward lower, more stable soles that still provide a bit of height," the designer said.

Sleek silhouettes, like minimalist walking sandals or low-profile heels, offer a more wearable update that fits seamlessly into 2025's shift toward functional, everyday style.

Many are swapping PVC sandals out for jelly shoes.
Legs of  person wearing Black lace pants and clear fisherman sandals
PVC and jelly sandals can have similar appearances.

Jeremy Moeller/Getty Images

All of the professionals we spoke to agreed that PVC sandals are out this summer as shoe trends move toward comfort, breathability, and more tactile materials.

"While they had a fashion-forward moment, their synthetic feel and lack of wearability in heat made them a tough long-term sell," Tincher told BI.

Instead, many will opt for woven-leather or jelly sandals, which can offer more personality and practicality.

Velcro "dad" sandals had their moment.
Socks and velcro sandals with thick footbed
"Dad" sandals may be falling out of favor.

Edward Berthelot/Getty Images

Bulky Velcro "dad" sandals β€” the ultra-padded, rubber-soled kind β€” are starting to fall out of favor, Yates said.

"With quiet-luxury dressing still going strong, shoppers want a sleeker silhouette that doesn't shout 'hiking shop,'" Yates told BI.

For an updated look, the designer recommends a slim sport sandal or a leather fisherman instead, as both can serve a similar purpose with less heft.

It's time to retire the lace-up gladiators.
Flat, white lace-up sandals
Lace-up gladiators were popular in the 2010s.

Edward Berthelot/Getty Images

Once a go-to for festival season in the 2010s, lace-up gladiator sandals are starting to feel overly complicated next to 2025's more streamlined shoe aesthetic, according to both Yates and Mardasian.

For a fresher take, the stylists suggest opting for sleek Grecian silhouettes or minimalist leather slides instead.

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So you finally got TSA PreCheck. Here's how to avoid being the most annoying person in line and get through faster.

An agent sits scanning passengers in front of a TSA PreCheck sign
TSA PreCheck is an express airport security line for pre-screened travelers.

Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

  • TSA PreCheck is an airport-security express lane that can save you time while traveling.
  • The program has more members than ever β€” over 20 million passengers are enrolled.
  • Travel expert Gilbert Ott said these etiquette tips can keep you from holding up the line.

Those of us who've had TSA PreCheck for a while have seen the express airport security line moving slower than it should. We've had our patience tested by first-time users fumbling for passports at the counter, removing their coats when it's their turn to be scanned, and waltzing on through with a belt on.

These days, you're more likely to encounter newbies in the fast-pass lane than ever.

The TSA reported in August 2024 that program enrollment reached a record 20 million travelers. And roughly 2 to 3 million flight passengers used the faster security line per day so far in 2025.

In the TSA PreCheck line, pre-screened travelers can go through security quickly without taking off their shoes or removing electronics or liquids from their carry-on bags. With more travelers than ever signing up for the program, you're likely to encounter more newbies in the express lane these days.

It costs about $80 to enroll for five years, but you can get the service essentially for free through credit cards such as Capital One Venture, Capital One Venture X, Chase Sapphire Reserve, Delta SkyMiles, and American Express.

passengers heading to their departure gates enter TSA pre-check before going through security screening at Orlando International Airport,
TSA PreCheck is an express lane through airport security β€” and if you don't know the etiquette for the service, you may be slowing it down.

AP Photo/John Raoux

Gilbert Ott, who says he flies more than 200,000 miles a year and has been blogging about flying for the past decade, told Business Insider that the express airport security lane makes his life easier. Ott's blog, called God Save the Points, covers everything from airline news and flight reviews to travel tips and money-saving hacks, such as how to best use credit-card points.Β 

"I spend too much time in airports. As much as I may love them, sometimes the less time I spend in them, the happier I am," Ott said. "So the quicker I can get through and just be on a plane, the better."

While the TSA PreCheck line is often full of frequent flyers, those new to the program, which requires a background check, may not be as savvy about security etiquette, especially during busy travel times like summer. Ott said this can cause the line to move more slowly, but he shared his best tips for TSA PreCheck travelers.

Pre-strip before you even get to the airport

Pre-stripping is removing everything you may need to take off at security, from big jackets to the contents of your pockets, before you get in line.

"When I go to the airport, I take my belt off before I get there. I have it in my backpack, knowing I'll put it on as soon as I get through PreCheck," Ott told BI. "So keep the jewels and the watch in your bag. Then, when you get to the other side of security where you're not holding people up, you can do the glamour."

Ott said this process will make people move through the line quicker.Β 

"My routine is somewhere along the lines of comfy jeans, a T-shirt or hoodie, and then a bomber jacket," he said. "Essentials like my phone and passport go in my bomber jacket pockets while I wait in the queue so that when I step up to the scanners, my jacket is off, pockets are empty, my bags go on the trays, and off we go."

Leave the flashy shoes in your bag

An air traveler places his shoes in a bin before passing through the TSA.
An air traveler places his shoes in a bin before passing through the TSA.

ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images

TSA PreCheck passengers aren't required to take off their shoes. But in Ott's experience, passengers who wear fancy loafers or shoes with buckles or studs often get stopped because they set off the scanner.Β 

"The main thing is metal, either as part of the shoe or in the boot or heel of the shoe," Ott said. "Ceramic and rubber are usually fine. Basically, sneakers tend to always work."

Be ready before it's your turn

When you first get in line, Ott recommends having your boarding pass and identification out before it's your turn to show them. That way, you won't spend time searching for these documents while others wait behind you.Β 

If everyone followed Ott's advice, he thinks we'd all get through security faster.Β 

"If you think of the 20 seconds it takes somebody to do this very basic thing, and you'd multiply that by 50,000 people going through an airport's screens a day, you could pretty much just walk through an airport without stopping," Ott told BI. "We can all have a better time."

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Nvidia CEO says Chinese AI researchers are 'world class' — and US companies are hiring 'a whole bunch' of them

Jensen Huang holding a microphone.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said Chinese AI researchers are "world class."

I-hwa Cheng/Getty

  • Jensen Huang, the CEO of Nvidia, believes Chinese AI researchers are "world class."
  • US-based AI companies like Anthropic and OpenAI are hiring them, he said in an interview with "Stratechery."
  • International competition is healthy β€” but only if regulations don't prevent the US from keeping up, he said.

Jensen Huang, the CEO of Nvidia, thinks that China's AI researchers are some of the very best in the world β€” so it's no surprise that US companies are bringing them on board.

"The researchers, the AI scientists in China, they're world-class. These are not Chinese AI researchers, they're world-class AI researchers," Huang said in an interview with Ben Thompson, author of "Stratechery." "You walk up and down the aisles of Anthropic or OpenAI or DeepMind, there's a whole bunch of AI researchers there, and they're from China. Of course, it's sensible, and they're extraordinary, and so the fact that they do extraordinary work is not surprising to me."

As a whole, the country is doing "fantastic" in the AI market, Huang said, with models from Chinese-based companies β€” such as DeepSeek and Manus β€” emerging as powerful challengers to systems designed in the US.

"Let's face it, DeepSeek is deeply excellent work," Huang said. "To give them anything short of that is a lack of confidence so deep that I just can't even tolerate it."

The challenges presented by international rivals, Huang added, are absolutely essential to the continued improvement of AI companies in the US.

"Everybody loves competition. Companies need competition to inspire themselves, nations need that, and there's no question we spur them," he said. "However, I fully expected China to be there every step of the way. Huawei is a formidable company. They're a world-class technology company."

Intense competition could become problem though, Huang said, if US-based companies don't have all the tools they need. Building out the "ecosystem" required to support AI, he said, is already difficult β€” and Huang believes operations could be kneecapped by restrictive regulations. He was particularly critical of the "Diffusion rule," a Biden-era policy that would've established limits on exports of US-made AI chips come May 15.

"You can't just say, "Let's go write a diffusion rule, protect one layer at the expense of everything else." It's nonsensical," he said. "The idea that we would limit American AI technology right at the time when international competitors have caught up, and we pretty much predicted it."

On May 12, the White House announced it would rescind the rule, mere days before it was set to go into effect.

"The idea of AI diffusion limiting other countries access American technology is a mission expressed exactly wrong. It should be about accelerating the adoption of American technology everywhere before it's too late," Huang said. "If the goal is for America to lead, then AI diffusion did exactly the opposite of that."

Competition flows both ways, he said β€” and American companies should be battling it out in the Chinese market.

"The idea that we would have America not compete in the Chinese market, where 50% of the developers are, makes absolutely no sense from a computing infrastructure, computing architectural perspective," Huang said. "We ought to go and give American companies the opportunity to compete in China, offset the trade deficit, generate tax income for the American people, build, hire jobs, create more jobs."

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