Starbucks CEO sees a rebound in markets the place vaccinations have risen

Starbucks is seeing big uptrends in business in places where vaccinations are on the rise, CEO Kevin Johnson said Thursday.

“Consumer mobility skyrocketed and … we saw traffic increase in our stores,” CNBC’s Johnson Jim Cramer said in a Mad Money interview. He also said Starbucks sales in the same store in regions where consumers are being vaccinated are above pre-pandemic levels.

The link between increased business activity and increasing vaccination rates is simple, Johnson said. The company found that when at least 35% of adults in a market have been vaccinated against the virus, governments will begin easing Covid restrictions to give way to an economic recovery.

Johnson added that the US is acting as a guide for global markets as countries vaccinate their citizens against Covid-19 and roll back health restrictions.

“We’re seeing this happening in Mexico now, we’re starting to see this in Europe,” he added. “Every market around the world will see exactly what the United States has seen here over the past 90 days.”

Seattle-based Starbucks is present in 80 countries and generates most of its revenue in the United States

Akbar V Exhibits Her “Brudda” Bankroll Freddie How Atlanta Women Give Lap Dances (Video)

Chile! If it’s one thing Akbar V is going to do, it’s whatever she wants! As you may already know, Akbar rarely applies a filter, whether she’s clapping back at Khia saying she “ain’t got no money” or asking Chris Brown if she can “get a shot” with him. This past weekend was no different when she welcomed Bankroll Freddie to Atlanta with a little demonstration native to famous landmarks like Magic City. The short of it is, Akbar put on a brief performance and gave Bankroll a quick bounce, grind and wine of her hips at a birthday party.

A short clip shows Akbar attempting to whisper something in Bankroll’s ear. He slightly moves his face, then Akbar turns around and gets to work! She was dressed in a dark grey, sleeveless dress paired with high-top Nike sneakers. In the video clip, she can be seen switching from rubbing to bouncing that bottom on Bankroll, while keeping her balance by holding unto his knee-thigh area.

At one point, Akbar V rubs her goodies and reaches her hand backwards in an attempt to find Bankroll’s hand and get him to follow suit! He’s not quite having it and keeps his left hand close to his body clutching his black phone. He raises the other hand in a seemingly encouraging way. Someone off camera tries to force his hand to rub on Akbar’s clappas, but he visibly attempts to keep his hand closed. Despite his attempts to keep his hands to himself, Bankroll is seen smiling—seemingly enjoying the moment!

Akbar posted the clip to her Instagram account, along with a caption clarifying the dance was all in good fun and nothing else.

“Had to show @bankroll_freddie how ATL girls get down,” she wrote in her caption. “Happy Birthday @kinggouch1k I know I wouldn’t have heard the last of i didn’t show up #QueenOfAtlanta this my brudda we just having fun nothing more…I can’t dance”

Roommates, thoughts? Is it appropriate to give someone you consider a brother a lap dance?

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Marjorie Taylor Greene needs Nancy Pelosi to place her on the 1/6 committee

MP Marjorie Taylor Greene told CNN’s Jim Acosta that she would like Spokesman Pelosi to put her on the committee of inquiry into the 1/6 attack.

Video:

Jim Acosta asked Rep Marjorie Taylor Greene for evidence that the FBI was involved in the 1/6 attack. She doesn’t have one, but she thinks it would be great if Spokesman Pelosi put her on the special committee to investigate the attack on the Capitol. pic.twitter.com/ClauT5lFq4

– Sarah Reese Jones (@PoliticusSarah) June 27, 2021

After Acosta asked Greene for evidence that the FBI was behind the 1/6 attack and she didn’t have it, she expressed an interest in serving on the Investigation Committee of the 1/6 attack.

Greene replied: “Sure, it should attract me the committee. That would be great you know “

Jim Acosta asked, “And you’d show up and ask Ask?”

Greene said, “Absolutely. Of course I would. I’ve worked hard all my life and I would work hard there too. “

There’s no chance Spokeswoman Pelosi Greene, whom she has referred to as the enemy within, will join the investigative committee of the 1/6 attack that she is suspected of assisting.

On Saturday night, Rep. Greene spoke at Trump’s rally in Ohio calling for the AOC and Pelosi to be incarcerated.

Of course, Greene wants to be on the 1/6 committee. What criminal does not want to investigate his own crime?

Marjorie Taylor Greene is called to testify before the committee rather than get anywhere near an investigative position.

Spokesman Pelosi wants a serious and credible investigation that rules out Marjorie Taylor Green.

Mr. Easley is the executive editor of the White House press pool and congressional correspondent for PoliticusUSA. Jason has a bachelor’s degree in political science. His thesis focused on public policy with a specialization in social reform movements.

Awards and professional memberships

Member of the Society of Professional Journalists and the American Political Science Association

Florida apartment collapse demise toll rises

This aerial view shows search and rescue workers working on site after the partial collapse of the Champlain Towers South in Surfside, north of Miami Beach, on June 24, 2021.

Chandan Khanna | AFP | Getty Images

The death toll has risen to nine people after a twelve-story condominium building collapsed in Florida, Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said at a news conference Sunday morning.

“We have identified four of the victims and notified the next of kin … We are making every effort to identify the others who have been recovered and are also contacting their family members as soon as we can,” said Levine Cava.

Champlain Towers South suddenly collapsed early Thursday morning in Surfside, Florida, north of Miami Beach.

Search and rescue teams dug a 125-foot trench at the rescue site Saturday, allowing authorities to retrieve more bodies and human remains, Levine Cava said.

Miami-Dade police identified four of the deceased as Stacie Dawn Fang, 54, on Saturday night; Antonio Lozano, 83; Gladys Lozano, 79; and Manuel LaFont, 54.

According to the authorities, 156 people were missing as of Saturday.

Levine Cava and Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett told the press Sunday morning that Saturday’s searchers contained the fire at the rescue center and rescues were continuing. Teams from Mexico and Israel are helping the rescue effort, Levine Cava and Burkett say.

“We don’t have a resource problem. We had a luck problem. We just have to start getting a little more luck now,” Burkett said on ABC News’ This Week on Sunday morning.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said at the news conference on Sunday that debris from the rescue center will be moved to a separate location for forensic analysis.

Authorities are still investigating the cause of the collapse on Thursday. An engineer warned in a 2018 report of “major structural damage” in the collapsed condominium building. The report identified problems with the waterproofing under the pool deck and “abundant cracks” in the underground car park.

Levine Cava ordered a 30-day audit of all residential properties five floors or higher that are 40 years or older and come under the jurisdiction of the county on Saturday. The mayor encouraged cities to conduct their own building assessments as well.

Surfside has approved a voluntary evacuation of residents of Champlain Towers North, the sister property of the collapsed building. The city’s building inspector found no immediate cause for concern in the sister property, Levine Cava told NBC News’ Meet the Press on Sunday morning.

Britney Spears’ Brother-in-Regulation Jamie Watson Defends Her Household

At Wednesday’s court hearing, Britney said she wanted to be able to meet with a therapist once a week at most, and at her own home to maintain privacy. The singer has in the past undergone mental health treatment both at her house and at clinics. At the hearing, Britney also described what she said was a phone call with her father about a past treatment plan for her.

“‘I’m sorry, Brittany, you have to listen to your doctors. They are planning to send you to a small home in Beverly Hills to do a small rehab program that we’re going to make up for you. You’re going to pay $60,000 a month for this.’ I cried on the phone for an hour and he loved every minute of it,” she said. “The control he had over someone as powerful as me as he loved to control to hurt his own daughter and 100,000%. He loved it.”

She also said in her statement, “My precious body has worked for my dad for the past f–king 13 years, trying to be so good and pretty. So perfect because he works me so hard when I do everything I’m told.”

$70 million field workplace haul is pandemic file

Still from Universal’s “F9.”

Universal

Universal’s “F9” is paving the way for 2021’s summer box office.

Over its opening weekend, the Fast and Furious film tallied $70 million in box office receipts, the most of any movie released in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

The previous record holder was Paramount’s “A Quiet Place Part II” which opened in May with just under $50 million in ticket sales. Other top openers were “Godzilla vs. Kong,” which tallied $32.2 million during its first weekend in April, and “Cruella,” which took in $37.4 million when it was first released in May.

With an additional $37.9 million in ticket sales internationally, “F9” has now garnered more than $405 million since its debut outside the U.S. and Canada in May.

“F9’s opening weekend performance shows that Universal’s decision early on in the pandemic to move the film well into 2021 was the absolute best move,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at Comscore.

The release of “F9” coincides with a country-wide loosening of Covid-related restrictions and an increase in the number of theaters are open to the public. As of this weekend, 80% of North American theaters were open, according to data from Comscore.

As vaccination rates continue to rise and the number of coronavirus cases decline consumer confidence in returning to movie theaters has spiked. These audiences are also being exposed to fresh movie marketing on the big screen, which could entice them to return for future releases — particularly movies such as “F9,” which is only available in theaters and not being released on streaming until a later date.

In the next few weeks, Hollywood is releasing blockbuster features like “Black Widow,” “Jungle Cruise,” “Space Jam: A New Legacy” and “Snake Eyes.”

Then later in the summer and into the fall audiences will experience: “Dune,” “Free Guy,” “Eternals,” “The Green Knight,” “The Suicide Squad,” “Venom: Let there be Carnage,” “Spider-Man: No Way Home” and “No Time To Die.”

“‘F9’ is the first true summer blockbuster released in over two years and all eyes were on this performance to provide a glimpse into the future of the movie theater,” Dergarabedian said. “And that future now looks very bright and bodes well for the big films now in the pipeline set for release in the coming weeks and months.”

Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC. NBCUniversal is the distributor of “F9.”

Crypto-Mining Crackonosh Malware Discovered In GTA V, The Sims four Torrents

According to a study published by the security company Avast, cyber criminals target players who want to become crypto-rich with “mining malware”.

The so-called “Crackonosh” malware is hidden in free versions of games like NBA 2K19, Grand Theft Auto V, Far Cry 5, The Sims 4 and Jurassic World Evolution that are available for download on torrent sites, Avast said Thursday .

Once installed, Crackonosh quietly uses the computing power of the computer to mine cryptocurrencies for the hackers. The malware has been used since at least June 2018, according to Avast, to generate a $ 2 million cryptocurrency known as Monero.

Avast researcher Daniel Benes told CNBC that infected users may notice that their computers are slowing down or deteriorating from overuse, while their electricity bills can also be higher than normal.

“It takes all the resources the computer has to keep the computer from responding,” he said.

According to Benes, around 220,000 users worldwide have been infected, and 800 devices are infected every day. However, Avast only detects malicious software on devices that have the antivirus software installed, so the actual number could be significantly higher. Brazil, India and the Philippines are among the hardest hit countries, while many cases have also occurred in the US.

The researchers said that Crackonosh takes several steps to try to protect itself after it’s installed, including disabling Windows updates and uninstalling security software.

As for the origin of the malware, Avast believes the author could be Czech – Crackonosh means “mountain spirit” in Czech folklore.

Avast discovered the malware after customers reported the company’s antivirus was missing on their systems and provided an example of a user post on Reddit. The company said it investigated this and other similar reports.

“In summary, Crackonosh shows the risks involved in downloading cracked software and shows that it is very profitable for attackers,” wrote Benes.

“As long as people keep downloading cracked software, attacks like this one will continue to be profitable for attackers,” added Benes. “The main takeaway from this is that you really can’t get anything for free, and if you’re trying to steal software, the chances are someone is trying to steal you.”

“Remarkable Perseverance”

This isn’t the first time malware has impacted games. Cisco-Talos researchers discovered malware in cheat software for several games in March. Meanwhile, a new hacking campaign targeted gamers through the Steam platform earlier this month.

According to a report from Akamai Security Research this week, cyberattacks on gamers rose 340% during the coronavirus pandemic.

“Criminals are relentless, and we have the data to prove it,” said Steve Ragan, Akamai security researcher and author of the State of the Internet / Security report.

“We see a remarkable persistence in the defense mechanisms of the video game industry, which are tested daily – and often hourly – by criminals looking for vulnerabilities to crack servers and reveal information. We also see numerous group chats forming on popular social networks dedicated to sharing attack techniques and best practices. “

Correction: This story has been updated to correct the spelling of the cryptocurrency known as Monero.

Doximity CEO ignored Silicon Valley knowledge, constructed $10 billion firm

Jeff Tangney, CEO, of Doximity at the New York Stock Exchange for their IPO, June 24, 2021.

Source: NYSE

Jeff Tangney launched his first health-tech start-up, Epocrates, in the middle of the dot-com bubble. While the company survived the crash and eventually went public, the endgame was a disappointing acquisition for less than $300 million.

By the time Tangney started his next venture, Doximity, in 2010, he’d learned a few things: Don’t raise too much money. Don’t burn too much cash. Fix a real problem for doctors.

With Doximity, Tangney created a web service that’s both a professional network — think LinkedIn for doctors — and a secure way for medical experts to communicate and share information with patients and colleagues. It now counts 1.8 million medical pros in the U.S. as users, including over 80% of physicians.

On Thursday, Doximity debuted on the New York Stock Exchange, closing the week with a market cap of almost $10 billion after raising around $500 million in its IPO. Tangney’s stake is worth $2.9 billion.

Those are big numbers especially when you consider that, prior to this week, Doximity never showed up on a “unicorn” list of billion-dollar tech companies. Its last financing round in 2014 valued the company at under $400 million. Tangney said that because Doximity is profitable it still hasn’t touched the $50 million it raised seven years ago.

“I did resist some of the Silicon Valley wisdom of, you need to go big, you need to hire 40 more salespeople and do all these things,” Tangney, 48, said in an interview on Thursday, after ringing the bell at the NYSE.

In Doximity’s target market, there’s no point in aiming for rocketship growth, Tangney said. The company generates revenue from drugmakers, who use the site to market treatments to a very targeted audience, and health systems looking to promote content to doctors across the country. It’s also a recruiting tool hospitals and health centers use to fill key jobs.

Tangney recognized early on that he could expand only as rapidly as customer budgets would allow.

“The reality of health care and our clients, who are very staid institutions, a lot of non-profits that have been around for 100 years, is that even if you lean in and hire tons of sales and marketing people, they’re not going to let you grow,” Tangney said.

He’s also not inclined to pay for branding just for the sake of building his profile — another reason why the company has remained largely unknown in Silicon Valley even though it’s headquartered in San Francisco. Doximity’s advertising budget for last fiscal year totaled $2.6 million, or roughly the amount Uber spends on an average day.

Tangney said the best advertising has come from doctors touting the product within their practitioner networks.

Meanwhile, the company generated over $200 million in revenue last fiscal year and produced over $50 million in net income.

Climbing trip at Stanford

Tangney’s journey to Doximity started in the late 1990s while he was living in New York with a trained physician named Richard Fiedotin. From their un-air-conditioned apartment, the pair came up with the idea of creating an app for the Palm Pilot, which had just hit the market, that would allow doctors to get critical information.

Tangney and Fiedotin took that idea with them to Stanford Graduate School of Business, where they met another physician named Tom Lee. The three bonded over the intersection of tech and health care while on a teambuilding climbing trip for students in the program.

In 1998, they started what became Epocrates, and over the next two years raised about $40 million from some of Silicon Valley’s top health investors. As mobile moved to BlackBerry devices and then to iPhones, Epocrates gained traction as a way for doctors to make decisions about prescriptions and patient safety while on the move.

The venture capitalists told Tangney to hire like crazy, so he did. Then came the tech crash and the crisis from the 9/11 terrorist attacks. In 2002, Epocrates was forced to cut a bunch of jobs, Tangney said.

The company held on, but it was a slog. Fiedotin left a few years later, and Lee departed to start One Medical, a chain of primary care clinics that uses technology to improve the patient experience. Tangney stuck around a bit longer, and tried to take Epocrates public. Then came the financial crisis of 2008, and the company had to withdraw its prospectus.

Tangney finally left in late 2009, a year before the eventual IPO and four years before Athenahealth bought the company for $293 million.

“There was a point during the last couple years of my tenure where it felt like we were in this tunnel, marching toward a goal,” Tangney said. “I wasn’t having as much fun. When you’re not in that place of loving what you do, you’re not doing your best work.”

Tangney had spent the past decade selling products to medical centers and talking to doctors about the challenges they faced doing their jobs. He kept those conversations going and learned that communication was a constant point of stress, whether it’s getting in touch with patients, other doctors, administrators or recruiters. In Tangney’s estimation, 80% of communication in the industry “is done via snail mail and fax.”

“Software is indeed eating the world but it kind of choked a little bit on health care,” he said.

Shari Buck had worked with Tangney at Epocrates. She’s one of the first people he approached with the idea of creating a professional network designed for doctors. Buck said she hopped on board “without reservation,” joining as one of the three co-founders, along with Nate Gross, a doctor who is also the founder of health-tech incubator Rock Health.

Doximity co-founders Jeff Tangney (left), Nate Gross and Shari Buck

Doximity

“Before we had an office, Jeff would drive up to Marin to meet me,” Buck said. “We would meet in a workspace above the garage. We used to laugh at how Apple it was,” she said, referring to the storied location where Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak started their computer company.

Tangney also turned to Lee as a sounding board and advisor. At One Medical, Lee had the perfect test audience for Tangney: A growing base of doctors who were enthusiastic about technology.

At the time, Tangney was not at all focused on revenue, but was rather pursuing an approach more akin to consumer internet start-ups, trying to build a big base of engaged users with the hope that money would eventually follow.

Lee said they batted around ideas for future revenue opportunities. Helping medical recruiters find talent was a clear possibility.

“Recruiting doctors is not a well-defined profession and had been done poorly,” said Lee, who’s now founder and CEO of health company Galileo. “A doctor receives a lot of job opportunities. In classic medical marketing, you’d get these glossy photos of opportunities that were completely outdated, showing glorious pictures of suburban communities and symphony life and fishing.”

Best ideas come over cocktails

For Tangney, product development at Doximity has always been centered around what doctors need. So he created a medical advisory board a decade ago, bringing together a few dozen physicians in the network for a weekend every year.

The group gets together on a Saturday afternoon to provide feedback on new products, learn about updates that could be coming and for some general brainstorming. The talks continue informally over evening drinks and then resume Sunday morning, ending with lunch.

“Software is indeed eating the world but it kind of choked a little bit on health care.”

While Doximity had to skip this year’s gathering because of Covid-19, the event has been held in Napa and at Pebble Beach, and more recently at the company’s San Francisco office.

“It’s been probably the biggest influence on our product roadmap,” Buck said. “We talk about what we plan on building, individual features and new crazy ideas that we have. The best ideas come at cocktail hour on Saturday night.”

Buck said Tangney is known for carrying around little notebooks that he diligently fills up cover to cover over the two days.

Kevin Spain of Emergence Capital attended the Napa weekend in 2012, not long after his venture firm led Doximity’s first investment, a $10.8 million financing round.

Spain was thoroughly invested in Doximity’s success, and not just because of the money Emergence had on the line. He wasn’t yet a partner at the firm but had convinced his superiors to back a pre-revenue business. It was an atypical bet for Emergence, which focuses on early-stage cloud software companies.

Spain said that while board meetings were instructive because he could see signups going in the right direction and engagement on the site increasing, the Napa weekend was much more insightful. He got to hear directly from doctors about what they needed to improve their practice.

“They felt like they had a hand in co-creating this thing Doximity was building,” said Spain, whose firm owns a $1.35 billion stake in the company as of Friday’s close. “I’d never seen that before.”

Some of those doctors ultimately made good money from the IPO. Doximity allocated up to 3.5 million shares to doctors on the platform, representing 15% of the offering. After Doximity’s stock price jumped 115% in its first two days, the value of shares owned by doctors climbed from $91 million to over $195 million.

“Physicians are sort of outsiders in the financial markets and business world,” Tangney said. “Yet in our life and world they’re the insiders, they’re the people we care about most. We’d rather the shares go to them if there’s a pop than to some hedge fund somewhere.”

One challenge for Tangney as he continues to seek expansion opportunities is that there’s a finite universe of users and the core product already reaches the vast majority of them. The company serves more than 80% of U.S. physicians and over 90% of recent medical school graduates. There are only about 1 million doctors in the country.

Still, Tangney sees a decade of revenue growth ahead. There are digital ad dollars to capture as pharmaceutical companies move spending online. And there’s the power of medical referrals, helping doctors get patients to the right places based on where the top experts work and which hospital specializes in treating a particular disease.

Doximity also just entered telehealth, a $4.3 billion market opportunity, according to the prospectus. As a response to the pandemic, Doximity launched a video-based virtual visit service that doctors can use from their existing app and patients can use without having to download anything.

The company said it signed over 150 telehealth subscription agreements with medical systems and served over 63 million virtual visits in the fiscal year that ended in March. Yet the product only accounts for 2% of its revenue.

At the highest level, Tangney said, health care accounts for 18% of the U.S. economy, so there’s no shortage of money available if Doximity’s service continues to add valuable features.

“We’re steadfastly focused on these very busy million people who really take care of the sick all day and aren’t given great tools to collaborate with each other easily and to make care better,” he said.

WATCH: Disrupting Healthcare

Chinese language firms take part in soccer sponsorship at UEFA Euro 2020

Football fans watch the UEFA Euro 2020 Championship Group A match between Wales and Switzerland in a pub on June 12, 2021 in Shanghai, China.

Chen Yuyu | Visual China Group | Getty Images

BEIJING – After home appliance manufacturer Hisense became the first Chinese sponsor of the UEFA European Football Championship in 2016, three more Chinese companies signed partnerships for this year’s Euro 2020.

These companies pay their price to reach overseas markets while building global prestige for home buyers.

“Chinese brands use football not only for local marketing (selling their products to Chinese consumers), but also to open up new markets, especially in Europe,” says Pierre Justo, Managing Director International, Media and Sports at the consulting firm Kantar, in an email.

The Chinese government has encouraged local businesses to go overseas, while many businesses are eager to strengthen their brands by selling overseas.

Hisense, based in Qingdao, Shandong Province, said the company aims to generate half of its total overseas sales, valued at about $ 23.5 billion, by 2025. That’s triple the $ 7.93 billion it made overseas during last year’s pandemic.

The television and appliance maker claims that its sales in Europe more than doubled in the first five months of the year from a year earlier, aided by increasing demand for refrigerators in France.

Hisense began to penetrate Europe over 10 years ago and today has more than 8,000 employees on the continent with offices in Germany, Spain and 20 other countries. The company sponsored the 2018 FIFA World Cup and has signed a contract for 2022.

Another Chinese sponsor, smartphone company Vivo, said it officially entered six European countries in October and claims it has more than 400 million users in more than 50 countries.

Read more about China from CNBC Pro

A full list of Euro 2020 sponsors was not available, but the sponsors the Union of European Football Associations lists on its website include Russian energy company Gazprom, German automaker Volkswagen and US express delivery company FedEx.

Alipay, a subsidiary of Alibaba, and ByteDance’s TikTok are among the other companies paying to have their names roll behind the soccer players along the stadium in June and July this year.

The one-month football tournament Euro 2020, which started on June 11, has been postponed due to last year’s pandemic. During the last championship in 2016, 2 billion people watched live TV coverage, fueled by increased interest from China and Brazil, according to a UEFA report quoted by the Associated Press.

In 2018, Alipay agreed to an eight-year partnership that included Euro 2020 and Euro 2024. The deal was worth € 200 million ($ 238.5 million), according to the Financial Times. For Euro 2020, Alipay’s deal includes the display of English and Chinese language versions of its subsidiaries.

UEFA said it could not disclose the cost of partnering with Chinese brands “due to confidentiality clauses”. When Ant was contacted by CNBC, Ant declined to confirm the scope of its eight-year partnership agreement.

Alipay, one of the two major mobile operators in China, has tried to expand globally by working with overseas merchants and Chinese tourists. The number of Chinese travelers has fallen since the pandemic forced countries to close their borders last year.

China’s fan base

Another Chinese company looking to benefit from the tournament is iQiyi, which has acquired the online live streaming rights for Euro 2020. Subscriber growth has stagnated at just over 100 million, while the company posted another $ 193.4 million loss in the first quarter.

The deal attracted “significant” visitor traffic as well as opportunities for business partnerships with Volvo, Heineken, Volkswagen and Meituan, said Lingxiao Yu, CEO of iQiyi Sports, in a Chinese statement translated by CNBC.

He declined to say if more people bought subscriptions as a result. The state broadcaster CCTV has the right to broadcast the games live on television.

While Euro 2020 has been one of the most popular topics on Weibo, China’s version of Twitter, in recent weeks, it is unclear how much of China’s football market can grow internationally without a team.

Over the past two decades, China has tried unsuccessfully to build its own teams by paying top dollars for foreign players and coaches, said Justo von Kantar. The only way for China to develop its own soccer stars will be to cultivate a local culture around the sport from the ground up, he said.

On TikTok, the contrast between the worldwide interest in football and that of China becomes clear.

The official account for Euro 2020 has 2.5 million followers, compared to just 291,000 followers on Douyin – the very popular Chinese version of the short video and streaming app, which is also part of ByteDance.

Risks of the China partnership

China remains a large and growing lucrative market for international sport. After decades of cultivation, the National Basketball Association’s local business reached $ 4 billion in 2018, Deputy Commissioner Mark Tatum told Forbes.

Working with China, however, has its own risks.

In 2019, an NBA-affiliated tweet backing protesters in Hong Kong caused mainland companies to suspend their partnerships, causing the association an estimated cost of up to $ 400 million.

The official video streaming platform Tencent resumed broadcasting of most of the games after a few days, while the state broadcaster CCTV stopped broadcasting the games for more than a year, according to state media.

Disclosure: CNBC parent Comcast / NBCUniversal owns the TV rights to English Premier League football matches.

Massive Latto enters the airport in her hood amid cultural conversations about it

Angry! The cultural talk about wearing hoods in public has been going on for a hot minute! Some argue that hoods shouldn’t be rocked outside the home, while others argue that those who don’t wear them should mind their business. And some people get stuck on that “in certain rooms” line where they might carry it to the airport, but not to the grocery store or elementary school for example. Well, it seems like Big Latto recently took a flight and proudly rocked a hood at the airport despite the criticism.

Latto, dressed in what appears to be a red shirt, took to Instagram to let us know that she’ll still be comfortable! Dressed in a fuchsia hood and black face mask, Latto addressed any possible concerns or comments about her chosen look.

“PSA, I’m in the airport with my hood and whoever checked me out,” Latto said in an Instagram story video.

She ends the short clip with a laugh, which could indicate that she is joking about the situation. Nonetheless, some celebrities have “checked” others to see if they are publicly portraying themselves in this way. Celebrities like Mo’Nique have fueled the conversations on social media. As you may recall, she went over to Instagram a few weeks ago to call the practice. At the time, she admittedly went on her own excursion and saw “too many” black women wearing “hoods, scarves, slippers, pajamas, blankets”.

“I’m not saying you have no pride, but the portrayal you are showing has to ask someone if you have it,” replied Mo’Nique of what she saw.

She followed her first video with a clarification that legends like Patti LaBelle and Margaret Avery approached her for similar behavior.

“If I had changed my mind, I would have felt that they were rubbing me wrong,” said Mo’Nique. “But I am glad that I took the position of appreciation and gratitude because they tapped me.”

Roommate, let us know what you think about wearing hats in public!

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