A ‘radically inclusive’ out of doors house for LGBTQ+ and folks of shade

Participants during the snowboarding activity with the Hoods to Woods Foundation at Big Snow American Dream in East Rutherford, New Jersey on June 13, 2024.

Danielle DeVries | CNBC

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — For 16-year-old Zyshawn Gibson, snowboarding down the indoor ski park at Big Snow American Dream in East Rutherford, New Jersey, was a welcome change of scenery.

Gibson’s participation at the ski park was made possible through the Hoods to Woods Foundation, a nonprofit based in New York and New Jersey that “promotes awareness of the outdoors to inner city children through snowboarding,” according to the organization’s website. Through its 15-year history, Hoods to Woods has helped hundreds of underserved youth such as Gibson develop a new interest and outlet through snowboarding, co-founder Omar Diaz estimated.

“It keeps me out of the house,” Gibson told CNBC from a lounge room in the Big Snow complex. “It’s a different thing to do, instead of being outside in the streets and being in danger and stuff like that.”

Hoods to Woods, the brainchild of Diaz and co-founder Brian Paupaw, is dedicated to providing new opportunities for teenagers and young adults who come from similar backgrounds to their own. The group hosts weekslong programs across urban areas in the two states.

Participants during the snowboarding activity with the Hoods to Woods Foundation at Big Snow American Dream in East Rutherford, New Jersey on June 13, 2024.

Danielle DeVries | CNBC

The organization is just one of several across the United States working to bringing people of color to outdoor activities, including winter sports — spaces where they are often marginalized and underrepresented.

A 2019-2020 participation study released by Snowsports Industries America showed that the participation for white Americans remained at 67.5%. In comparison, Asians accounted for 7.7% of the participants, while Black people made up 9.2% and Hispanics came in at 14%.

Similarly, a demographics study updated by the National Ski Areas Association in 2023 found that white participants represented 88.1% of guests.

One factor that contributes to this divide is the high barrier to entry for these winter sports, given the average expenses when it comes to equipment and transportation. The same study from Snowsports Industries America revealed that more than half of winter sports participants in 2019 through 2020 made over $75,000 a year.

Breaking down barriers

But organizations such as Hoods to Woods have made it their mission to break down these walls.

The nonprofit started in 2009 as an effort from Paupaw and Diaz, two seasoned snowboarders, to give back to their communities by introducing youth to the outdoors through snowboarding.

Co-founder Omar Diaz (right), his son Sebastian (middle) and volunteer Katie Korpacz pose for a photo during the snowboarding activity with the Hoods To Woods Foundation at Big Snow American Dream in East Rutherford, New Jersey on June 13, 2024.

Danielle DeVries | CNBC

“The representation of people that looked like me and even came from my environment was important, because you could be out on the mountain and you hear people talking but they don’t sound like you,” Diaz said. “You grow up in an urban environment, and in the mountains everyone around you sounds completely different.”

The entire program — including snowboarding lessons, transportation and meals — is free for its youth participants. Paupaw and Diaz raise money to pay for travel and food.

The group also accepts donations of gear or gifts, while Big Snow has lent its facilities at no charge to the nonprofit for years.

Curating communities in the outdoors

Outside of Hoods to Woods, there are other nonprofits in the United States dedicated to similar causes.

For instance, Edge Outdoors in Washington state, aims to “[address] the invisibility of Black, Indigenous, women of color in snow sports,” founder Annette Diggs told CNBC. The group also works to include women who belong to the LGBTQ+ community, including both trans and queer-identifying participants.

“One thing that’s unique about Edge is that we work with the community — a lot of our participants are being taught by people from their community, meaning Black and brown people,” she said.

Ciera Young, who is Black and has multiple sclerosis, learned adaptive skiing through a scholarship from Edge.

“I was just so grateful that my instructors listened to me, and they said, ‘We want to make sure you’re able to ski the way you want to ski and that you feel empowered,'” she said. “Being in a space with other BIPOC folks was incredible.”

Zyshawn Gibson, left, and Tah’gee Van Dunk during the snowboarding activity with the Hoods to Woods Foundation at Big Snow American Dream in East Rutherford, New Jersey on June 13, 2024.

Danielle DeVries | CNBC

Meanwhile, Vermont-based nonprofit Unlikely Riders, created in 2020, is planning to build a people of color-stewarded outdoor community center, which co-founder Abby Crisostomo envisions will one day be a “radically inclusive space.”

In the four years since its founding, Crisostomo estimated that Unlikely Riders has hosted more than 145 events, donated 2,500 pieces of winter gear and instructed more than 570 community members for free. In addition to skiing and snowboarding, the group also introduces people of color and LGBTQ+ communities to mountain biking while fostering a welcoming environment.

Small businesses, such as Skida or the people of color-owned ToughCutie, have been instrumental in championing the efforts of Unlikely Riders by donating gear and hosting events.

Coming full circle

Besides their mission of inclusivity, the co-founders of Hoods to Woods also emphasized the importance of mentorship within the program, including checking in with their community participants and helping with financial literacy, college applications and employment offers.

“I saw kids who had behavioral problems at school and at home, do a 180 because they were able to be in environment where they could be themselves and think freely,” Paupaw said. “To me, that’s one of the most powerful things I’ve witnessed as a human being, but also as a co-founder of this program.”

Through Hoods to Woods, Diaz, Paupaw and their volunteers have built many relationships with their participants. Some come back to volunteer after graduating from their programs.

Participants and volunteers during the snowboarding activity with the Hoods to Woods Foundation at Big Snow American Dream in East Rutherford, New Jersey on June 13, 2024. More than half of the program’s volunteers are certified snowboard instructors, said co-founder Omar Diaz.

Danielle DeVries | CNBC

“This is the perfect combination,” Diaz told CNBC. “Giving back to the youth, changing their lives, doing it in a place that I love — I’m happy. There’s no better way to give back.”

Miquan Chisholm, 27, was one of the program’s first participants 15 years ago. He’s now a dedicated volunteer to the cause. His daughter is just 3 now, but he envisions a future in which she will one day join the community.

“It changed my life because it gave me a different view on life. I never thought that I would be snowboarding as a Black person … And I fell in love with it,” he said. “Hoods to Woods definitely gave me the confidence to try new things and just be open-minded about things in life and realize there’s so many opportunities for people out there.”

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Biden Hits Trump with $50 Million Advert On Abortion And Mission 2025

The Biden-Harris campaign is launching a $50 million ad campaign in July, using Trump’s own words and his Project 2025 to highlight the threat he poses to women’s and girls’ health freedom. The “Her Own” ad will run in all battleground states.

The ad will remind voters that Donald Trump is bragged about overturning Roe v Wade and is responsible for overturning Roe v. Wade, using the Republican presumed nominee’s own words from the June debate in which Trump bragged about appointing three “great” Supreme Court justices who helped “kill” Roe and even said, “it’s been a great thing.”

NARRATOR:
For almost 50 years, Roe v. Wade was the law of the land, ensuring a woman could make her own health care decisions.

TRUMP:
And what I did is, I put three great Supreme Court Justices on the Court, and they happened to vote in favor of killing
Roe v. Wade. It’s been a great thing.

NARRATOR:
Ask yourself, who do you want in the White House: The man proud to overturn
Roe v. Wade, or the President fighting for your rights?

PRESIDENT BIDEN:
I’m Joe Biden and I approve this message.

The Biden-Harris campaign will run the spot “on pivotal high viewership moments to reach politically diverse audiences, such as The Bachelorette season premiere, the Olympic Games on NBC, and the Republican National Convention, where Trump and his extremist Project 2025 agenda will be under a national spotlight.”

Days ago, conservative leaders warned of a coming split in the Trump coalition due to his wanting to water down their abortion platform because he knows he can’t win running as the guy who will institute a nationwide abortion ban, and yet that’s exactly what the Trump/conservative coalition presidential policy agenda Project 2025 lays out.

It’s more than fair for voters to be skeptical of any Hail Mary promises from Republicans on abortion after they spent decades trying to get where we are today, and several of their Supreme Court justices misled voters and Senators about seeing Roe as established precedent.

Republicans have struggled as the nation turned against them on abortion after seeing the results of Republican policy in action. They tried changing the messaging, in what amounts to their usual belief that they can flat out lie to voters and get away with it, but given the medical torture their overturning of Roe is inflicting on a ten-year-old girl and women across the country, the spin has failed to take root, so we saw Trump lying about “after birth” abortion at the debate and now scrambling to change a deadly platform after bragging about it.

Women plan to “Roe the Vote” this November, and that’s why Donald Trump is trying to run from his own “achievement” of stealing rights from girls and women.

“Donald Trump brags that ‘killing Roe v. Wade’ has been ‘a great thing.’ So, let’s take a closer look at what Donald Trump thinks is ‘great’: a ten-year-old rape victim had to leave her home in Ohio and travel several hours to Indianapolis in order to receive an abortion. A Texas woman miscarried in the lobby restroom of an emergency room after front desk staff were too scared to admit her. OBGYNs fled Idaho for fear of being prosecuted under the state’s extreme abortion ban,” Biden-Harris 2024 Senior Spokesperson Lauren Hitt said in a statement sent to PoliticusUSA. “If Trump is reelected, he will go even further –  punishing women who receive an abortion, banning abortion nationwide, and carrying out the rest of the extreme Project 2025 agenda. The only thing standing between American women and Trump’s cruel attacks on reproductive health care is Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.”

In years past, pundits would have decried this as fear-mongering, but tragically today it’s a reality and Democrats have been proven right about the threat Republicans’ pose to basic established freedoms. If one reads Project 2025, it’s clear many more freedoms are on the chopping block.

The issue of abortion is a game changer for Democrats, and this ad comes at a pivotal time when they need to refocus their attention on the issues of abortion and democracy for the election instead of petty power grabs by paid representatives. Democrats need to stop being fearful babies prioritizing their own races and start standing up strong and proud over their platform to do their part for the future of our union.

Lives are literally at stake.

Listen to Sarah on the PoliticusUSA Pod on The Daily newsletter podcast here.

Sarah has been credentialed to cover President Barack Obama, then VP Joe Biden, 2016 Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, and exclusively interviewed Speaker Nancy Pelosi multiple times and exclusively covered her first home appearance after the first impeachment of then President Donald Trump.

Sarah is two-time Telly award winning video producer and a member of the Society of Professional Journalists.

Connect with Sarah on Post,  Mastodon @PoliticusSarah@Journa.Host, & Twitter.

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Novo Nordisk weight reduction medicine linked to uncommon eye situation: research

A box of Ozempic and contents sit on a table in Dudley, North Tyneside, Britain, October 31, 2023. 

George Frey | Reuters

Novo Nordisk investors appeared unperturbed Thursday by a critical Harvard report that linked weight loss drugs to a rare eye condition.

Semaglutide, which is present in weight loss drugs including Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic and Wegovy, might be associated with an increased risk of a rare eye disease, according to a study carried out by Harvard Medical School.

Analysts said the study results were “hardly a game-changer,” however. Shares in the Danish pharmaceutical company’s shares were little changed on Thursday, dipping in early morning trade before rising 0.1% as of 11:17 a.m. London time.

The Harvard report found that patients with type 2 diabetes or obesity, who are prescribed semaglutide, have an increased risk of nonarteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (NAION) — a condition which can lead to loss of vision in one eye. Patients were more likely to be diagnosed with the eye condition compared to patients who were not prescribed the weight loss drugs, the study found.

While the research paper does suggest “some correlation” with a rare ocular event, the quality of the evidence is “vey low, the error bars are very wide,” according to Deutsche Bank analyst Emmanuel Papadakis.

The worst case scenario would likely be a further update to the label warning section of the drugs, which is “hardly a game-changer,” said Papadakis.

He added that Deutsche Bank generally regards semaglutide medications as “one of the most derisked therapeutic classes in industry history from a safety perspective.”

A spokesperson from Novo Nordisk said the optic nerve disease NAION is not an “adverse drug reaction for the marketed formulations of semaglutide” as per the approved labels. They added that there are “key methodological limitations” to the study such as the “small number of people” with type 2 diabetes or obesity that were exposed to semaglutide and were included in the trial.

“Patient safety is a top priority for Novo Nordisk, and we take all reports about adverse events from use of our medicines very seriously,” the spokesperson said.

Popularity for the blockbuster drugs has seen Novo Nordisk grow to become the most valuable company in Europe, with a valuation larger than Denmark’s total gross domestic product last year.

Wegovy has also been shown to have health benefits beyond losing weight and regulating blood sugar. The Food and Drug Administration in March approved it for use in reducing the risk of heart disease.

The drugs, however, have faced scrutiny after some patients reported experiencing stomach paralysis and suicidal ideation while taking them. A study carried out by researchers at the University of British Columbia noted an increased risk of bowel obstruction, a disorder where food is blocked from passing through the small or large intestine, and pancreatitis, or pancreas inflammation.

The labels for the drugs already include warnings about pancreatitis and certain types of bowel obstruction. A change in vision is also listed as a potential side effect for both Ozempic and Wegovy.

The U.S. study, which was published on Wednesday, analyzed data from 16,827 patients from December 2017 through to November last year. The researchers noted that further study is required to assess whether semaglutide causes the eye condition.

— CNBC’s Jenni Reid contributed to this report.

Biden ABC interview fails to quell 2024 reelection considerations

President Joe Biden speaks to supporters during a campaign rally at Sherman Middle School on July 05, 2024 in Madison, Wisconsin. 

Scott Olson | Getty Images

President Joe Biden did not assuage Democratic anxieties about his 2024 reelection bid against former President Donald Trump during a highly-anticipated ABC News interview on Friday night, his first televised interview since his fumbling debate performance in June.

On Saturday, House Rep. Angie Craig, D-Minn., officially called on Biden to bow out of the presidential race.

“This is not a decision I’ve come to lightly, but there is simply too much at stake to risk a second Donald Trump presidency,” Craig said in a statement on Saturday morning. “That’s why I respectfully call on President Biden to step aside as the Democratic nominee for a second term as President and allow for a new generation of leaders to step forward.”

Craig is now the fifth House Democrat to call on Biden to exit. Rep. Mike Quigley, D-Il., made his own announcement during an MSNBC interview Friday, just before the full ABC News 22-minute interview aired.

They join a growing choir of Democratic lawmakers, donors and strategists losing faith in Biden’s ability to wage a successful campaign against Trump. Reps. Lloyd Doggett, D-Tx. Raúl Grijalva, D-Ariz. and Seth Moulton, D-Mass. have also publicly called on Biden to step down.

“The president is rightfully proud of his record,” said David Axelrod, who served as a senior advisor to former President Barack Obama, after the ABC News interview aired. “But he is dangerously out-of-touch with the concerns people have about his [capacities] moving forward and his standing in this race.”

Earlier this week, former Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep. Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., some of Biden’s closest allies, publicly validated concerns about Biden’s fitness for reelection. Pelosi, for example, said it was “legitimate” to ask whether Biden’s debate performance was simply a one-off episode or representative of a more long-term condition.

Both Pelosi and Clyburn noted that they still support the president as he vies for a second term.

Jeffries meeting Sunday

On Wednesday, Biden held a host of calls and meetings, including with Pelosi, Clyburn and a gathering of Democratic governors to try and reassure his concerned supporters.

While the list of Democrats stepping forward with their qualms about Biden grows, much of the panic is playing out behind closed doors.

Several Democratic lawmakers and their staff spoke to NBC News anonymously Friday night and Saturday morning, doubling down on their concerns about Biden even after the ABC News interview.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., is working to organize a Sunday virtual meeting of Democratic committee ranking members where Biden will likely be a topic of discussion, NBC News reported.

On the other side of Capitol Hill, Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., is trying to convene a meeting of Democratic senators next week to talk about Biden’s reelection concerns and the impact it might have on down-ballot races, according to the NBC News report.

Losing donor support

Meanwhile, the donor class has been sounding its own alarm bells on Biden.

“We need to move beyond the gerontocracy!!” Galaxy CEO Michael Novogratz, a crypto billionaire and Democratic donor, posted on social media Saturday morning. “We need to sweep the floor of the team that’s been in charge the past 30 years and pass the reigns!! It’s time.”

Novogratz previously backed the campaign of long-shot Democratic challenger Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minn., before he dropped out of the race.

But Novogratz is part of a swelling wave of Democratic donors losing support for Biden. Some of them, like Disney heiress Abigail Disney, have embargoed their future donations to the party until the president bows out of the race, CNBC previously reported.

A flurry of polls including from the New York Times/Siena College and the Wall Street Journal have found Biden losing ground against Trump following his debate flop on June 27. His debate performance has been remembered mostly for moments where he tripped over his words, failed to piece together coherent sentences at times or spontaneously paused mid-answer appearing to gather his thoughts.

“It was a bad episode. No indication of any serious condition. I was exhausted. I didn’t listen to my instincts in terms of preparing and a bad night,” Biden told ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos during the Friday interview.

The president added staunchly that he is not planning to drop out of the 2024 race.

“If the Lord Almighty came down and said, ‘Joe, get out of the race,’ I’d get out of the race,” Biden said. “But the Lord Almighty’s not coming down.”

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Deliver Their Love Story to Amsterdam

“The one thing I told myself was ‘Do not drop the baby,’” he told his brother Jason Kelce on the July 3 episode of their New Heights podcast. “‘Do not drop Taylor on your way over to this damn couch.’”

Travis had originally planned a different cameo.

“I initially mentioned it to Tay,” he told Jason. “I was like, ‘How funny would it be if I just rolled out on one of the bikes during the 1989 album. That era.’”

Taylor, Travis said, began laughing. “She was like, ‘Would you seriously be up for doing something like that?’” he recalled. “And I was like, ‘What? I would love to do that. Are you kidding me?’ I’ve seen the show enough, might as well put me to work here.”

Travis has attended more than 10 Eras tour concerts on five continents since he famously attempted, without success, to pass on a friendship bracelet with his number on it to Taylor at her show in Kansas City, Mo.—home of the Chiefs—almost exactly one year ago. The two went on to begin dating later that summer of 2023.

Look back at Taylor and Travis’ road to romance…

Ferrari’s success as a luxurious model comes down to 5 secrets and techniques

In the world of luxury, Hermès is arguably the gold standard.

Its sales are growing double digits even as other luxury companies post declines or dramatically slower growth. Wealthy customers lucky enough to be anointed as Birkin-bag worthy can purchase a Birkin 25 for about $11,000 and flip it the same day for more than $23,000. Analysts predict Hermès could surpass Louis Vuitton in revenue within the next three years as the world’s largest luxury brand.

Hermès stock is up 13% this year, while LVMH shares are flat and Kering is down 18%.

There is one luxury company, however, that has raced past Hermès when it comes to growth and brand cache – Ferrari.

This year, Ferrari for the first time surpassed Hermès as the most valuable luxury company in the world as measured by stock multiple, which gauges growth and profit prospects. Ferrari’s stock now trades at 50 times earnings, compared with 48 for Hermès and 23 for LVMH.

The storied automaker, founded in 1947 by Enzo Ferrari as way to fund his race team, debuted on the New York Stock Exchange at $60 a share in 2015. It now trades at $410 a share.

The company is valued at more than $75 billion — roughly 1½ times the market cap of Ford or General Motors, which make millions of cars each year. Ferrari produced only 13,663 cars last year.

Ferrari is not a traditional luxury company, of course. It makes cars and has a race team, a merchandise company, a car-restoration company and many businesses that bear little resemblance to a maker of $1,300 scarves and $800 sandals.

Yet in a recent research report, Bernstein luxury analyst Luca Solca posits that Ferrari and Hermès are similar, since both “occupy the pinnacle of the pricing pyramid” in their categories and are “perfectly positioned” to benefit from the surge in the global wealthy.

To better understand what makes Ferrari a luxury brand, CNBC traveled to Ferrari headquarters in Maranello, Italy, to interview the company’s CEO, Benedetto Vigna.

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Vigna is an unlikely luxury king. He spent most of his career at Geneva-based semiconductor maker STMicroelectronics, where he ran its micro-electromechanical systems and sensors group. He helped create the screen sensor technology used in iPhones, for example.

His appointment to the top job at Ferrari in 2021 was a sign that technology would be core to the supercar maker’s growth, and in a sense, the future of luxury.  

In an interview at the company’s $200 million E-Building, Vigna talked about the upcoming electric Ferrari, its commitment to sustainability and current global demand for Ferraris.

The main topic of conversation, however, was on what makes Ferrari a leader in luxury, and what lessons other companies and executives serving wealthy clients could heed from its rise. Here are five main takeaways:

1. Play hard to get

Ferrari Purasangue SUV

Adam Jeffery | CNBC

As Solca points out in his research note, Ferrari and Hermès both “sell less than the market would take.” A lot less.

Based on orders, analysts estimate Ferrari could easily sell two or three times its current production. Ferrari’s allure was built on scarcity and exclusivity.

Even if you can afford a Ferrari, with an average price of $380,000, securing an order is nearly impossible.

The wait time for a Purosangue, Ferrari’s pseudo-SUV, and other hot models is now up to three years, the longest in its history. Ask any Ferrari dealer about their biggest problem, and they’ll say: “Not enough cars, too many frustrated clients.”

But CEO Vigna said the scarcity is part of Ferrari’s brand promise.

“We have to stay true to our founders strategy, which is to always sell one car less than the market demands.”

His strategy is to grow profit by making more on each car, rather than making more cars.

“We always want to push the quality of revenues over quantity,” he said.

Indeed, Ferrari’s production increases over the years have lagged far behind the growth of wealthy potential buyers. In 2010, it produced 6,573 cars, which means over the past 14 years, production has doubled. Over the same period, the global population of billionaires has more than tripled (and so has the population of those worth $30 million+ and $100 million+).

Vigna said seeing a Ferrari on the road should be like seeing a rare and exotic animal. The imbalance also gives Ferrari a unique position in the auto world: The cars usually appreciate in value over time.

Vigna said that if clients have to wait for one, all the better.

“Waiting is part of the experience,” he said.

During CNBC’s visit to the factory, a Ferrari customer took delivery of a new maroon 812 Superfast. He looked to be in his 70s or 80s. When he saw the car, and posed with it under the storied Ferrari entrance gates, his face lit up and he transformed into a 10-year-old on Christmas morning.

Ferraris are special, because they are still special. 

2. Make emotion the driver

The Ferrari SP38 seen at Goodwood Festival of Speed 2022 on June 23rd in Chichester, England.

Martyn Lucy | Getty Images

Ask any Ferrari fan or owner what makes a Ferrari a Ferrari, and they might say the design, the engine sound, the handling, the power, the braking, or the 100 years of racing history behind that bright yellow badge.  

Vigna says a true luxury product is defined by one chief characteristic: emotion.

“Ferrari is a luxury company because it’s a company that is delivering a unique product. It’s connecting with the most inner part of people, the emotional side,” he said. “A luxury company is a company that is using technology, innovation, storytelling, heritage, everything, with the ultimate goal to feed that emotional side that we all have.”

Vigna said Ferrari will never produce vehicles that people simply need for transportation.

“When I get invitations to talk to conferences, I won’t attend if I hear two words — utility or mobility. We don’t make a useful product. We make an emotional product,” he told CNBC. 

It’s similar to what LVMH Chairman Bernard Arnault refers to as “desirability.” It’s not enough to make a high-quality product, or an expensive product or one with more features or functions. It has to tug at the heart.

3. The art of pricing

An in-progress Ferrari at the supercar maker’s E-Building in Maranello, Italy.

Crystal Lau | CNBC

Based on Ferrari’s soaring prices, you’d think pricing is based on profit demands and Wall Street’s obsession with margin growth.

Yet Vigna said the base price for each model is actually set about a month before its launch – in an unusual process.

“The way we define price in our company is very simple,” he said. “One month before the car is ready for the unveil, we go on the track — me and several people — and we drive it for a day or a day and a half. And then with fresh emotion in our body, we define the price. It’s me, the CMO and the CFO defining the price. We share the emotion.”

Clearly, those emotions are rising. The cheapest Ferrari in 2012 was the California, with a manufacturer’s suggested retail price of $195,000. Today’s entry-level Ferrari, the Roma, starts at $273,000, or 40% more.

Ferrari is launching more limited-edition and special-edition cars that command far higher prices: The SF90 XX Stradale starts at around $900,000, and all 799 coupes and open-top Spiders were sold out when it was unveiled. The SP3 Daytona, with only 599 units, starts at $2.3 million.

Perhaps the biggest boost to profits is personalization. Today’s Ferrari buyers increasingly want custom paint colors, leather, fabrics, stitching, exposed carbon-fiber and other personal details that make it their own. Those personal touches can add anywhere from $100,000 to $500,000 to the sale price.

Vigna said his “value over volume” strategy means Ferrari can grow profits in the double digits with only modest increases in cars made.

4. The road to VIP status

Ferrari would never admit it, but dealers will tell you that customers have to work their way up a costly commercial ladder to get access to new Ferraris and especially limited editions.

It’s similar to the path Rolex buyers have to follow to eventually get a new Daytona, or Hermès customers have to take to eventually get a Birkin.

In short, you start by buying a basic (and sometimes less popular) model. Then you can buy a slightly more desirable model, or two or three. If you attend Ferrari events, show support for the brand, even join a Ferrari racing program, you can eventually become eligible for more expensive and even limited-edition models.

Nearly three-quarters of all Ferraris are sold to existing customers. Which means starting at the bottom of the ladder is difficult.

“Ferrari and Hermès reserve their most desirable products for their most loyal customers,” Solca said. “This in effect ‘bundles’ access and amps up desirability.”

5. Happy employees means happier customers

Workers at the new Ferrari NV E-building factory in Maranello, Italy, on Friday, June 21, 2024. The site in Maranello, built over the past couple of years in near-total secrecy, will make Ferrari’s first EV from late 2025 alongside hybrid models and cars powered by combustion engines. Photographer: Francesca Volpi/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Francesca Volpi | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Luxury companies often mirror the rising inequality in the economy. Even well-paid and well-respected employees work every day to make products they will never be able to afford or experience.

Vigna has sought to bridge those two worlds.

Shortly after becoming CEO, he discovered that many Ferrari employees had never even driven in a Ferrari. The company brought employees to the test track to take a ride and get a first-hand appreciation of the importance of their work.

Last year, he also announced an employee stock ownership program, giving each employee the option to become a shareholder of Ferrari, receiving a one-off grant of shares, free of charge, worth up to about 2,065 euros ($2,229)

While common in the U.S., employee stock programs are rare in Europe. Vigna said he learned to appreciate employee stock plans – and the importance of having employees share the benefits of shareholders – while working in Silicon Valley.

“This proposal came from the team and it was approved right away, by me and the board,” he said. “The people are the center of the company. You need to motivate all of them. If you give shares, they all feel part of the company, like owners of the company. All companies have people. Only a few companies are made of people.”

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Biden tries to calm Democrats as 2024 drop-out stress mounts

President Joe Biden and his White House staff spent Wednesday delivering pep talks in calls and meetings with close allies, Democratic governors, legislators and campaign staff.

“Let me say this as clearly as I possibly can, as simply and straightforward as I can: I am running,” Biden said on a call with campaign staff, an official told NBC News. “I’m not leaving. I’m in this race to the end and we’re going to win.”

The comments are part of Biden’s larger firefighting mission as his team works to quell Democratic panic about his reelection bid in the wake of his disastrous debate performance against former President Donald Trump last week.

Biden was joined at the Wednesday campaign meeting by Vice President Kamala Harris, who is increasingly drawing eyes as a potential replacement for the president if he chooses to drop out of the race.

The president spoke with some of his closest allies and Capitol Hill supporters Wednesday, including former Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Rep. Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y. and Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del.

The president also has taped interviews with two Black radio shows, the Earl Ingram Show on the Civic Media Network and The Source with Andrea Lawful-Sanders on WURD Radio, scheduled to air Thursday morning, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said at the Wednesday press briefing.

On Wednesday evening, the president is also scheduled to meet with Democratic governors from across the U.S., many of whom have been floated as other potential stand-ins for Biden. That meeting follows a Monday huddle of governors, who reportedly expressed their concerns about the Democratic Party’s path forward, according to NBC News.

New polls are delivering mixed signals about the president’s current standing in the head-to-head rematch against Trump.

A closely watched New York Times/Siena College poll released Wednesday found Trump leading Biden 49% to 41% among the registered voters surveyed. For likely voters, Trump led Biden by a slightly smaller 6-point margin, though that was 3 points higher than before the debate. The New York Times poll surveyed 1,532 registered voters across the country from June 28 to July 2. The margin of error was plus or minus 2.8 percentage points for registered voters. The debate was on June 27.

A Wall Street Journal poll also out Wednesday echoed those findings, with Trump ahead of Biden 48% to 42%. That survey interviewed 1,500 registered voters from June 29 through July 2 and had a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points.

A Tuesday CNN poll also found Trump with a 6-point lead against Biden, though that was the same as the poll’s April result. The margin of error for that question was plus or minus 3.7 percentage points.

Polling so close after the debate represents a snapshot of immediate voter reactions and the results could change as voters take more time to process Biden’s substandard performance.

While Biden’s campaign continues its blitz, pressure mounts for the president to consider bowing out of the 2024 race.

The New York Times reported Wednesday that Biden has privately told an ally that he is weighing whether to stay in the race. Several outlets including CNN and ABC News followed with similar reports. The White House has repeatedly said those reports are false.

In television interviews on Tuesday, Pelosi and Clyburn said it was reasonable to question Biden’s physical and cognitive fitness, though they also doubled down in their support for the president.

Also on Tuesday, House Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Texas, became the first congressional Democrat to officially call on Biden to bow out of the race. Rep. Jared Golden, D-Me., later published an op-ed expressing his lack of confidence in Biden’s candidacy titled, “Donald Trump is going to win the election and democracy will be just fine.”

In response, the White House and the Biden campaign have rolled out a slate of events for the coming week to reassure the public.

On Friday, the president will sit for an interview with ABC News. He is also visiting key battleground states Wisconsin on Friday and Pennsylvania on Sunday. Additionally, the White House announced that next week Biden will give a press conference at the NATO summit.

“He has done more than 40 interviews this year alone, and we’re going to continue that,” Jean-Pierre said Tuesday. “Those were unscripted. He’s done more than 500 ‘gaggles.’ Those are unscripted. And we want to continue to do that.”

FDA approves Eli Lilly Alzheimer’s drug donanemab

A sign with the company logo sits outside of the headquarters campus of Eli Lilly and Company on March 17, 2024 in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Scott Olson | Getty Images

The Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday approved Eli Lilly‘s Alzheimer’s drug donanemab, expanding the limited treatment options for the mind-wasting disease in the U.S.

The agency approved the treatment, which will be sold under the brand name Kisunla, for adults with early symptomatic Alzheimer’s disease, according to the company.

Nearly 7 million Americans have the condition, the fifth-leading cause of death for adults over 65, according to the Alzheimer’s Association. By 2050, that group is projected to rise to almost 13 million in the U.S.

“This is real progress. Today’s approval allows people more options and greater opportunity to have more time,” said Joanne Pike, president and CEO of the Alzheimer’s Association. “Having multiple treatment options is the kind of advancement we’ve all been waiting for — all of us who have been touched, even blindsided, by this difficult and devastating disease.”

It’s a long-awaited win for Eli Lilly after donanemab faced obstacles in its path to market. The FDA rejected the drug’s approval last year due to insufficient data, then surprisingly delayed it again in March. Last month, an advisory panel to the agency recommended the treatment for full approval, saying the benefits outweigh its risks. 

A vial of Eli Lilly’s Alzheimer’s drug sold under the brand name Kisunla.

Source: Eli Lilly

Donanemab will compete head-to-head with another treatment from Biogen and its Japanese partner Eisai called Leqembi, which has gradually rolled out in the U.S. since it won approval last summer.

Donanemab and Leqembi are milestones in the treatment of Alzheimer’s after three decades of failed efforts to develop medicines that can fight the fatal disease. Both drugs are monoclonal antibodies that target toxic plaques in the brain called amyloid, a hallmark of Alzheimer’s, to slow the progression of the disease in patients at the early stages of it. 

Eli Lilly’s drug slowed Alzheimer’s progression by 35% over 18 months compared with a placebo, according to a late-stage trial. Patients were able to end their treatment and switch to a placebo after six, 12 or 18 months after they hit certain goals for amyloid plaque clearance.

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The drug, which is administered through monthly infusions, will cost an estimated $12,522 for a six-month course, $32,000 for 12 months and $48,696 for 18 months. Medicare coverage and reimbursement is available for eligible patients, Eli Lilly said.

Neither treatment is a cure. Drugs that target and clear amyloid plaque can also have significant safety risks, including swelling and bleeding in the brain that can be severe and even fatal in some cases. 

Three patients who took Eli Lilly’s drug in a late-stage trial died from severe forms of those side effects, called amyloid-related imaging abnormalities, or ARIA.

Eli Lilly’s drug is now the third of its kind to reach the market after Leqembi and an ill-fated therapy from Biogen and Eisai called Aduhelm. The two companies recently dropped that medicine. The FDA received criticism for its expedited approval of Aduhelm in 2021 despite a negative recommendation from an advisory panel.

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Götene, Sweden is promoting land at simply 9 US cents per 10 sq. toes

Götene, about 200 miles from Stockholm, is selling plots of land starting at 1 krona per square meter or nine US cents per 10 square feet. Buyers must build a home on the land with plans to either live there permanently or use it as a vacation property, according to CNN.

Götene’s mayor, Johan Månsson, told CNN the town decided to launch this scheme to attract more people to the area, which has seen “low birth rates and an aging population” for some time now.

The plots being put up for sale had been on the market for many years, Månsson said.

Since the town launched the scheme in May, it has received thousands of requests and the government has decided to pause buying until early August so they can fine-tune the process.

CNN reports that when Götene starts selling off land again, it is likely there will be a bidding process instead of just selling the plots at that low price of 1 krona per square meter.

Götene, Sweden

Jan Kjerrman / 500px | 500px Plus | Getty Images

Building a house in the area typically costs 3 to 4 million krona, or $283,000 to $377,262. Plots of land usually cost 500,000 krona, or $47,158, Månsson said.

As of right now, anyone can buy a plot. The town does not currently have any specific rules about legal status, but visa rules are still up to the Swedish government.

Götene’s only official requirement is to build the house within two years of buying the land.

With their scheme going viral, the town’s mayor says it is considering selling more land or even cheap houses like the viral one-euro homes that Italy has become known for.

“We have a lot more land, and we’ll have to sit down and see if we can do something to make something more of it other than just these 30 plots. We need something to offer the callers,” he told CNN.

Månsson said this program has brought hope to the town.

“If you’re seeking a quiet life in the country, we can bring you a high quality of life,” he said. “It’s the perfect match.”

Götene is located in a rural area near Lake Vänern, the largest lake in Sweden. It is also close to several UNESCO-rated sites: the Platåbergens Geopark, Lake Vänern Archipelago, and Mount Kinnekulle.

Conversions from Swedish krona to USD were done using the OANDA conversion rate of 1 euro to 0.09 USD on July 1, 2024. All amounts are rounded to the nearest dollar.

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Cory Hardrict Says He Cried For A 12 months After Tia Mowry Divorce

As we prepare to close National Men’s Health Month, Cory Hardrict is keeping it real about his emotional health following his divorce. Hardrict was married to actress Tia Mowry for 14 years before she filed to end their marriage in October 2022.

In the paperwork, the ‘Sister Sister’ star cited “irreconcilable differences” as the reason for the split. The court finalized their paperwork over a year ago, in April 2023. The former couple has two children: a son, Cree, and a daughter, Cairo.

RELATED: Tia Mowry Sees Marriage To Cory Hardrict As “A Success” Despite Divorce

Cory Hardrict Shares His Emotional Struggles Following Divorce

Cory got candid about his emotions after his divorce at the American Black Film Festival earlier this month. According to Essence, Hardrict spoke on a panel when the topic arose. A clip shared by Hollywood Melanin on Instagram shows the actor dressed in a burnt orange suit on stage.

“It’s tough when it feels like you’re going through something alone and no one understands, and no one’s there for you,” Cory Hardrict said. “It was a year and a half crying myself to sleep every night.”

Additionally, Cory shared that his loved ones can testify that his “kids and family were everything” to him. Therefore, after more than a decade of marriage and nearly two as a couple, Hardrict implied the post-split period was painful for him. However, it seemingly showed him that he’s “stronger than [he] thought [he] was.” 

“By the grace of God, I’m here, and I’m still going,” the actor added.

Watch the clip of Cory Hardrict opening up below. 

RELATED: Tia Mowry & Cory Hardrict Go Viral After Sharing A Hug At Recent Award Show (Video)

Here’s What Tia Mowry Previously Shared About Their Split

Note that Cory Hardrict previously revealed that cheating was not a factor. And in June 2023, Tia Mowry gave additional context about the reason she filed for a divorce.

She told Hello Beautiful that she’d been considering the split for about five years. Despite loving the role of a wife, Mowry shared that tradition didn’t allow for the “constant” nature of change.

“I love being a wife. But I am understanding that tradition could be a blessing and a curse. What I mean by that is tradition warrants for no change, whereas change is constant,” Mowry shared.

After some family deaths, she attended therapy and started questioning her peace and happiness. Ultimately, she decided that choosing herself was best for her, Cree and Cairo.

“A part of my decision was also for them. For them seeing their mother walk in truth. I feel like it’s a great lesson for them because it was not an easy decision. It was one of the hardest decisions that I had ever had to make in my entire life.”

Most recently, former ‘Bachelorette’ star Rechel Lindsey opened up about the advice Tia shared with her amid her own divorce.

RELATED: Rachel Lindsay Reveals The Advice She Received From Tia Mowry Amid Her Ongoing Divorce

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