The Brutalist Report - fastcompany
- How brands are tapping into LinkedIn’s influencer revolution [335d]
- Oscar nominations 2025: Surprises, snubs, and everything to know about the Academy Awards announcement [335d]
- 47% of the EU’s electricity now comes from clean energy [335d]
- L.A. artists and collectors are reeling from massive losses in wildfires [335d]
- Costco upholds its DEI policies as Amazon and Walmart scale theirs back [335d]
- Wahlburgers locations closing after Hy-Vee in-store deal ends: fast-casual burger chain joins list of restaurants with smaller footprint [335d]
- Trump’s DEI order faces resistance from two major state bar associations [335d]
- Why California Republicans are at odds with Trump over L.A. wildfire aid [335d]
- Anti-LGBTQ+ policies hurt young people and make them want to move out of state: Trevor Project study [335d]
- iPhones with TikTok installed are being sold for as much as $10,000 on eBay. What to know before buying one [335d]
- Las Vegas hotel workers union ends 69-day strike [335d]
- States are turning their public benefits systems over to AI. The results have often led to ‘immense suffering’ [335d]
- ‘The Brutalist’ used AI voice editing. Is that such a crime? [335d]
- Inside the design of ‘Skeleton Crew,’ Lucasfilm’s bid to recapture the joy of old ‘Star Wars’ [335d]
- What to do when you can’t escape your old boss on social media [335d]
- Instagram is about to look a lot more like TikTok [335d]
- A psychologist explains what Gen Z should be striving for at work (hint: not happiness) [335d]
- Trump’s chaotic new border policy, in the rise and fall of two apps [335d]
- Trump can’t shake the real estate developer inside him [335d]
- Trump claims there’s an energy emergency. He’s wrong [335d]
- BlueConic has been fully remote since COVID. This is what makes remote leadership work [335d]
- Smartphones are making people lonely. This app thinks it has the cure [335d]
- How America’s work standards are hurting employees [335d]
- How Davos leaders are responding to Trump’s DEI crackdown [335d]
- Amazon closes all Quebec warehouses, cutting 1,700 jobs [336d]
- Why Big Oil isn’t happy with Trump’s climate withdrawal [336d]
- Trump’s Hawk Tuah-like meme coin moment isn’t a betrayal—it’s keeping a promise [336d]
- Procter & Gamble considers price hikes to offset possible Trump tariffs [336d]
- Content to commerce: MeatEater’s path to $100 million success [336d]
- Why Starbucks’ new restroom policy is getting mixed reactions [336d]
- Can cheaper hot dogs and beer save baseball? Why MLB teams are leaning into value menus [336d]
- How Trump is escalating his campaign against DEI programs [336d]
- Wisconsin man charged with arson of congressman’s office over TikTok ban [336d]
- Trump pardons Silk Road creator Ross Ulbricht [336d]
- NFL tells New England Patriots it can’t be on Bluesky [336d]
- OpenAI says India court can’t hear case on alleged copyright breach [336d]
- Trump rescinds Biden’s executive order on AI safety, as promised [336d]
- ByteDance releases new AI reasoning model in a bid to challenge OpenAI [336d]
- ‘TikTok, we mean business’: MrBeast is bidding for the beleaguered app [336d]
- Samsung’s Galaxy S25 phones are—you guessed it—all-in on AI [336d]
- An immigration lawyer breaks down Trump’s attack on birthright citizenship—and if the 14th Amendment can save it [336d]
- Progresso’s sold-out soup drops are coming back [336d]
- Trump’s meme coin sparks backlash in the crypto industry [336d]
- Johnson & Johnson ketamine-derived nasal spray gets FDA approval for depression, but JNJ stock dips on earnings [336d]
- Instagram courts TikTok creators with cash bonuses up to $50,000 [336d]
- L.A. homeowners seeking to rebuild might shift to these natural materials. Here’s why [336d]
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