There are a few products I love to get at Sephora, like the Drunk Elephant B-Goldi bright illuminating drops.
Jimena Venegas
I've worked at Sephora for over a year, and there are some products I absolutely love buying there.
The Drunk Elephant B-Goldi bright illuminating drops make for a beautiful, glowy makeup base.
I always recommend the Benefit Cosmetics Fan Fest fanning-and-volumizing mascara to customers.
Over the past couple of years, consumers have cut down on spending in many categories — but beauty was not one of them. In fact, beauty and cosmetic products were the fastest-growing retail category last year.
There are tons of great brands and products on the market, but as a Sephora employee, I have my own opinions on which ones are worth shoppers' hard-earned cash.
I regularly test new beauty items, so I've probably tried at least half of the makeup on my store's shelves. Because of this, I'm often asked which products I recommend for a full face of makeup.
If I had to pick, these are the eight beauty products I couldn't live without.
The Rare Beauty Brow Harmony flexible lifting and laminating brow gel stays in place all day.
I use the Rare Beauty Brow Harmony flexible lifting and laminating gel to shape my brows.
Jimena Venegas
Rare Beauty Brow Harmony is my all-time favorite clear brow gel because it's waterproof and lifts and shapes the hair without leaving a crunchy, dried texture.
It's also the only gel I've tried that will lay my thick brow hairs down without leaving a white cast.
The Saie Sun Melt natural-cream bronzer leaves my skin looking tan and glowy.
The Saie Sun Melt natural-cream bronzer has a beautiful, lightweight formula.
I use it when I want glowy makeup that's not too sheer and will practically melt into my skin.
The Charlotte Tilbury Beautiful Skin medium-coverage liquid foundation makes my face look flawless.
The Charlotte Tilbury Beautiful Skin medium-coverage liquid foundation leaves a natural-looking finish.
Jimena Venegas
I love this Charlotte Tilbury foundation because it can last up to 16 hours on the face and has medium, buildable coverage.
This product seamlessly blends into my skin and makes it look smooth and healthy. It's perfect for people who want coverage that still looks natural.
The Drunk Elephant B-Goldi bright illuminating drops make a perfect glowy base.
I use the Drunk Elephant B-Goldi bright illuminating drops under makeup or alone.
Jimena Venegas
The Drunk Elephant B-Goldi bright drops are an illuminating serum with 5% niacinamide, which can treat acne and help even skin tone.
This serum is perfect as a glowy base under makeup or a brightening product on the skin by itself.
The Milk Makeup Hydro Grip hydrating makeup primer has great skincare ingredients.
The Milk Makeup Hydro Grip hydrating makeup primer contains hyaluronic acid and niacinamide.
Jimena Venegas
This Milk hydrating primer is one of my favorite base products because it can hold makeup in place for up to 12 hours.
It's formulated with hyaluronic acid and niacinamide to hydrate skin and create a dewy finish.
I cover blemishes and dark circles with the Too Faced Born This Way super coverage multiuse concealer.
The Too Faced Born This Way super coverage multiuse concealer feels lightweight.
Jimena Venegas
The Too Faced Born This Way concealer has lightweight, full coverage, so it's perfect for covering dark spots and highlighting natural features.
The brand also carries a wide range of shades, so there's something for almost every skin tone.
The Huda Beauty Easy Bake loose baking and setting powder blurs texture and fine lines.
I swear by the Huda Beauty Easy Bake loose baking and setting powder.
Jimena Venegas
This lightly pigmented, silky powder from Huda Beauty is my go-to for setting and baking makeup. I reach for it when I need to blur texture and fine lines while preventing under-eye creases.
When it comes to eye products, I always recommend the Benefit Cosmetics Fan Fest fanning-and-volumizing mascara.
The Benefit Cosmetics Fan Fest fanning-and-volumizing mascara is one of my go-to products.
Jimena Venegas
If my clients want a volumizing mascara, I point them to this product. Benefit's Fan Fest fanning and volumizing mascara perfectly fans out my lashes and makes them look voluminous.
It doesn't even smudge or flake on me if I wear it to the gym.
Former President Donald Trump appeared wide awake in this shot in Manhattan Criminal Court on Tuesday — but he's apparently had some time staying awake during the proceedings so far.
Pool
Donald Trump is apparently having difficulty staying awake during his first-ever criminal trial.
I relate to Trump's struggle to stay awake!
And most Americans must, too. They told Gallup they needed more sleep.
I am not facing 34 felony charges stemming from hush-money payments to an adult film actress I allegedly slept with.
But besides that? Right now, I feel closer to Donald J. Trump than I ever have before.
Give me a seat and a place where not much is happening? There's a very good chance I'm going to doze for a bit.
This has been happening to me at least since high school — which, coincidentally, is when I stopped going to bed at a sensible time. If I was in a classroom where the lights dimmed for a movie or a filmstrip or a grainy VCR showing of Romeo and Juliet? Snooze time. College lecture halls when I hadn't done the reading and couldn't follow what my professor was saying? Sawing logs.
Sometimes, my naps were intentional: Like when I entered the work world and discovered that I could lie down under my cube and get a 10-minute afternoon power nap and either no one noticed or cared.
Less ideal was when I drifted off while interviewing someone — while sitting in front of them. I don't know how long I was out for — probably just a few seconds — but definitely long enough for them to notice, and for me to notice that they noticed. I think they were Swedes selling ringtone software or something like that, and in any case, they were too polite to say anything, so we all pretended it didn't happen.
Later on, when I had kids and started taking them to movies, I became so used to sleeping mid-Pixar that I started to embrace the idea: I was paying to take a nap.
But cinema-sleep isn't specific to kids' films: A comfy theater is Ambien for me, even when I'm really into the movie, like when I went to the new "Dune" last month. (Not all movies: I was wide awake and gripping my chair for "Civil War" last week.)
And yes, I definitely slept for a few minutes Tuesday afternoon on the subway. Then I caught a second wind and started writing this.
My hunch is that I'm not alone here and that some of this resonates with some of you. News item:
"For the first time in Gallup polling since 2001, a majority of U.S. adults, 57%, say they would feel better if they got more sleep, while 42% say they get as much sleep as they need. This is nearly a reversal of the figures last measured in 2013, when 56% of Americans got the sleep they needed and 43% did not."
I'm not a doctor, and I don't play on TV, but I'm pretty sure none of this is anything like actual narcolepsy. It's just that we probably — OK, almost certainly — don't get enough sleep many nights, and our bodies need to even things out during the day.
I don't know when Donald Trump goes to sleep, but I do know that during his Twitter era, he tended to do a lot of late-night scrolling — also relatable — and posting. And again, I've never faced felony charges and multiple trials, but I bet that if I did, I'd have a hard time sleeping.
Benedict Wong and Liam Cunningham in "3 Body Problem."
Ed Miller/Netflix
Netflix continues to rewrite the playbook for global entertainment.
It's solidified its position as the dominant streamer.
It now faces new challenges as it enters the advertising and gaming markets.
Since Netflix began its worldwide expansion in 2016, the streaming service has rewritten the playbook for global entertainment — from TV to film, and, more recently, video games.
Hollywood used to export most global hit series and movies. Now, thanks to Netflix's investments in international TV and film, programs like South Korea's "Squid Game" and France's "Lupin" have found massive audiences around the world. And Netflix's English-language originals, such as Shonda Rhimes' "Bridgerton," Ryan Murphy's "Dahmer," and Tim Burton's "Wednesday," have broken the streamer's internal streaming viewership records.
Netflix's impact on the global TV industry remains undeniable, even as it now faces fresh questions about its audience growth potential, ability to compete for ad dollars, and opportunity to capture younger viewers.
How Netflix disrupted the global TV industry
To thrive on an international stage, Netflix sought both US mass-market programming like "Stranger Things" as well as local content that could win over viewers in specific markets (and produce breakout hits).
The strategy helped the streaming service grow its customer base to more than 260 million global subscribers. Its momentum also reinvigorated production in places like Germany, Mexico, and India.
More recently, it along with other streamers has sought broadcast network-type shows that will grab broad viewership, plus fewer, lower-budget movies under new film chief Dan Lin. It's also dipped into live programming like sports and comedy.
Netflix shook up its leadership to reflect a changing business
After breaking all of Hollywood's rules and disrupting everything about the entertainment industry, Netflix — since its first-ever subscriber loss — has been breaking its own rules, reversing its stances on password sharing and advertising.
Meanwhile, TV head Bela Bajaria was named chief content officer, with film reporting to her.
An elite team of interdisciplinary execs helps make Netflix's biggest decisions. Known internally as the "Lstaff" — the "L" stands for leadership — the 22-member group sits between the company's officers and its larger executive corps of vice presidents and above, who are called the "Estaff."
Still, the company's growth has generally made it a desirable place to work in recent years, despite some tests its corporate culture has faced. While hiring has slowed, it's still adding employees to maintain its lead over other paid streamers and fuel its global expansion.
More on Netflix's business model and company culture:
Netflix faces more competition from TV viewers than ever from traditional media companies like Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery and tech players Apple, Amazon, and YouTube, most of which are further along in selling ads and offering live sports programming.
The competition is pushing the streaming giant to continue evolving. Netflix introduced a cheaper, ad-supported tier to combat slowing subscriber growth. It's also building video games and selling merchandise and experiences tied to series like "Squid Game" and "Bridgerton."
As it did with movies and TV shows, Netflix is ramping up advertising and games slowly. It's commissioning and licensing mobile games, some of which are based on existing franchises like "Stranger Things" and acquired companies to kickstart the business.
More on Netflix's advertising and gaming ambitions:
At its height, Donald Trump's stake in Trump Media was worth a staggering $5.11 billion.
But since March, Trump Media's stock has plummeted.
As of Tuesday, the former president's shares have lost roughly $3.33 billion in value.
As Trump Media & Technology's stock has tumbled, so has Donald Trump's wealth.
At its height in late March just after going public, the Truth Social company had a market capitalization of $8.97 billion.
That meant the former president, who owns a roughly 57% stake in the media startup, had shares worth a whopping $5.11 billion.
But since then, the stock has been in a free fall. On Tuesday, Trump Media closed with a market capitalization of about $3.12 billion — a 65% drop from its peak.
In other words, Trump's value has dropped more than $3.33 billion in about three weeks.
Shares of Trump Media, the parent company of Truth Social, plummeted Monday after a filing showed it was moving to allow company insiders — including Trump — to sell their shares early.
Shares have been on a six-month lock-up period, preventing the former President from cashing out right away.
Trump Media initially arrived on the market to great fanfare, landing him on a list of the world's wealthiest people and fueling speculation from power users and meme-stock buyers.
Still, the stock has been a windfall for Trump, even if it's worth much less now. Any boost could be helpful for the presumptive GOP nominee in 2024. Trump has mounting legal bills from his various criminal cases to pay, as well as judgments in two civil cases.
Trump's first criminal trial — on charges of hiding hush-money payments to porn star Stormy Daniels — kicked off Monday with the start of jury selection. Trump will need to stay in court for the coming weeks.
Mark Cuban has been touted as a future presidential candidate.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/Getty Images
Mark Cuban paid $275,900,000 in federal taxes this year, he said on X.
The billionaire also took a jab at former President Donald Trump while disclosing the figure.
Here's what Cuban's millions could do for the US government.
Billionaire Mark Cuban disclosed the hefty chunk of change he paid in 2023 taxes this year, publishing the nine-figure number in a post on X this week while simultaneously taking a shot at former President Donald Trump.
"I pay what I owe. Tomorrow I will wire transfer to the IRS $288,000,000.00," Cuban wrote on the social media site on Sunday before amending the actual figure to $275,900,000 in a follow-up post.
"This country has done so much for me, I'm proud to pay my taxes every single year. Tag a former president that you know doesn't," Cuban added, in a seeming dig at Trump, who declined to share his tax returns while running for office and during his four-year term, breaking with recent tradition.
President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden shared their tax returns on Monday, revealing they earned nearly $620,000 in 2023.
The average federal income tax payment among the more than 164 million Americans who filed returns in 2020 was $16,615, Business Insider reported last year — much less than the $275.9 million in taxes Cuban just paid. Though, his net worth is much, much higher.
Here's how the US Government could put Cuban's millions to use. And yes, we know Cuban's tax bill won't go directly to paying for these programs, but for the sake of context, here's what his taxes could have funded.
Fund the NTSB in its entirety
The National Transportation Safety Board, which is an independent US government agency that oversees civil transportation accident investigations, secured $145 million in funding for Fiscal Year 2024 in the president's budget, the agency announced in a March 2023 press release. That figure represents a $15.7 million increase from the previous budget year.
An explanatory statement on the Transportation Department's funding in the 2024 Appropriations Act said the agency ultimately got $140,000,000 for salaries and expenses in the final bill.
Earlier this year, the agency requested $150 million for FY 2025 to fund its 455-full time equivalent employees.
Cuban's $275.9 million contribution to the US government could fully back the department with nearly half still left over.
Pay a bunch of lawmakers' salaries
Representatives and senators, on average, make $174,000 each year. Multiply that figure by all 535 members of Congress, and you get $93 million.
Cuban's million could easily cover congressional paychecks and even account for President Joe Biden's $400,000 salary and Vice President Kamala Harris' $235,100 salary.
Fund the DOD (for a couple of hours)
The Department of Defense has requested a whopping $850 billion budget for the 2025 Fiscal Year. It's too soon to say whether the spending bill will pass, but the department managed to score $841.4 billion in Fiscal Year 2024.
If you divide $850 billion by 365 days in the year, you get a $2,328,767,123.29 department cost per day. Divide that number by 24 hours, and you get $97,031,963.47 per hour.
So, Cuban's $275.9 million wouldn't quite be able to cover the potential three-hour DOD cost at $291,095,890.41. But his tax payment could fund the US war machine for a little over two hours.
Take a (tiny) chunk out of US debt
The US government's debt load is increasing by almost $1 trillion nearly every 100 days, CNBC reported earlier this year.
The current national debt sits at $34 trillion as of April 2023. While $275.9 million might not seem like it would make a dent in that astronomical number, every little bit helps! Right?
Two of three men stranded on the uninhabited island of Pikelot Atoll in Micronesia wave life jackets as a U.S. Navy P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol and reconnaissance aircraft discovers them
US NAVY/Reuters
Three men stranded on a Pacific island were rescued after creating a "HELP" sign with palm leaves.
A survival expert said lighting three fires is an effective way to send a distress signal.
She also praised the men and said the key thing is to be creative and find any way to send a signal.
Three mariners stranded on an island in the Pacific Ocean were rescued earlier this month after they made a large "HELP" signal by laying out palm leaves on the beach — a scene right out of a movie.
The men, all in their 40s, left Polowat Atoll, a tiny coral island that's part of the Federated States of Micronesia, on March 31, traveling in a small, 20-foot skiff. Nearly a week later on April 6, a relative reported them missing.
On April 9, US military forces rescued the group from Pikelot Atoll, another tiny island in Micronesia about 1,000 miles north of Papa New Guinea and around 100 nautical miles from where the men set out.
"In a remarkable testament to their will to be found, the mariners spelled out 'HELP' on the beach using palm leaves, a crucial factor in their discovery. This act of ingenuity was pivotal in guiding rescue efforts directly to their location" Lt. Chelsea Garcia, the search and rescue mission coordinator at the time the men were found, said in a statement from the Coast Guard.
A US Navy P-8 Poseidon aircraft discovered the mariners. They dropped survival packages, while the Coast Guard Cutter Oliver Henry was rerouted to Pikelot to rescue the men, whose boat had been damaged.
A survival expert told Business Insider the men were smart to create a signal, but that there may be even more effective ways of doing so to indicate to others you're in distress.
The universal rule of three
Cat Bigney, a survival consultant and instructor at the Boulder Outdoor Survival School, said that often the best way to get spotted by a rescue team is to start a fire, as a big smoke stack can be spotted from miles away.
And not just one fire, but ideally three. Three of anything is considered the universal signal of distress: three fires, three blows in a whistle, three gunshots. Think of the original SOS call, the morse code distress signal which consists of three dots, three dashes, and three dots.
Bigney said it's most effective to build the three fires in a row, as the succession of smoke fumes will signal to anyone who can see them that you need help.
"You want to use anything that's going to cause a lot of smoke" to build the fire, she said, such as green vegetation or damp wood —which produce more smoke because it burns at a lower temperature and results in incomplete combustion.
Depending on the circumstances, it may be best to wait to light the fires until a plane or boat is visible to ensure you are ready when a rescue team is nearby, and so they do not miss you.
Beyond fires, Bigney said it's ideal to create signals with contrast. So in the case of the men stranded on Pikelot Atoll, palm leaves against bright white sand may've created enough contrast to be seen easily from afar.
It's also generally recommended to spell out SOS, rather than a message like "HELP," in part because the letters in SOS can also be read upside down.
"Now what they did, worked," Bigney said of the rescued men. "So I think the take-home message is be creative and do something."
The Coast Guard said the men had access to food and water while stranded with their damaged boat. Bigney said it was not necessarily the most dire survival situation but that other factors, like incessant sand fleas or nearby predators, could make it hard for some people to think clearly.
"They did a good job. They thought to signal for help," she said, adding, "Oftentimes it is just a psychological game, in any situation."
In 2017, Lynsi Snyder took full control of In-N-Out after she turned 35 in May of that year.
NHRA
Lynsi Snyder is In-N-Out Burger's billionaire owner and president.
She inherited control in 2017 and it remains a private, family-owned business.
The reclusive heiress has a $6.7 billion net worth. Here's what we know about her life and empire.
Lynsi Snyder became one of the youngest billionaires in the US when she inherited complete control of iconic Southern California burger chain In-N-Out in 2017.
Snyder is the only granddaughter and heir of Harry and Esther Snyder, who founded the first tiny burger stand Baldwin Park, California, in 1948. At age 23, she became the primary beneficiary of the burger dynasty; her rise to the top of the chain at such a young age was largely the result of the deaths of her family members and internal legal drama at the company.
Since becoming president of In-N-Out in 2010, she has expanded the chain to Texas, Oregon, Idaho, and Colorado. The chain is also planning stores in Tennessee.
Lynsi Snyder, 41, is the billionaire owner and president of In-N-Out Burger.
Lynsi Snyder, owner and president of In-N-Out Burger.
Rich Polk/Stringer/Getty Images
Her net worth is $6.7 billion as of April, according to Forbes.
Snyder became one of the youngest billionaires in the US when she inherited full control of In-N-Out in 2017. Despite outside pressures to go public or grow through franchising over the years, In-N-Out has remained a privately run family business since it was founded in Southern California by her grandparents, Harry and Esther Snyder, in 1948.
Snyder is a reclusive heiress. She has experienced several family tragedies that led to her gaining control of the chain at an early age. She makes public appearances on behalf of charities, but keeps a low profile with the media. Here's what we know about her life and the In-N-Out empire.
Snyder's grandparents Harry and Esther Snyder opened the first In-N-Out restaurant in 1948. A burger cost 25 cents.
Harry and Esther Snyder, shown with sons Rich and Guy.
In-N-Out
The Snyders opened the first In-N-Out in Baldwin Park, California, located East of Los Angeles, according to the company's corporate history.
The original Baldwin Park, California, burger stand was demolished decades ago to make room for a freeway.
A replica of the original In-N-Out burger stand and drive-thru.
Nancy Luna
The restaurant's two-way speaker drive-thru system was considered groundbreaking at the time, the Orange County Register reported in 2014.
Under Lynsi Snyder's leadership, In-N-Out unveiled a replica burger stand in 2014 near the original location.
Lynsi Snyder at the replica burger stand.
BTV/In-N-Out
Though you can't order a double-double or other food there, the stand does sell souvenirs.
"This is a really special spot for me," Snyder said at the time, according to the Register.
In 1976, cofounder Harry Snyder died.
Harry Snyder
CBS This Morning/YouTube
Lynsi Snyder's uncle, Rich Snyder, took over the company after Harry's death, CBS This Morning reported in 2015.
Rich Snyder ran the company until 1993, when he and another In-N-Out executive died in a plane crash.
The site of the plane crash.
CBS This Morning/YouTube
The day before the crash on approach to John Wayne Airport in Orange County, California, Rich Snyder had watched 10-year-old Lynsi perform in a pageant, KCET reported in 2016.
Rich Snyder's legacy continues, including on In-N-Out drink cups.
An In-N-Out drink cup.
YouTube
Today, if you look at the bottom of an In-N-Out soft-drink cup, you'll find a Bible verse.
"JOHN 3:16" is printed on the inside lip of every cold beverage cup.
The bottom of an In-N-Out drink cup.
Hollis Johnson/Business Insider
"Back in the late '80s, Rich Snyder put that on the bottom of the cup," Mark Taylor, the former president of In-N-Out, said in the 2010 interview with California's Gold. "He started it, and we're going to keep it on there."
Lynsi Snyder has also added references to the Bible to In-N-Out's fast food packaging.
The bottom of an In-N-Out fry container.
Nancy Luna
A devout Christian, Lynsi has added three more Bible verses to different restaurant products. She added Proverbs 24:16 to French fry containers, for example.
She also added Luke 6:35 to coffee cups.
A cup on In-N-Out coffee.
Nancy Luna
Around the holidays, patrons can also find Isaiah 9:6 printed on In-N-Out holiday cups.
Rich added the Bible references to the cups after his own religious conversion, Lynsi has said.
Lynsi is also a very religious person.
BTV/In-N-Out
"He had just accepted the Lord and wanted to put that little touch of his faith on our brand. It's a family business and will always be, and that's a family touch," Lynsi said about her uncle adding the Bible reference to In-N-Out's cups in a 2019 interview with the Christian Post.
During his tenure, Rich established In-N-Out University to train entry-level managers from all In-N-Out locations.
In-N-Out University in Southern California
Steven B./Foursquare
The "university" operated out of store No. 1 in Baldwin Park for years until it got its own building in 1984.
Lynsi's father, Guy Snyder, ran the company after Rich's death.
Guy Snyder at a restaurant opening.
CBS This Morning/YouTube
Guy ran the business between 1994 and 1999.
Lynsi began working as an associate at In-N-Out in 1999.
Guy Snyder.
CBS This Morning
Her father remained in charge of the company until 1999, when he died of a prescription-drug overdose. Lynsi was 17 at the time.
Guy had struggled with addiction for years, Lynsi has said.
Young Lynsi with Guy
CBS This Morning/YouTube
In a 2017 video interview, Lynsi said her father had a drug addiction and had been in and out of rehab facilities since she was 5 years old.
Her parents had divorced when she was 12 years old, she said.
Members of the Snyder family.
CBS This Morning
The divorce came after her father had had an affair, Lynsi said in the same interview.
Lynsi has talked about how the death of her father affected her decision-making as an adult.
Young Lynsi with her father.
"Jay Leno's Garage"/YouTube
"My world shattered," she said in the interview with non-profit multimedia company I Am Second. "After my dad died, there was no way I was going to be alone." She said she would jump from one man's arms right into the next. She has been divorced three times.
After her father's death, Snyder married her first husband.
Lynsi Snyder.
I Am Second/YouTube
She was 18 years old at the time.
The marriage didn't last long.
Lynsi Snyder.
I Am Second
"It wasn't right," she said. "I paid the price with a divorce and jumped right into the arms of someone else." Then, she said, she started smoking pot and abusing alcohol.
Lynsi turned to drugs and alcohol.
Lynsi Snyder
The Values Institute/YouTube
She said substance use was something she had wanted to stay away from because of her father's addiction, but she found herself using them as an adult.
Her second marriage dissolved within six years, she said.
Lynsi Snyder.
I Am Second
Snyder said had she worried she would "meet an early death" like her father. She eventually married for the second time, had two children, and later had an affair.
When the relationship broke down, "I couldn't feel like a bigger failure at that point," she said.
She wed a third time and had another child with a man she said married her for money and cheated on her.
Lynsi Snyder
Screengrab from LitbyMoonProductions on YouTube
"The first time he cheated on me I thought, 'Well, I deserve it,'" she said. "It was terrible." She said he'd been unfaithful for four years before they divorced.
In 2014, Lynsi married Sean Ellingson.
Lynsi Snyder and Sean Ellingson.
Azusa Pacific University – Chapels/YouTube
She told an audience at Azusa Pacific University that she met her soon-to-be fourth husband on the dating app Tinder.
She said the first conversation they had was about their mutual experience with addiction, politics, their spiritual lives, and what their goals were in 2014.
Lynsi Snyder and Sean Ellingson
BTV/In-N-Out
They both say they have finally found peace through religion, she said at the time.
Lynsi credits turning her life around to her faith.
Lynsi speaking at a church.
Army of Love/Facebook
She she told I Am Second that she ultimately decided to spend time with God and Jesus and that faith still guides her today.
Now she and her husband run a ministry called Army of Love.
The Army of Love logo
BTV/In-N-Out
Their mission is to "enlist, train, and equip an army of love" to help anyone in need of support.
Lynsi and Ellingson founded Slave 2 Nothing Foundation in 2016.
Lynsi Snyder
Azusa Pacific University – Chapels/YouTube
Slave 2 Nothing has the mission to free people from being enslaved to any person or substance. In 2022, Slave 2 Nothing granted a total of 101 awards totaling $2 million to nonprofits working in the states in which In-N-Out Burger operates.
In 2012, she bought a 4-acre Los Angeles County estate for $17.21 million.
Lynsi Snyder's former estate
Panton Real Estate Video Tours/YouTube
She bought it from former Dodgers star Adrián Beltré, the Los Angeles Times reported.
The main house has 11 bedrooms, 13 bathrooms, an indoor batting cage, a movie theater, a game room, a chef's kitchen, and a gym.
The house.
Panton Real Estate Video Tours/YouTube
The grounds feature an infinity pool, a guest house, a tennis court, a basketball court, and two-hole golf course, the Times reported.
She moved out of the house in 2020.
The staircase at Lynsi Snyder's former house.
Panton Real Estate Video Tours/YouTube
In 2021, she sold the estate at a loss for $16.25 million, per the Times.
Snyder describes herself as an "organized, careful leader."
Lynsi Snyder
NHRA
At the same time, she says she's also a thrill-seeker, BI previously reported.
She's also a fan of an "adrenaline rush."
Snyder fire eating, which she often does during band performances as well as aerial routines.
BTV / In-N-Out
"I'm a lot like my dad, a little bit of a daredevil," she told Orange Coast Magazine in 2014. "I like an adrenaline rush. My dad took me to the racetrack for the first time when I was two or three … Anything with a motor, that was in my blood."
In her free time, Snyder enjoys drag racing, a hobby she started when she was 18 years old.
Lynsi Snyder
NHRA
"I just love muscle cars," she told the National Hot Rod Association. "I love the whole sport. I think that it was kind of an escape and a hobby that was a lot of fun and a connection to my dad."
Snyder named her racing car the "Flying Dutch Fox."
The Flying Dutchman is the name of an In-N-Out secret menu item.
NHRA
The name is a tribute to her father, who had a car named the "Flying Dutchman," she told the National Hot Rod Association.
She also collects vintage cars.
Lynsi Snyder with Jay Leno.
Jay Leno's Garage/YouTube
Lynsi's collection includes a unique 1941 Willys Coupe, with about 1,000 horsepower, which used to belong to her dad, according to Jay Leno's Garage. A car like this can cost upward of $130,000.
Besides cars, Snyder also loves rock 'n roll.
Lynsi Snyder performing.
BTV/In-N-Out
She and her husband, Sean, play in the In-N-Out band, .48 Special, whose members are all company employees.
Lynsi performs vocals and plays bass and occasionally rhythm guitar.
Lynsi Snyder playing guitar
BTV/In-N-Out
Her husband, meanwhile, does some vocals and plays lead guitar and harmonica.
Around the time she started racing, Snyder was the target of two attempted kidnappings, she said.
Lynsi Snyder being interviewed
I Am Second
The first was when she was 17 and still in high school. The second time she was 24 and working as a manager at In-N-Out, per Orange Coast Magazine.
Lynsi was able to spot her would-be kidnappers the first time.
Lynsi Snyder
I Am Second/YouTube
"I ran across the highway," she told Orange Coast Magazine, adding that she was suspicious of her would-be kidnappers because "they had a van with boarded-up windows.
When asked about her plans for In-N-Out, Snyder told CBS she would never take the company public or franchise its restaurants.
Lynsi Snyder being interviewed in an In-N-Out restaurant
CBS
"The only reason we would do that is for the money, and I wouldn't do it," she said an interview with CBS This Morning.
Since becoming In-N-Out's president in 2010, Snyder has expanded In-N-Out's footprint to new states.
Cars line up for the Colorado opening of In-N-Out in February 2021.
Getty Images
Under her leadership, In-N-Out has opened stores in Texas, Oregon, Idaho, and Colorado.
In-N-Out has plans to bring the chain's famed Double-Double to Tennessee.
Lynsi Snyder holding a flag
BTV/In-N-Out
The company said in January 2023 that it would expand into Tennessee. It's still working on opening the stores.
The first restaurant in Tennessee is slated to open in 2025.
Lynsi Snyder with Tennessee officials.
BTV/In-N-Out
The store, near a planned office for the chain in Franklin, Tennessee, will open next year, the Tennessean reported. They will be In-N-Out's closest locations to the East Coast.
There was another unidentified state where In-N-Out considered opening up shop.
Lynsi Snyder holding a flag.
BTV/In-N-Out
She told The Tennessean: "We came here years ago, actually East of the Smokies, but came back out to Pigeon Forge and Nashville and fell in love. There was one other state definitely interested and wanting us there, but we chose Nashville."
Don't expect an In-N-Out restaurant on the East Coast, though.
An In-N-Out restaurant
Nancy Luna/Insider
The California chain will "probably never" expand to the East Coast while Lynsi is running the company, she told NBC's "Today" in April 2024.
Over the last decade, In-N-Out has added 102 restaurants. Of those, 64 opened after Snyder took control of the company.
An In-N-Out drive-thru lane.
Nancy Luna
When the Tennessee location opens, In-N-Out will have a presence in more than twice as many states as it did when Snyder became president in 2010.
Lynsi did make one nostalgic menu tweak in 2018 when she added hot cocoa.
Cups of In-N-Out hot cocoa
Nancy Luna
It was previously on the menu in the 1950s.
"I'm not sure how it fell off the menu but it's part of our culture and something special for kids, and I'm happy that we're bringing it back," Snyder told the Orange County Register.
Before that, the chain's last significant menu change had been more than 15 years earlier.
A menu at an In-N-Out restaurant.
Nancy Luna
That was when restaurants added lemonade, the Register reported.
Lynsi approved two new beverages for In-N-Out in December 2023.
Patties, buns, potatoes, vegetables, and everything else you can order from the restaurant are delivered to each location via trucks from In-N-Out distribution centers.
Trucks at an In-N-Out distribution center.
Google Maps
The company says nothing is ever frozen or microwaved, according to CBS This Morning.
Lynsi's memories of her family inform how she runs the business, she has said.
Lynsi Snyder hugging an In-N-Out employee
MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty Images
"My heart is totally connected to this company because of my family, and the fact that they are not here — I have a strong tie to keep this the way they would want it," she told CBS.
The company's mission is "about the quality, the friendliness, and the cleanliness," she said.
Lynsi Snyder appearing on CBS
CBS This Morning/YouTube
"We keep it simple," she told CBS.
In 2018, Snyder was the face of the Forbes 400 wealthiest Americans list.
The Forbes 400 2018 cover.
Forbes
She was also the youngest woman in the group that year.
But Lynsi otherwise rarely appears on magazine covers or gives media interviews.
Snyder and her husband attend a press conference announcing the chain's entry into Tennessee.
BTV/In-N-Out
Her January 2023 trip to announce the Tennessee expansion marked a rare public appearance for Lynsi.
Snyder said that she shies away from interviews intentionally.
Lynsi Snyder
CBS This Morning/YouTube
"We want to do what we do best, and that's serve some good burgers to our customers. It's not about us here — it's about this," she told CBS in 2015, pointing to the restaurant behind her.
Still, Lynsi is active on Instagram, where she has nearly 68,000 followers.
Lynsi Snyder's Instagram
Screenshots of Snyder's Instagram
She posts updates about her charities, her In-N-Out family, her friends, her favorite foods, and brand swag.
Snyder released a book in October 2023 about the chain's 75-year history.
"The Ins-N-Outs of In-N-Out Burger" book
Lynsi Snyder
"The Ins-N-Outs of In-N-Out Burger" reveals "the true In-N-Out Story," from her grandparents' founding of the first store until today.
"I have waited so long to tell the true In-N-Out Story," Snyder wrote on her Instagram page ahead of the book's release.
The average manager at In-N-Out makes $180,000 a year, Snyder reveals in the book.
An In-N-Out restaurant
Nancy Luna/Insider
Snyder says in her new book that one secret to In-N-Out's success is its tradition of paying above-industry-standard wages.
"Yes, we pay well," she wrote.
Lynsi has said In-N-Out has limited menu price hikes even as employee wages have gone up.
In-N-Out restaurant workers
Paul Bersebach/MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty Images
"I was sitting in VP meetings going toe-to-toe, saying 'We can't raise the prices that much, we can't,'" she told NBC's "Today" in April 2024. "When everyone else was taking jumps, we weren't."
In-N-Out Burger celebrated its 75th anniversary with a festival in October at the newly named In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip.
A logo for a race featuring the In-N-Out logo
In-N-Out/NHRA
The company took over the naming rights of the legendary Southern California drag strip in time to host its anniversary celebration there. The 12-hour event attracted 23,000 people, the Daily Bulletin reported.
The latest electric pickup on the market may go a lot farther than Tesla's Cybertruck — literally.
GMC announced the final specs for its new Sierra EV Denali Edition 1, including a range of about 440 miles — a 10% increase from the initial 400-mile estimate.
That's also 100 miles more than the Cybertruck, its most high-profile competitor, which has an advertised range of 340 miles for its beefiest version.
Tesla did not respond to a request for comment before publication.
The Denali Edition 1, the premium grade of the Sierra EV, will also feature increases in max payload and towing power from GMC's initial estimates.
Even with the impressive new range, it's not clear how strong demand will be for the new Denali, given a slowdown in demand for costly EVs (and especially for electric pickups). Automakers have responded by slowing EV production (including GM, which said last year it would delay some of its electric pickups).
Denali Edition 1 deliveries are expected to begin this summer, starting at $99,495, GMC said, followed by other trim levels like the Sierra EV Elevation and the Sierra EV AT4.
Fetterman has grown increasingly critical of Biden's approach to Israel — but he insisted on Tuesday that wasn't the case.
Reuters/Elizabeth Frantz
Sen. John Fetterman says "uncommitted" voters are "wearing a MAGA hat."
But he's also become a critic of Biden on Israel himself — just from the other direction.
On Tuesday, he insisted that wasn't the case: "That's not critical. It's just I disagree."
In February, Sen. John Fetterman had a strong message for President Joe Biden's critics on the left.
"If you're not willing to just support the president now, and say these kinds of things, you might as well just get your MAGA hat because you now are helping Trump with this," the Pennsylvania Democrat said on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" at the time.
In an interview with Business Insider at the Capitol on Tuesday, he indicated that he was specifically referring to the Uncommitted movement, which has driven voters in several states to cast "uncommitted" ballots in protest of Biden's support for Israel's war in Gaza.
"What is damaging is if you're talking about 'abandon Biden' or 'I'm uncommitted for voting,'" Fetterman said on Tuesday. "Then, you know, you're wearing a MAGA hat."
Since Fetterman first made his "MAGA hat" comments in February, he has criticized the Biden administration multiple times on Israel, suggesting that the president is "pandering to the fringe" as he's sought to implement a temporary cease-fire in Gaza and discourage Israel from retaliating against a recent Iranian missile and drone attack.
On Tuesday, Fetterman insisted he wasn't being critical — just disagreeing. And he argued that doing so wasn't damaging to Biden in the same way that he says the president's left-wing critics are.
"No, I haven't been critical. That's not critical. It's just I disagree on certain aspects of it. That's reasonable," said Fetterman. "[I'm] 10,000% all about Biden, I love that guy, I'm proud to call him my president. It's really just very different than the fringe that's talking about uncommitted, or to abandon Biden, or anything like that."
But Fetterman's contention that he hasn't criticized Biden doesn't hold water.
The Pennsylvania senator said it was "appalling" that the Biden administration allowed a resolution demanding an immediate cease-fire in Gaza to pass at the UN Security Council. He has repeatedly criticized the administration for discouraging Israel from invading Rafah, which the US fears could lead to even more civilian deaths. He has also forcefully argued against conditions on Israel aid as Biden suggested they may be on the table.
And on CNN on Sunday, Fetterman said he did not agree with Biden telling Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the US would not participate in any offensive against Iran.
"I think we should follow and have Israel's back in this situation. I don't agree with the president," said Fetterman, before adding that he believes Biden is "fantastic."
Since the October 7 Hamas attacks, Fetterman has emerged as a staunchly pro-Israel voice, alienating many of his old progressive allies in the process.
At times, the Pennsylvania senator has found himself to the right of most Democrats on the issue. He was one of just two Democrats — the other being Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia — who refused to cosponsor in December a resolution supporting a two-state solution in Israel.