The Tesla company logo is pictured on a Model X electric car.
Reuters
A man says his Tesla malfunctioned, accelerating on its own after a collision in Nevada.
The couple said the incident followed a head-on collision with a Jeep that they caught on camera.
The Tesla driver was able to stop his car by braking, he told a local NBC affiliate.
A Tesla driver said his car malfunctioned and began accelerating on its own after a collision with another car.
It was scary enough when Radu and Angela Stefan were in a head-on collision with another vehicle while driving their Tesla on Mount Charleston in Nevada on the afternoon of July 7.
But the nightmare got worse when Radu Stefan's Tesla began accelerating on its own moments after a Jeep Rubicon turned around a corner and hit them head-on while they were stopped at an intersection, he told a local news outlet. The Jeep later drove away from the scene, according to Stefan.
"It was like a horror movie," Stefan told KSNV, an NBC affiliate station in Las Vegas. "We were just horrified, experiencing it. Just in shock."
Stefan did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.
"We lost control of the car," Stefan told KSNV. "The car went towards the mountain, and I was barely able to stop it at one point, but that we saw in the rearview mirror the people who hit us, they just left."
Stefan did not say in the interview if he had any of Tesla's self-driving or driver-assist software engaged at the time of the collision.
Nevada State Police, who responded to the crash and are investigating the incident and searching for the Jeep driver, according to KSNV, did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment. Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Tesla's vehicles have drawn regulator scrutiny in recent years around their self-driving and assisted-driving features. The company recalled 2 million Teslas in 2023 amid a litany of crashes associated with the Autopilot feature and a yearslong probe from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
Delta Air Lines has apologized after a perceived anti-Palestine social media post.
A since-deleted reply from Delta's official account called the Palestinian flag terrifying.
Delta has since revised its uniform policy to only permit US flag pins.
Delta Air Lines has issued a public apology for a perceived anti-Palestinian social media post.
Earlier this week, a post on X shared images of two Delta flight attendants wearing Palestinian flag pins.
The post, which incorrectly equated the Palestinian flag to the militant group Hamas' flag, read: "Since 2001 we take our shoes off in every airport because a terrorist attack in US soil. Now imagine getting into a @Delta flight and seeing workers with Hamas badges in the air. What do you do?"
A since-deleted reply from Delta's official account said: "I hear you as I'd be terrified as well, personally. Our employees reflect our culture and we do not take it lightly when our policy is not being followed."
In a statement to The Washington Post on Thursday, Delta apologized for the incident and said it had taken action against the employee responsible for the airline's post, noting that the comment "was not in line with our values and our mission."
The employee responsible for the comment "has been counseled and no longer supports Delta's social channels," the airline added.
Edward Ahmed Mitchell, the national deputy executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), told The Post that the comment could make people think that the Palestinian flag is "an icon of a hate group."
"What happened with Delta is just the latest example of anti-Palestinian racism," Mitchell said. "And my hope is that this incident will begin to slowly, slowly move the needle in a different direction."
Azka Mahmood, an executive director from the CAIR chapter in Georgia, said that equating the Palestinian flag with Hamas "erases the existence and legitimacy of the entirety of Palestine," per CNN.
"The Palestinian flag represents a country and national aspirations of over 7 million Palestinians," she said."It is clear that some groups want to delegitimize the flag of Palestine entirely, suppress any expression of the existence of Palestine, and discourage open support for Palestinian rights."
The CAIR said on X that it welcomed the apology from Delta and hoped that "it sends a message to those who continue to dehumanize the Palestinian people as they face genocide, ethnic cleansing and forced starvation imposed by the far-right Israeli government, and enabled by the Biden admin."
We welcome this apology and hope it sends a message to those who continue to dehumanize the Palestinian people as they face genocide, ethnic cleansing and forced starvation imposed by the far-right Israeli government, and enabled by the Biden admin. https://t.co/0f51mpKCJ5
Following the incident, Delta announced that starting Monday, only US flag pins would be permitted to be worn on its uniforms, per The Post.
Some Delta employees pushing to unionize are now demanding a public apology from the airline's leadership.
In an open letter to Delta CEO Ed Bastian, the group said: "Delta leadership must publicly apologize to the targeted crew members, confirm that pins representing the flags of different nations are allowed per policy."
"Everyone should be able to freely express their pride and support for their heritage without encountering hostility or discrimination from employers or customers," it continued.
Business Insider contacted Delta and CAIR for comment.
The flags
A man waves a Palestinian flag.
– /AFP via Getty Images
The Palestinian flag features a red triangle on the left side next to horizontal stripes of black, white, and green. It is based on the flag of the 1916 Arab Revolt.
The Hamas flag is solid green with white Arabic script in the center.
The Hamas flag.
MARCO LONGARI/AFP via Getty Images
The current version of the Palestinian flag was adopted by the Palestine Liberation Organization in 1964.
The flag has featured prominently in pro-Palestinian protests across the world, being used as a symbol of solidarity by people calling for a ceasefire in Gaza.
Israel launched an intense military campaign in the territory following Hamas' October 7 attacks, which killed around 1,200 people in Israel.
More than 38,000 Palestinians have been killed in the resultant conflict so far, according to Gaza's health ministry.
An entity that appears to be affiliated with King Charles scooped up a $6.6 million NYC condo.
It's located on Billionaires' Row, a neighborhood with south of Central Park.
A building rep told BI that consulates have historically purchased units in residential buildings.
An entity that appears to beaffiliated with King Charles III has scooped up a lavish apartment on New York City's Billionaires' Row.
The buyer on closing documents for the almost 3,600-square-foot condo, which sold for $6.6 million on June 27,is listed as "His Majesty the King in Right of Canada, represented by the Minister of Foreign Affairs."
The deed was signed by Robert McCubbing, whose LinkedIn page identifies him as the senior trade commissioner and director of trade and investment for the Consulate General of Canada in New York.
The building, center, overlooking Central Park.
David Sundberg
McCubbing told The New York Post that Global Affairs Canada bought the unit to use as "the Official Residence for the Consulate General of Canada in New York."
Although King Charles is listed on related documents, McCubbing said doing so is a standard practice because Canada is part of the Commonwealth.
"His name is used on legal documentation. It's a function of Canada being a constitutional monarchy," McCubbing told the outlet.
He added that King Charles would not personally use the unit.
The three-bedroom, 4½-bathroom apartment is on the 11th floor of 111 West 57th Street, a skyscraper just south of Central Park known for its slender design. That stretch of 57th Street and the surrounding area is home to some of the most expensive residential real estate on earth.
The Consulate General of Canada in New York, Buckingham Palace. and McCubbing did not immediately to Business requests for comment from Business Insider.
Douglas Elliman's Erin Boisson Aries and Thomas Aabo repped the buyer, according to The Real Deal. They declined Business Insider's request for comment through an Elliman spokesperson.
A lounge inside 111 West 57th Street on Billionaire's Row.
Adrian Gaut
Unit 11A was the last unit left for sale in 111 West 57th Street's landmarked Steinway Building section, a 111 West 57th Street spokesperson said. There are 14 condos in that lower part, which used to be the headquarters of iconic piano maker Steinway & Sons, and 46 apartments in the tower portion of the building.
Building amenitiesat 111 West 57th Streetinclude an 82-foot, two-lane swimming pool with private cabanas, a private dining room and chef's catering kitchen, and an on-site padel court.
The 82-foot, two-lane pool at 111 West 57th Street.
Adrian Gaut
The porte-cochère entry for cars at 111 West 57th Street.
Adrian Gaut
The deed for the transaction hit New York City's public records database on July 9.
It's far from the only NYC property tied to the crown, The Real Deal reported, noting it found 24 properties across the city affiliated with the Queen in the wake of her death — at which point King Charles became the sovereign of Canada.
Sen. John Fetterman at the US Capitol. The senator has backed President Joe Biden multiple times.
AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite
John Fetterman has repeatedly gone to bat for Biden as some Democrats call for a new nominee.
At a recent Democratic lunch, Fetterman reportedly asked senators if Biden should continue his campaign.
Only a smattering of lawmakers agreed with Fetterman, according to Politico.
Since joining the upper chamber last year, Sen. John Fetterman has been one of President Joe Biden's strongest political allies.
And after Biden's disastrous debate performance — which has led to a chorus of congressional Democrats asking the president to step aside as the party's presidential nominee — the Pennsylvania lawmaker has doubled down in his support of the embattled leader.
But so far, many Senate Democrats appear highly skeptical of Biden's chances in November, despite only one Democratic senator publicly calling on the President to forgo his reelection bid.
During a Senate Democratic lunch on Thursday — where Biden's top campaign aides spoke about his polling and a path forward — Fetterman voiced his frustration at the pessimism in the room regarding the president's chances, Politico reported.
"You have legacies, too," Fetterman told the senators who were present in the room, according to the outlet. (Some senators had already left the meeting before Fetterman rose to speak, Politico reported.)
The first-term lawmaker also questioned senators about what their legacies would look like if they turned on Biden over a bad debate, according to the report.
When Fetterman asked his fellow Democrats if they'd want to see Biden continue in the race, only a handful of people in the room — four in total — joined him in agreement, according to Politico.
The lawmakers who stood with Fetterman included Sens. Chris Coons of Delaware and Tammy Duckworth of Illinois, per the report.
Democratic senators have largely remained mum on Biden's chances in public despite their long-standing support of the president's legislative priorities, but their reported views behind closed doors reveal the hesitancy that still permeates the caucus.
For weeks, Fetterman has looked to dunk on Democrats who have gone against Biden, arguing that their lack of support only serves to embolden former President Donald Trump's campaign.
"I refuse to join the Democratic vultures on Biden's shoulder after the debate," the senator wrote on X after the June debate. "No one knows more than me that a rough debate is not the sum total of the person and their record."
Fetterman — who faced criticism from some Democrats after his own debate performance in the high-stakes 2022 Senate race which featured then-GOP candidate and celebrity doctor Mehmet Oz — brushed aside naysayers that year.
And he has done the same for Biden — who has insisted that he's not leaving the presidential race — ahead of the general election.
During a June appearance on "Fox News Sunday," Fetterman compared his campaign situation with that of the president.
"We had a difficult debate, and yet we still managed to go on to win," he said at the time. "One debate is not a career."
Tesla CEO Elon Musk recently donated to a pro-Trump super PAC, according to a new report.
Steve Nesius/Reuters
Elon Musk's politics may seem to be all over the place, but he's demonstrated a consistent pattern.
As far as political donations are concerned, he's been splitting his bets since the early 2000s.
While he's kept donating to both parties, Musk has also more openly embraced the GOP.
Though Elon Musk may appear these days like your typical right-wing billionaire, that hasn't always been the case.
The Tesla, SpaceX, and xAI CEO's rightward lean is actually the culmination of a political evolution that's been playing out over decades.
And as one of the richest and most powerful people in the world, Musk's political stances carry a great weight.
Musk's political donations dating back to 2002 fit neatly into just a single landing page on OpenSecrets, a nonprofit organization that tracks money in politics. And he's contributed to both sides of the political aisle — most recently, reportedly donating to a pro-Trump super PAC.
Though Musk historically hasn't been big on political donations, he's publicly said that he weighs in on politics when it could affect his businesses. And 2024 may have the biggest effect on Musk yet.
The early years: From apartheid-era South Africa to Tesla takeover
Elon Musk, the founder of SpaceX, stands beside a rocket in Los Angeles in 2004.
Paul Harris/Getty Images
Musk, 52, has said very little publicly about apartheid, the system of racial segregation that became the defining issue of his childhood in the Republic of South Africa.
His father, Errol — who inherited wealth from half of an emerald mine he used to own — was elected to Pretoria City Council in 1972, running under the anti-apartheid Progressive Party. The apartheid system was a major motivation behind the younger Musk's decision to leave South Africa for Canada in 1989, according to Ashlee Vance's 2015 biography of the billionaire.
Growing up in the primarily white suburbs outside of Johannesburg, Musk was also surrounded by censorship and disinformation about the government's treatment of Black people, The New York Times reported in May. His mandatory government service was what first exposed him to the reality of the situation, according to the Times, who spoke with a high school classmate of Musk's about the insulated experience.
"People, at some point, realize that they've been fed a whole lot of crap," Andrew Panzera, who was in Musk's German class, told the Times. "At some point you go, 'Jeepers, we really were indoctrinated to a large extent.'"
Musk's political coming of age during the pre-social media era remains much of a mystery. But then his profile rose with the sale of his company X.com, a competitor to PayPal co-founded by Musk, and his subsequent takeover of Tesla as owner after joining founders Martin Eberhard and Marc Tarpenning with a $6.5 million investment in 2004.
Musk's politics pre-Trump
Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk and former President Donald Trump, who have met multiple times over the years. Musk said in 2024 that Trump calls him "out of the blue."
AP Photo/Alex Brandon
Musk has long argued for small government and advocated for laissez-faire economic policy, calling the US government the "ultimate corporation" at a CEO summit in December 2020. In terms of donations, he's been in a relative holding pattern from his early years in Silicon Valley up to the present, donating moderate sums of money to politicians from both parties.
"I get involved in politics as little as possible," Musk said at a 2015 Vanity Fair event, adding that, "There's some amount I have to get involved in," due to his business interests.
He donated $2,000 each to former President George W. Bush and his 2004 Democratic challenger, former Secretary of State John Kerry. Musk also donated to California Democrats up and down the ballot, but still gave the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) $25,000 ahead of the 2006 midterms.
Another example of Musk hedging his donations came in the buildup to the 2008 presidential primaries, where he contributed to both Sens. Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton in their contentious race.
Musk didn't donate to either Clinton or Trump during the 2016 cycle.
The billionaire also started out as a heavy Trump skeptic, saying in October 2015 that it would be "embarrassing" if Trump won the GOP nomination, much less the presidency.
"I don't really have strong feelings except that hopefully Trump doesn't get the nomination of the Republican party, because I think that's, yeah … that wouldn't be good," Musk said at the Vanity Fair event. "I think at most he would get the Republican nomination, but I think that would still be a bit embarrassing."
But more recently, Musk has taken a different approach to the Trump-dominated GOP. His latest donations have all been to Republican candidates and causes, with Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware being the last Democrat to receive any Musk donations back in 2020.
Musk's politics during Trump's term
The Twitter logo seen displayed on a smartphone with Elon Musk's account in the background.
Getty Images
Starting in 2017, Musk's donations began to skew Republican, with the billionaire spending nearly seven times more on GOP campaigns than Democratic ones. He also accepted positions on two of Trump's White House councils and tweeted his support of Rex Tillerson's nomination as Secretary of State.
While Musk previously said he supported Hillary Clinton's campaign promises on the environment and climate change, he defended his decision to attend Trump's business council meetings so he could raise the issue along with the January 2017 travel ban affecting Muslim-majority countries. He then stepped down from the councils in June 2017, citing Trump's decision to leave the Paris Climate Accord.
"Climate change is real," Musk tweeted. "Leaving Paris is not good for America or the world."
Musk largely stopped mentioning Trump from that point until much later in his presidency, when Trump attended a SpaceX launch for NASA in May 2020.
Musk during Biden's presidency
Elon Musk at the Cannes Lions International Festival Of Creativity on June 19, 2024.
Marc Piasecki/Getty Images
In the last few years, Musk's flirtations with the Trump-led GOP have been ramping up.
In mid-2022, Musk said he voted for a Republican candidate for the first time in a Texas special election, adding that he expected to see a "massive red wave" in the year's midterms. Musk's Texas voter registration does not show party affiliation, but he's argued on X that the Democratic Party has drifted further from the center than the GOP.
After taking control of Twitter, now X, at the end of 2022, Musk reinstated Trump's account on the platform. Musk called Trump's expulsion from the platform following the January 6 riots a "morally bad decision" and "foolish to the extreme."
"Indeed, great damage was done today to the public's faith in the American legal system," Musk wrote in a post on X.
"If a former President can be criminally convicted over such a trivial matter — motivated by politics, rather than justice — then anyone is at risk of a similar fate," Musk added, echoing Trump's own narrative that the conviction was an act of political persecution.
Trump has even been reportedly chatting up Musk about an advisory role in his cabinet if he wins this November. And that's not the extent of the pair's burgeoning chumminess — Musk said earlier this month that the former president sometimes calls him on the phone out of the blue.
While Musk has been more bullish lately about support for the GOP, his history of donations and past comments show that he has tended to position himself wherever he thinks power and influence are heading.
Musk donated 'sizable amount' to a pro-Trump super PAC, report says
Elon Musk donated to America Pac, according to Bloomberg.
Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu via Getty Images
Musk has yet to endorse a US presidential candidate for the 2024 election, but a Bloomberg report said he's leaning away from Democrats.
Sources told the outlet that Musk donated a "sizable amount" to America PAC, a political action committee focused on electing Donald Trump. The exact amount is unclear, but America PAC must disclose its list of donors on July 15, according to the outlet.
Biden has recently attempted to rebuild standing with voters — including an interview with ABC News and a press conference — but is struggling to reassure them.
Biden misspoke during his press conference while discussing Vice President Kamala Harris. He said, "I wouldn't have picked Vice President Trump to be vice president did I think she was not qualified to be president."
"This is real!!??" Musk wrote on X.
In separate X posts, he wrote that "reality is beyond parody" and that "the most entertaining outcome is the most likely."
While guests on the star-studded wedding invitation list — which includes names such as Kim Kardashian, Mike Tyson, and John Cena — make their way to the ceremony, they will be greeted by posters bearing the face of the prime minister, who is in the area to kick off a project.
"Heartfelt welcome to India's beloved and respected Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Mumbai," the posters lining the way to the event read, per Reuters.
Keshav Upadhye, the chief spokesperson for Modi's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party in the state of Maharashtra, said the posters had been put up by some "excited party workers," not the party itself, per Reuters.
Posters of India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi seen outside Jio World Convention Centre.
Reuters/Dhwani Pandya
After months of headline-making pre-wedding celebrations, Anant Ambani — the son of Asia's richest man Mukesh Ambani — and Radhika Merchant were married early Saturday at the Jio World Convention Centre.
While it's not certain whether Modi will attend the wedding celebrations, it is thought he may briefly make an appearance.
Activities are scheduled for July 13, and the reception is set to take place on July 14.
Modi's potential presence at the event, which has drawn criticism from locals, could cause backlash from the opposition and the public, as the 73-year-old leader has previously been accused of being too close to business tycoons like the Ambanis.
He's the chairman and managing director of Reliance Industries, a conglomerate with interests in a variety of sectors, including petrochemicals, telecom, and energy.
The Ambanis made headlines in 2018 for throwing another huge celebration for the wedding of Isha Ambani and Anand Piramal. It included a private Beyoncé concert and high-profile guests such as Nick Jonas and Hillary Clinton.
Earlier this year, the family also hosted an extravagant three-day pre-wedding celebration for Anant's wedding. Tech heavyweights such as Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg were just two of the 1,200 guests invited.
Therapist Ruth Westheimer, who died at 96, addressed sexual-performance issues during her radio show "Sexually Speaking."
Donna Svennevik/Getty Images
Dr. Ruth Westheimer, an internationally renowned sex therapist, has died at age 96.
Born in Germany to Jewish parents, Westheimer escaped the Holocaust as a child. She never saw her parents again.
Westheimer became known for her candid sex advice and good-natured attitude on her 1980s radio show "Sexually Speaking."
Dr. Ruth Westheimer, a renowned sex therapist, media personality, and Holocaust survivor known for leading entertaining and culture-shifting conversations about sexual health and pleasure, has died at 96, multiple outlets reported.
Westheimer died at her NYC home on Friday, her publicist Pierre Lehu told the Associated Press.
In the 1980s, Westheimer became internationally known and admired for her candid sex talks, first on her New York City radio show "Sexually Speaking" and later, her talk show "Good Sex with Dr. Ruth Westheimer."
At a time when discussing sexual health in mainstream media was considered taboo, Westheimer, a diminutive but unreserved woman, became known for her informative approach to sex education. Westheimer, known to her fans as "Dr. Ruth," extolled the benefits of sex even during the final years of her life.
"Talking about sex from morning til night! That keeps you young," Westheimer told People magazine during a June 4 interview, which fell on her 95th birthday.
Westheimer, a Jewish orphan, became a psychologist against all odds
Westheimer was born in Germany as Karola Ruth Siegel. She lived in Frankfurt with her parents and grandmother where she grew up baking and attending weekly Jewish services at their local synagogue, Insider previously reported.
But that all ended in 1938 when her family was separated during Nazi raids. She never saw her father, mother, or grandmother again.
Following a riot that killed 91 Jews, Westheimer's parents sent her to an orphanage in Switzerland along with 300 other Jewish German children, through a protection system called Kindertransport.
"They gave me life twice," Westheimer said of her parents to German news outlet BILD am Sonntag. "First when I was born. And the second time when they sent me on the Kindertransport."
Nazis took Westheimer's family to concentration camps soon after her departure via Kindertransport. Her father and grandmother died due to the inhumane conditions, while her mother was declared missing.
Julius Siegel, pictured above, was the father of Dr. Ruth Westheimer, who was born in Germany as Karola Ruth Siegel.
Courtesy of Dr. Ruth Westheimer
"I don't think of myself as a survivor. I think of myself as an orphan of the Holocaust," Westheimer said in "Ask Dr. Ruth," a 2019 documentary about her life.
With just the contents of a suitcase and a handful of letters and pictures of her family, Westheimer emigrated to British-controlled Mandatory Palestine on September 8, 1945, where she began a career as a sniper in the Israeli military. She never shot anyone during her state-mandated career there, but she did recover from shrapnel wounds on her legs during an explosion on her 20th birthday.
Two years later, Westheimer moved to Paris with her first husband, an Israeli soldier, and began studying psychology at the Sorbonne University. She worked as a kindergarten teacher to pay for her education and because a professor at the University of Paris before moving to the US in 1956.
Once in Manhattan, Westheimer poured her energy into earning her master's degree in sociology from The New School, and then her doctorate in education from Columbia University. She worked at Planned Parenthood and then New York-Presbyterian Hospital, spending her time educating others about sex.
Through it all, Westheimer built upon her personal life too. She divorced her first husband and married and divorced another before finally connecting with her third and final husband, Manfred "Fred" Westheimer, when she was 32. Fred was a fellow Holocaust survivor and lover of skiing, and Westheimer referred to their relationship as her "real marriage."
Together, they had a son Joel, and Fred adopted Miriam, Westheimer's daughter from a previous marriage.
Westheimer spent her career breaking down sexual taboos
Westheimer was one of the first on-air personalities to talk openly about sex and sexual health, sprinkling words like "erectile dysfunction," "vagina," and "penis" into her shows.
On the 1980s radio show "Sexually Speaking," New York City locals would call in, asking Westheimer to help them solve their sexual conundrums. No matter the topic — clitoral stimulation, masturbation, or a sexual attraction to peanut butter — Westheimer would always respond seriously, with a signature mixture of conviction and good-naturedness that made her known as one of America's most trusted sex educators.
"I think that sexual activity should be fun and should be human," Westheimer told David Letterman during an interview on his talk show in 1982.
Sex therapist Dr. Ruth Westheimer pictured attending the World AIDS Day Benefit Gala November 30, 1990 in New York City.
Arnaldo Magnani/Liaison/Getty Images
Her episodes challenged the time's taboos and stereotypes about pleasure too. Westheimer spoke of the benefits of female masturbation and discussed sex between gay people, something that, at the time, was unheard of in mainstream media.
A champion of fulfilling sex and love at every age
Dr. Ruth Westheimer has died at age 96.
Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images
Westheimer led by example, helping others to envision and build fulfilling lives in spite of unimaginable hardship. Even in her final years, she championed the pursuit of sexual pleasure.
During an interview with People magazine on her 94th birthday in June 2022, Westheimer shared words she believed we ought to live by: "To make sure not to put sex life on the sideline, even in older years. But to keep it alive."
The same year, she released a revised edition of her book "The Art of Arousal," a collection of paintings, sculptures, and drawings that depict eroticism throughout history.
In 2019, Westheimer told NPR's Scott Simon she wanted to leave her troubling childhood in the past, and avoided answering questions about it, with the exception of her documentary. She much preferred to focus on what she considered the two greatest achievements of her life: teaching sexual literacy, and being a mother and grandmother.
"And you NPR people, loud and clear, Hitler is dead, and my four grandchildren are fantastic in their lives," she said.
The Eiffel Tower Stadium at the Champ-De-Mars in Paris.
DIMITAR DILKOFF/Contributor/AFP via Getty Images
The 2024 Summer Olympics begin in Paris on July 26.
The estimated cost of the 2024 Olympic Games is $8.2 billion, according to a WalletHub report.
An estimated $3.2 billion was spent on infrastructure investments.
A lot has changed since Paris last hosted the Olympics 100 years ago.
In 1924, a then-record 44 countries competed in the Games, which cost an estimated 10 million francs, according to "A Look At Olympic Costs" at The Olympic Studies Centre.
This year, 206 countries are sending athletes to go for gold, and the host nation will spend an estimated $8.2 billion on preparation.
From stadiums to security, here's a breakdown of some of the most eye-popping costs of staging and attending the 2024 Olympics in Paris, according to a new WalletHub report and Olympics data.
Hosting the 2024 Olympic Games will cost an estimated $8.2 billion.
Tourists walking around Trocadero Plaza ahead of the Olympics.
Artur Widak/Contributor/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Paris is one of two cities to host the Summer Olympics three times; first in 1900, then 1924, and now 2024. (London has also hosted three times.)
WalletHub reported this year's estimated cost is $8.2 billion, although other outlets have estimated the total cost is as much as $10 billion. Still, that figure is actually less than other recent Summer Games.
After adjusting the figures for inflation, MarketWatch reported in 2021 that Tokyo 2020 was the most expensive Summer Olympics, costing an estimated $20 billion, followed by London 2012 at $17.1 billion and Rio de Janeiro 2016 at $15.6 billion.
An estimated $3.2 billion was dedicated to infrastructure investments.
The construction site for the Parc des Champions.
GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT/Contributor/AFP via Getty Images
WalletHub estimates that $3.2 billion was spent on infrastructure, which includes the two new stadiums constructed for the Games: the Olympics Aquatics Centre and the Adidas Arena.
The Olympics Aquatics Centre cost $204 million to build, SwimSwam reported, and can hold 6,000 people. The venue will host diving, synchronized swimming, and some water polo events.
Meanwhile, the Associated Press reported the Adidas Arena cost $150 million to build and can host up to 9,000 spectators for badminton, rhythmic gymnastics, and weightlifting events.
The Stade de France, which will host several athletics competitions and the closing ceremony, is valued at $705 million.
The Stade de France will host track and field events, rugby sevens matches, and the closing ceremony.
GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT/Contributor/AFP via Getty Images
In 2023, French newspaper Le Monde reported that the French government estimated the stadium was worth 647 million euros in 2021, which is about $705 million today.
Olympics.com reported that the country's largest stadium, The Stade de France, was originally constructed for the 1998 FIFA World Cup and has a capacity of 80,000 spectators.
Since then, it has been the home of several major sporting championships, such as the 2016 Euros and the 2007 and 2023 Rugby World Cups, and concerts by major artists like Beyoncé and Céline Dion.
Now, the stadium is prepared to host track-and-field events and rugby sevens matches, as well as the closing ceremony on August 11.
NBCUniversal spent $7.65 billion to renew its broadcast rights deal from 2021 to 2032.
NBC Olympics "Rings Across America" set at Universal Studios Hollywood in 2021.
Amy Sussman/Staff/Getty Images
In 2014, NBCU announced that the International Olympic Committee awarded the network broadcast rights "across all media platforms" from 2021 to 2032 in a deal worth $7.65 billion.
The network has held exclusive broadcast rights for the Summer Olympics since 1988, NBCU reported.
According to WalletHub, the network has already made upwards of $1.2 billion from domestic ad sales for the Olympics.
Spectators can expect to spend between $98 and $2,945 for tickets to the opening ceremony on the Seine.
The opening ceremony will take place on the Seine.
He Changshan/Contributor/Xinhua via Getty Images
The outdoor ceremony is the first of its kind, with boats for each national delegation riding down the Seine to kick off the Games.
Per Olympics.com, admission is actually free for many spectators, as people can access "the upper quays" without tickets. Lower quays, however, from the Austerlitz Bridge to the Iéna Bridge will require tickets. Tickets start at 90 euros and reach 2,700 euros, according to the Olympics' ticket-cost guide.
The river is also famously the focus of the city's $1.5 billion clean-up project, completed for both the opening ceremony and to host three open-air swimming events.
Tickets to various athletics events range from about $26 to $1,068.
Lyon Stadium, pictured in 2018, will host soccer games throughout the 2024 Olympics.
Quality Sport Images/Contributor/Getty Images
Almost half of tickets reserved for the general public are priced at 50 euros or less, with more than a million tickets being sold for 24 euros, or about $26, according to Olympics.com.
The most expensive single tickets are listed for 980 euros, or $1,068, per the Olympics.
The French Government spent $348 million on security for the Games, WalletHub reported.
Security guards in Paris.
JEWEL SAMAD/Contributor/AFP via Getty Images
WalletHub reported that more than 100 AI-equipped smart cameras will be present in the city.
The IOC also announced in May that Paris 2024 will be the first Olympic and Paralympic Games to use an AI-powered monitoring service to "protect athletes and officials from online abuse."
Laurene Powell Jobs has purchased a $70 million home in San Francisco, The Wall Street Journal reported.
The mansion is the most expensive home ever sold in the city.
Powell Jobs bought a $94 million property in Malibu in June.
Billionaire Laurene Powell Jobs has purchased a mansion for around $70 million in the Pacific Heights neighborhood of San Fransisco — a record price for a home in the city, The Wall Street Journal reported, citing unnamed people familiar with the transaction.
Powell Jobs, the founder of impact investing and philanthropy firm the Emerson Collective and the widow of Apple founder Steve Jobs, bought the property in an off-market deal from Sloan Lindemann Barnett and Roger Barnett, the CEO of natural nutrition company Shaklee Corp.
The Barnett couple had bought the Spanish Renaissance Revival-style mansion in 2011 for $33 million, the WSJ report said.
The previous sale price record in San Francisco was $43.5 million, local agents told the outlet.
Since Steve Jobs died from cancer in 2011, Powell Jobs has continued to build up her fortune, which was based on Apple and Disney stock she inherited from her husband.
According to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, Powell Jobs has a net worth of $11.4 billion. She owns stakes in various organizations, including the NBA's Washington Wizards and the NHL's Washington Capitals, and has invested in media outlets such as Axios and The Atlantic.
When my son was in his sophomore year of high school, he wanted to drop out and teach himself.
I supported him, and he went on to make films and win awards.
He didn't want to go to college either, but he's still living a successful life.
A few weeks before he turned 16, my older son pitched us a plan to leave high school on his upcoming birthday.
His father (my then-husband) and I took him seriously. Our son had a powerful inner drive, which I'd steadfastly supported. As a biologist trained in animal behavior and ecology — and the person lucky enough to be their stay-at-home parent — I'd been open to mothering both of my sons in unusual ways. From before their births, I'd hoped to help them connect to a wild human lineage we tend to forget in our culture of screens, social media, and intense work expectations. This included co-sleeping and potty training early.
So, I wasn't surprised when my son told me he wanted to drop out of high school to teach himself. It's what I taught him to do all along.
My son always enjoyed different learning techniques
Early on, my sons thrived in an affordable Montessori preschool. But then, after a few years in public school, the boys dimmed.
One day, I took them for a trial run at a K-8 Expeditionary Learning school that had recently formed in our small town. Later, they scrambled into the car, jubilant, rushing to exclaim, "Mom, we loved it! Can we please go to this school?"
From then on, they were so excited they almost never needed help with homework. Meanwhile, they spent summers at a nature-based wilderness school rooted in social learning. Both boys were experienced bow-drill fire-starters, knife makers, trackers, and solo overnight wilderness campers by their tweens.
Perhaps it was inevitable, then, that my older son felt increasingly hemmed in by his year-and-a-half at a public high school. By then, on his own time, he'd been among the first kids we know to build, fly, and race drones. He'd won numerous photography awards. Then, a book I'd shared with him, "The Teenage Liberation Handbook," set him on fire during his sophomore year. So, when he asked to leave school that spring, it didn't take us long to say, "Yes."
He flourished outside of school
Almost immediately, he studied for, practiced, and acquired a professional drone pilot's license. Meanwhile, he used his father's workshop to build out his first camper car. Soon, he began taking short trips near home to film with his drone.
We'd agreed he'd also do online learning through Kahn Academy, but at 23, he recently told me, "Mom, I used that a lot less than you thought."
He eventually moved out of our home and into a yurt in the backyard. For all intents and purposes, he governed his own life. Within reason, we'd approve of his trips and growing independence.
My social life included a close group of friends with similar-aged children who'd grown up together. My son spent a lot of time with that gang across his teen years — often camping, hiking, staging epic Nerf battles, skiing, and road-tripping together.
My son continued to thrive. Between 16 and 18, he began contracting as a filmmaker with the K-8 EL school he'd once attended. He made a few short documentary films spotlighting the school's approach to learning, including teaching students indigenous canoe-making skills. Then, he worked with the tribes of north Idaho to document their ancient stewardship of the lands and rivers.
He then decided to skip college, too
My son did well on his GED and SATs, but that didn't matter much to him. He took a few college courses but ultimately decided college was not for him.
Today, he's backpacking around the world on his bike. And he's using his gear and drone to make self-shot film adventures. So far, this includes last year's hike around the Ring Road in Iceland, a bike ride from Canada to Mexico, and this spring's solo cycle across the length of the United Kingdom in epically rough weather. He's currently on a ferry across the English Channel with new friends, set to ride across northern Europe this summer. He's currently getting paid for the videos he makes of his travels.
It's there, in his recent films, that I've seen the exact kind of joy on my son's face that I saw when he was a small child. As much as I might have safety concerns while he's out there riding thousands of miles across all manner of challenges (and oh, mercy, I do), he's becoming his own true self. And that is all I ever wanted for him.
Rachel Clark is a writer and the author. Her work has appeared in Newsweek, Salon, Psychology Today, and Good Housekeeping. Her memoir, in the works, links her experience as a biologist, wife, and mother to the impacts of coercive control on people and planet. Connect at www.rachelclarkauthor.com.