Tag: News

  • What Comcast’s new Netflix, Peacock, Apple TV+ streaming bundle tells you about the industry’s economics

    Apple TV +, Peacock, and Netflix logo inside a lasso
    • Comcast is selling Netflix, Peacock, and Apple TV+ for $15 a month. It would cost $23 to get them separately.
    • Where does that $8-a-month discount come from? 
    • Good question. The possible answer tells you a lot about streaming economics these days.

    If you subscribe to Netflix's cheapest plan, and also get Peacock's cheapest plan, and also get Apple TV+, it will cost you $23 a month.

    But if you get them all together, via a new package Comcast has started selling to its broadband customers, it will cost $15 a month — a discount of more than 30%.

    This is one of several new bundles the streaming industry is trying out these days — and, like I've written before, it's not really a return to the bundles of the old cable TV days. And you should be thankful for that.

    But what's the math behind the bundle? There's $8 of discounts a month here, spread among three companies. Are all of them taking less than they normally do? Or is one company subsidizing the others?

    Spoiler: I don't know. But I have heard two different theories of the case.

    The first is the more obvious one: Netflix is a big, very popular service that many people have heard of. Peacock and Apple are much smaller. So Peacock and Apple would get more benefit from being in a bundle with Netflix, so they are more likely to discount their rates in order to make the bundle work.

    I floated that one to Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos last week after his company's "upfront" presentation to ad buyers. He told me he wouldn't comment about any of the economics behind any of Netflix's deals. But, he added with a smile, he appreciated the logic behind my theory.

    But then there's the second theory I've heard floated — that all three services benefit from the bundle, so everyone makes some kind of accommodation. Part of that theory is one you've heard before: Bundles are easier/more cost-effective to market, and they reduce "churn" — people dropping out of services each month, which is a huge problem for the streaming business.

    But another part of that argument was new to me: That people who get streaming services by signing up via broadband companies like Comcast or Verizon are much less likely to stop and start their subscriptions. Which would make Netflix much more willing to take a discounted rate for this kind of bundle than it would be if it were part of a different bundle.

    That's pretty intriguing, and it does make sense. Digital distributors like Apple have made it very easy for subscribers to turn their streaming subscriptions on and off. But if you're getting say, Disney+ at a discount via a Verizon promotion, it requires several steps to turn that off. Just as important — you're much more likely to forget you're paying for Disney+ at all, since its cost gets buried in a monthly Verizon bill you may never look at.

    Is that true? Good question. Netflix, Comcast, and Apple all declined to comment about bundle economics. And it turns out that Antenna, the subscription-tracking service I often use to learn about this kind of thing, doesn't track subscriptions via wholesale deals like this.

    But here's something that gives some credence to the notion: Documents from Apple, unearthed via 2021 court proceedings, about Netflix's decision to stop selling subscriptions via Apple's App Store in 2018. Netflix, according to Apple executives who were discussing the move, wasn't just motivated to stop selling because of the fee Apple takes for each subscriber — they were also concerned that customers they acquired that way were more likely to unsubscribe.

    So maybe all streaming subscriptions aren't equal.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • All the GOP politicians who’ve flocked to Trump’s Manhattan trial to support him

    Trump's trial visitors include House Speaker Mike Johnson, the most powerful GOP lawmaker in the United States.
    Trump's visitors have included House Speaker Mike Johnson, the most powerful GOP lawmaker in the United States.

    • A long list of prominent GOP politicians have flocked to Trump's ongoing trial in Manhattan.
    • They include the speaker of the House, one governor, and several senators and House members.
    • It's an effort to show loyalty — and for some, boost their VP chances.

    Former President Donald Trump's hush-money trial in New York is suddenly the biggest magnet for ambitious Republican politicians hoping to demonstrate their loyalty.

    In recent weeks, the Manhattan criminal courthouse has played host to the speaker of the House, several GOP senators and vice-presidential contenders, over a dozen House members, and even two state attorneys general.

    It's resulted in at least one senator missing a vote, the postponing of a congressional mark-up, and a bevy of Republican heavyweights turning themselves into attack dogs for the presumptive 2024 nominee — who remains barred from criticizing jurors and witnesses via a gag order.

    And Trump has yet to receive a courtroom visit from his own wife, Melania.

    Here are all of the Republicans who've flocked to the trial so far.

    Sen. Rick Scott was the first elected Republican to show up. He ended up missing a vote.
    Florida Sen. Rick Scott walks behind Trump at the trial on May 9.
    Florida Sen. Rick Scott walks behind Trump at the trial on May 9.

    On Thursday, May 9, Sen. Rick Scott of Florida became the first elected Republican to show up to the trial.

    "What he is going through is just despicable," Scott told reporters outside the courtroom, arguing the trial was "clearly criminal" and was being run by "political thugs."

    Scott's visit came in the middle of the week, while the Senate was taking votes on a bill to reauthorize the Federal Aviation Administration for the next five years.

    The Florida senator, who's up for reelection in November, ended up missing a procedural vote on the bill later that day.

    That prompted his Democratic opponent, former Rep. Debbie Mucarsel Powell, to slam him as "sucking up to a defendant found liable for sexual abuse" and putting his "own extreme agenda before the people he was elected to represent."

    Sen. JD Vance was the first VP contender to show up.
    Sen. JD Vance snaps a photo at the trial on May 13.
    Sen. JD Vance snaps a photo at the trial on May 13.

    On Monday, May 13, Sen. JD Vance of Ohio was among the next crop of senators to show up — and the first vice presidential contender to do so.

    He later took to social media, calling the courtroom "dingy" while suggesting that the "main goal of the trial is psychological torture."

    Sen. Tommy Tuberville
    Sen. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama at the trial on May 13.
    Sen. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama at the trial on May 13.

    Tuberville came to the trial alongside Vance, where he derided jurors as being "supposedly American."

    He later told the conservative network Newsmax that he came to the trial to help Trump "overcome this gag order."

    Sen. Eric Schmitt
    Sen. Eric Schmitt at the trial on Tuesday, May 21.
    Sen. Eric Schmitt at the trial on Tuesday, May 21.

    The Missouri senator, among the first to endorse Trump in 2024, visited the trial on Tuesday, May 21.

    Like Sen. Scott, he ended up missing votes to do so.

    "You want to talk about threats to democracy? That's what this is across the street," Schmitt said at a press conference with other Republicans outside the trial.

    Gov. Doug Burgum was the 2nd VP contender to show up.
    North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum at the trial on May 14.
    North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum at the trial on May 14.

    Burgum — another VP contender whose political stock has been on the rise recently — attended the trial on Tuesday, May 14.

    He and the other Republicans in attendance quickly made waves on social media for wearing apparently matching outfits.

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    Vivek Ramaswamy showed up, too.
    Former GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy at the trial on May 14.
    Former GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy at the trial on May 14.

    Vivek Ramaswamy, the tech entrepreneur and 2024 presidential candidate, showed up to the trial on the same day as Burgum.

    He also happens to be a vice presidential contender — albeit, a lower-tier one.

    House Speaker Mike Johnson
    Johnson speaking to reporters outside the trial on May 14.
    Johnson speaking to reporters outside the trial on May 14.

    The highest-ranking Republican to visit the trial has been House Speaker Mike Johnson, who traveled to Manhattan on the same day as Burgum and Ramaswamy.

    The speaker delivered a series of remarks — including slamming the district attorney, the judge, and Michael Cohen — without taking questions afterwards.

    "He is soon to be officially the nominee of one of the major parties in our country," Johnson said of Trump. "Running for president, and they have him tied up here in this ridiculous prosecution. That is not about justice, it's all about politics, and everybody can see that."

    He concluded by insisting that he came to the trial "on my own" because he's "deeply concerned about this."

    Two dozen other House Republicans have also shown up
    Nine House Republicans, including Rep. Matt Gaetz, attended the trial on Thursday, May 16.
    Nine House Republicans, including Rep. Matt Gaetz, attended the trial on Thursday, May 16.

    On Thursday, May 16, the biggest crop of House Republicans yet attended Trump's trial.

    That included Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado, who was met with chants of "Beetlejuice" as she took to the microphones outside the courtroom.

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    Here are the 20 rank-and-file House Republicans who've attended the trial so far:

    • Andy Biggs of Arizona
    • Lauren Boebert of Colorado
    • Eric Burlison of Missouri
    • Michael Cloud of Texas
    • Andrew Clyde of Georgia
    • Eli Crane of Arizona
    • Byron Donalds of Florida
    • Matt Gaetz of Florida
    • Bob Good of Virginia
    • Diana Harshbarger of Tennessee
    • Ronny Jackson of Texas
    • Anna Paulina Luna of Florida
    • Mary Miller of Illinois
    • Cory Mills of Florida
    • Nicole Malliotakis of New York
    • Dan Meuser of Pennsylvania
    • Troy Nehls of Texas
    • Ralph Norman of South Carolina
    • Andy Ogles of Tennessee
    • Maria Elvira Salazar of Florida
    • Keith Self of Texas
    • Dale Strong of Alabama
    • Mike Waltz of Florida
    • Daniel Webster of Florida
    The top law enforcement officials in Iowa, Alabama, and South Carolina have also flocked to a criminal defendant's defense.
    Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird speaks to reporters outside the trial on May 13.
    Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird speaks to reporters outside the trial on May 13.

    One other intriguing cohort of trial attendees: three Republican state attorneys general.

    Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird and Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall were among the cohort of Republicans who attended the trial on Monday, May 13. South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson attended the trial on Monday, May 20.

    Their attendance is particularly striking: they are the top law enforcement officials in their respective states, and they're publicly taking the side of a criminal defendant in another state.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • The richest person in every state

    Elon Musk.
    Elon Musk is the richest resident of Texas.

    • Forbes compiled a list of the richest person in every state in 2024.
    • The billionaires include members of the Walton family, Mars family, and Chick-fil-A's Cathy family.
    • Alaska, Delaware, and West Virginia are the only states without billionaires.

    The US is home to more billionaires than any other country. While it's tempting to think they all congregate in California, New York, and Florida, these ultra-rich members of society can also be found in Bloomington, Indiana, Bentonville, Arkansas, and many other cities nationwide. In fact, there are billionaires in 47 states.

    In May 2024, Forbes released a list of the wealthiest person in each state. With fortunes across industries like tech, retail, agriculture, and oil, these individuals have a combined net worth of $1.6 trillion.

    Find out who's the richest person that calls your state home, according to Forbes' report. The below estimated net worths were accurate as of March 2024.

    ALABAMA: Jimmy Rane
    Jimmy Rane Alabama
    Jimmy Rane.

    Net worth: $1.5 billion

    Age: 77

    Source of wealth: As the founder and CEO of Great Southern Wood Preserving, Rane helped popularize the lumber business by appearing in commercials as a cowboy known as "the Yella Fella."

    Residence: Abbeville

    ALASKA: Jonathan Rubini and family, Leonard
    Hyde and family
    Anchorage, Alaska.
    Anchorage, Alaska.

    Net worth: $400 million

    Age: Rubini is 69; Hyde is 67.

    Source of wealth: Rubini serves as the CEO and chairman of commercial real-estate developer JL Properties, while Hyde serves as its president. Each of them owns 50% of the business, which also includes properties in Florida and Utah, Forbes reported.

    Residence: Anchorage

    ARIZONA: Ernest Garcia II
    A Carvana used car "vending machine"
    A Carvana used car "vending machine" in Miami, Florida.

    Net worth: $8 billion

    Age: 67

    Source of wealth: Ernest Garcia II owns the used car retailer DriveTime Automotive. He is also the largest shareholder of Carvana, an online used car dealer founded by his son Ernest Garcia III in 2012.

    Residence: Tempe

    ARKANSAS: Jim Walton and family
    Jim Walton
    Jim Walton.

    Net worth: $78.4 billion

    Age: 75

    Source of wealth: Jim Walton and his siblings inherited their wealth from their father, Sam Walton, who opened the first Walmart store in 1962 and founded the discount warehouse Sam's Club in 1983. Jim Walton is also the chairman of Arvest Bank.

    Residence: Bentonville

    CALIFORNIA: Mark Zuckerberg
    The founder and head of Facebook's Meta Group, Mark Zuckerberg, presents new devices and AI at a conference.
    Mark Zuckerberg.

    Net worth: $177 billion

    Age: 40

    Source of wealth: As a student at Harvard, Zuckerberg cofounded a social network known as "The Facebook" in 2004. He went on to become CEO of Meta, the parent company for Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Threads.

    Residence: Palo Alto

    COLORADO: Philip Anschutz
    Philip Anschutz
    Philip Anschutz.

    Net worth: $15.3 billion

    Age: 84

    Source of wealth: Anschutz initially amassed his fortune through the discovery of an oil field on the Wyoming-Utah border in 1979 and subsequent investments in railroad companies. He founded Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG) in 1994, which owns major sports teams and performance venues such as the Crypto.com Arena. AEG is also the parent company for Coachella music festival.

    Residence: Denver

    CONNECTICUT: Steve Cohen
    steve cohen
    Steve Cohen.

    Net worth: $19.8 billion

    Age: 67

    Source of wealth: Cohen founded two hedge funds, SAC Capital and Point72. Until SAC Capital was shut down after pleading guilty to insider trading charges in 2013, it was one of the most successful hedge funds in the world. (Cohen himself was never charged.) Point72 currently manages over $30.6 billion, Forbes reported. He also holds a 95% ownership stake in the New York Mets.

    Residence: Greenwich

    DELAWARE: Elizabeth Snyder
    A waterproof Gore-Tex coat displayed in a block of ice at an outdoor supplies shop
    A Gore-Tex coat.

    Net worth: $800 million

    Age: 77

    Source of wealth: Snyder's parents founded WL Gore & Associates, a manufacturing company that holds over 7,000 patents, in 1958. Gore-Tex, a waterproof fabric used in outdoor apparel and shoes, remains its most profitable invention. Snyder owns around 5.5% of the company, Forbes reported.

    Residence: Wilmington

    FLORIDA: Jeff Bezos
    Jeff Bezos
    Jeff Bezos.

    Net worth: $194 billion

    Age: 60

    Source of wealth: Bezos founded e-commerce titan Amazon in 1994 and still owns around 9% of the company. As of March 2024, he was the second-richest person in the US behind Elon Musk. Bezos has since overtaken Musk and attained the title of second-richest person in the world behind LVMH CEO Bernard Arnault, according to Forbes' real-time billionaires list.

    Residence: Miami

    GEORGIA: Dan Cathy, Bubba Cathy, and Trudy Cathy White
    Chick-fil-A Inc. president and COO Dan Cathy, son of the chain's founder Truett Cathy, sounds the trumpet while visiting one of his franchises.
    Dan Cathy.

    Net worth: $11.2 billion

    Age: 71, 69, and 68

    Source of wealth: The Cathys are heirs to the Chick-fil-A family fortune. Founded by their father, S. Truett Cathy, in the 1960s, the fried-chicken fast-food chain now has over 2,800 restaurant locations worldwide.

    Residence: Atlanta

    HAWAII: Pierre Omidyar
    Pierre Omidyar, Chairman and Founder of eBay, looks on during the final session of the annual Clinton Global Initiative meeting in New York, on Thursday, September 23, 2010.
    Pierre Omidyar.

    Net worth: $6.3 billion

    Age: 56

    Source of wealth: Omidyar founded eBay in 1995 and became a billionaire when the e-commerce company went public during the dot-com bubble in 1998. eBay also acquired PayPal in 2002 for $1.5 billion.

    Residence: Honolulu

    IDAHO: Frank VanderSloot
    View of the temple in the Idaho falls, Idaho.
    Idaho Falls, Idaho.

    Net worth: $3.3 billion

    Age: 75

    Source of wealth: VanderSloot is the founder and former chief executive of Melaleuca, Inc., which sells nutritional and wellness products online. Forbes reported that the company now has over one million customers each month.

    Residence: Idaho Falls

    ILLINOIS: Lukas Walton
    Lukas Walton
    Lukas Walton.

    Net worth: $28 billion

    Age: 37

    Source of wealth: Lukas Walton is the billionaire heir to the Walmart fortune and the grandson of Walmart founder Sam Walton. Lukas Walton inherited his vast wealth after his father, John T. Walton, died in a plane crash in 2005 at the age of 58.

    Residence: Chicago

    INDIANA: Carl Cook
    Indiana University Bloomington
    Indiana University Bloomington.

    Net worth: $10.6 billion

    Age: 61

    Source of wealth: Cook has served as CEO of Cook Group, a medical-device manufacturing company founded by his parents, since his father's death in 2011. Bloomberg reported the company made about $2.3 billion in revenue in 2022 and sells its products in over 135 countries.

    Residence: Bloomington

    IOWA: Harry Stine
    FILE PHOTO: Harry Stine, chief executive for Stine Seed, poses next to corn planted near the company's offices in Adel, Iowa, U.S. October 26, 2016. REUTERS/Tom Polansek
    Harry Stine.

    Net worth: $9.7 billion

    Age: 82

    Source of wealth: Stine is an agricultural pioneer and the founder and owner of Stine Seed, a corn and soybean seed company based in Adel, Iowa. According to the company's website, Stine Seed and its affiliates own around 800 patents related to soybean and corn genetic technology. Major licensing deals have helped it become one of the world's largest private seed companies.

    Residence: Adel

    KANSAS: Charles Koch and family
    Charles Koch poses for a photograph looking off frame.
    Charles Koch.

    Net worth: $58.5 billion

    Age: 88

    Source of wealth: Koch amassed his billions from serving as co-CEO of Koch Industries, which produces around $125 billion in revenue each year, Forbes reported. Founded in 1940 by his father, Fred Koch, Koch Industries is involved in various businesses, from oil pipelines to paper goods, and is the second-largest private company in the US.

    Residence: Wichita

    KENTUCKY: Tamara Gustavson
    Tamara Hughes Gustavson and Eric Gustavson
    Tamara Hughes Gustavson (left) and Eric Gustavson.

    Net worth: $7.8 billion

    Age: 62

    Source of wealth: Gustavson made her billions as the heiress to the Public Storage empire and as a prize-winning horse breeder. Her father, B. Wayne Hughes, cofounded Public Storage, a self-storage company that now owns and operates thousands of locations across the US and Europe, in 1972. Forbes reported Gustavson owns about 10% of the company.

    Residence: Lexington

    LOUISIANA: Todd Graves
    Todd Graves, the CEO and founder of Raising Cane's, is one of the world's 500 richest people, according to Bloomberg.
    Todd Graves.

    Net worth: $9.1 billion

    Age: 52

    Source of wealth: Graves, the founder and CEO of the chicken-tender restaurant chain Raising Cane's, opened his first restaurant in 1996. The company now has more than 750 restaurants in the US and internationally and $3.7 billion in annual sales, Forbes reported.

    Residence: Baton Rouge

    MAINE: Susan Alfond
    Susan Alfond of Scarborough, Harry Sawyer of Portland, and his wife and board member, Jane Sawyer.
    Susan Alfond.

    Net worth: $3.1 billion

    Age: 78

    Source of wealth: Alfond's father, Harold Alfond, made a fortune as the founder of the Dexter Shoe Company, once one of the largest shoe manufacturers in the US. He sold the company to Warren Buffett in 1993 for $420 million in Berkshire Hathaway stock, Forbes reported. Harold Alfond died in 2007, leaving his fortune to Susan Alfond and her three siblings.

    Residence: Scarborough

    MARYLAND: Annette Lerner and family
    Annette Lerner
    Washington Nationals principal owner, Mark Lerner, with his mother, Annette Lerner.

    Net worth: $6.4 billion

    Age: 94

    Source of wealth: Lerner's fortune grew after she loaned $250 to her husband, Ted Lerner, to establish a firm that sold homes to real-estate developers, Forbes reported. Founded in 1952, the firm grew to become one of the most successful real-estate companies in the DC area. The Lerners also made their money as owners of the Washington Nationals baseball team.

    Residence: Chevy Chase

    MASSACHUSETTS: Abigail Johnson
    Abigail Johnson
    Abigail Johnson.

    Net worth: $29 billion

    Age: 62

    Source of wealth: Johnson is the president and CEO of Fidelity Investments, and holds an estimated 28.5% ownership in the company. In 2022, American Banker named Johnson the second-most-powerful woman in finance, and she has been praised for embracing mobile technology and cryptocurrency in the company's business initiatives.

    Residence: Milton

    MICHIGAN: Daniel Gilbert
    Michigan
    Michigan.

    Net worth: $26.2 billion

    Age: 62

    Source of wealth: Gilbert is the founder and chairman of Rocket Companies, formerly known as Quicken Loans. From 2013 to 2018, under Gilbert's leadership, the company closed nearly half a trillion in home loans, according to the Gilbert Family Foundation. In 2020, when Quicken Loans went public as Rocket Companies, it was valued at $36 billion, Reuters reported.

    Residence: Franklin

    MINNESOTA: Glen Taylor
    Glen Taylor
    Glen Taylor.

    Net worth: $2.9 billion

    Age: 83

    Source of wealth: Taylor purchased Carlson Letter Service, a wedding stationery business that he worked for while attending college, in 1975, according to the company's website. It became the Taylor Corporation, a print services and communications company. He also owns stakes in the Minnesota Timberwolves and other sports teams.

    Residence: Mankato

    MISSISSIPPI: Thomas and James Duff
    Vintage large letter illustrated postcard 'Greetings from Hattiesburg, Mississippi.' showing the Forest County Courthouse, and the Main Street United Methodist Church.
    Hattiesburg.

    Net worth: $3 billion

    Age: 66 and 63

    Source of wealth: The Duff brothers' wealth originates from their family business: tires. Their father, Ernest, founded Southern Tire Mart in the '70s and sold it in 1998. James and Thomas bought it back in 2003 and then cofounded Duff Capital Investors, a holding company, in 2007. According to Forbes, it now brings in $5 billion in revenue across 20+ businesses.

    Residence: Hattiesburg

    MISSOURI: John Morris
    Golf: Bass Pro Shops Legends of Golf: Portrait of Bass Pro Shops owner John L. Morris posing in front of wedding chapel on Top of the Rock course on Sunday at Big Cedar Lodge. Legends and Champions Tour.
    John Morris.

    Net worth: $9.5 billion

    Age: 76

    Source of wealth: Morris is the founder and CEO of Bass Pro Shops, the outdoor gear chain that brings in $8.1 billion in sales revenue annually, according to Forbes. He founded Bass in 1972 in the back of his father's liquor store. In 2016, Bass acquired Cabela's for $5 billion.

    Residence: Springfield

    MONTANA: Dennis Washington
    missoula montana
    The County Courthouse in Missoula, Montana.

    Net worth: $7 billion

    Age: 89

    Source of wealth: Washington owns a business group called Washington Companies, which owns copper mines, marine transportation, and heavy-equipment businesses. He's also invested in his son Kyle's container-ship business, Seaspan Corp.

    Residence: Missoula

    NEBRASKA: Warren Buffett
    warren buffett
    Warren Buffett.

    Net worth: $133 billion

    Age: 93

    Source of wealth: Buffett is perhaps one of the best-known and most successful investors of all time. He's made his fortune via Berkshire Hathaway, which owns brands such as Geico, Dairy Queen, and Duracell. Despite his immense wealth, he's also known for his modest spending habits.

    Residence: Omaha

    NEVADA: Miriam Adelson and family
    Dr. Miriam Adelson and Sheldon Adelson attend Friends of The Israel Defense Forces (FIDF) Western Region Gala at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on November 1, 2018 in Beverly Hills, California.
    Miriam Adelson.

    Net worth: $32 billion

    Age: 78

    Source of wealth: Miriam Adelson is on the list after the 2021 death of her husband, casino magnate and major Republican donor Sheldon Adelson. Now, Miriam Adelson and her family own over 50% of Las Vegas Sands, a casino company worth over $34 billion.

    Residence: Las Vegas

    NEW HAMPSHIRE: Rick Cohen and family
    the Symbotic logo
    Symbotic.

    Net worth: $19.6 billion

    Age: 71

    Source of wealth: Most of Cohen's familial wealth comes from Symbotic, a warehouse automation company that has partnered with Walmart. Cohen is the chairman and CEO. However, Cohen also owns the US' largest grocery wholesaler, C&S Wholesale Grocers, which brings in $33 billion annually, Forbes reported.

    Residence: Keene

    NEW JERSEY: Rocco Commisso
    Rocco Commisso, chairman of Fiorentina, looks on prior to kick-off in the Women Serie A Playoffs match between ACF Fiorentina and Juventus at Viola Park on May 6, 2024
    Rocco Commisso.

    Net worth: $8 billion

    Age: 74

    Source of wealth: Commisso is the founder and CEO of Mediacom, the fifth-largest cable television provider in the US, based on the number of video customers, according to the brand. Commisso also owns two professional soccer teams: the New York Cosmos and ACF Fiorentina.

    Residence: Saddle River

    NEW MEXICO: Ron Corio
    Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA downtown cityscape at twilight.
    Albuquerque, New Mexico.

    Net worth: $1.7 billion

    Age: 62

    Source of wealth: Corio's billionaire status — the first in New Mexico — stems from Array Technologies, a solar tracking systems business. He is the founder and former CEO, resigning in 2020 before its IPO.

    Residence: Albuquerque

    NEW YORK: Michael Bloomberg
    Michael Bloomberg
    Michael Bloomberg.

    Net worth: $106 billion

    Age: 82

    Source of wealth: What hasn't Bloomberg done? Besides his 12-year stint as the mayor of New York City and an unsuccessful presidential campaign, Bloomberg cofounded Bloomberg LP in 1981. Bloomberg is a media company and a financial firm with revenues of $13 billion.

    Residence: New York

    NORTH CAROLINA: James Goodnight
    Businessman James Howard Goodnight attends the Cocktails To Celebrate The Fortune 100 Best Companies To Work For on March 8, 2016 in New York City.
    James Goodnight.

    Net worth: $10.1 billion

    Age: 81

    Source of wealth: Goodnight and his colleague John Sall (also a billionaire) cofounded a private school, Cary Academy, and also co-own a hotel and country club. But their biggest business venture together is the software company SAS, founded in 1976. It made over $3 billion in 2022, according to Forbes.

    Residence: Cary

    NORTH DAKOTA: Gary Tharaldson
    super 8 motel
    Super 8.

    Net worth: $1.2 billion

    Age: 78

    Source of wealth: Tharaldson, the only billionaire in North Dakota, got his start in 1982 when Tharaldson Hospitality purchased a Super 8 Motel. It then became a huge hospitality group and one of America's largest developers of new hotels.

    Residence: Fargo

    OHIO: Les Wexner and family
    Les Wexner
    Les Wexner.

    Net worth: $6 billion

    Age: 86

    Source of wealth: Wexner opened The Limited in Ohio in the 1960s. He then founded a retail empire that, at one point, owned brands like Abercrombie & Fitch, The Limited Too, Express, and Victoria's Secret. Now Wexner's company has been renamed Bath & Body Works Inc., and solely owns the chain of the same name.

    Residence: New Albany

    OKLAHOMA: Harold Hamm and family
    Harold Hamm speaking at the 2023 Concordia Annual Summit in 2023.
    Harold Hamm.

    Net worth: $18.5 billion

    Age: 78

    Source of wealth: Hamm founded the Shelly Dean Oil Company, now known as Continental Resources, in 1967 when he was only 21. It's now one of the largest oil companies in the US, thanks in part to Hamm's revolutionary decision to use horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing in the Bakken region of North Dakota in the '90s. The company went public in 2007, but in 2022, Hamm and his five children took the company private again in a deal worth $27 billion.

    Residence: Oklahoma City

    OREGON: Phil Knight and family
    Phil Knight at the Fiesta Bowl on January 1, 2024.
    Phil Knight.

    Net worth: $40.9 billion

    Age: 86

    Source of wealth: One word: Nike. Knight cofounded the iconic brand in 1964 alongside Bill Bowerman. Although Knight retired in 2016, he and his family still own 20% of the company, which, in 2023, earned $51 billion in fiscal revenue, per Forbes.

    Residence: Hillsboro

    PENNSYLVANIA: Jeff Yass
    Haverford College duck pond.
    Haverford College duck pond.

    Net worth: $27.6 billion

    Age: 65

    Source of wealth: After spending time as a pro gambler and trader on the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, Yass cofounded Susquehanna International Group in 1987. The successful Wall Street trading firm has a 15% stake in ByteDance, TikTok's parent company. NBC reported that Yass also has a personal share (7%) of ByteDance worth about $21 billion.

    Residence: Haverford

    RHODE ISLAND: Jonathan Nelson
    Providence, Rhode Island.
    Providence, Rhode Island.

    Net worth: $3.4 billion

    Age: 68

    Source of wealth: In 1989, Nelson founded and led the private equity firm Providence Equity Partners. He was CEO until January 2021 and is now its executive chairman. The firm has invested in over 170 companies, including Hulu, Warner Media Group, and Yankees Entertainment and Sports Network (YES).

    Residence: Providence

    SOUTH CAROLINA: Robert Faith
    Greystar Real Estate Partners.
    Greystar Real Estate Partners.

    Net worth: $5.8 billion

    Age: 60

    Source of wealth: Robert "Bob" Faith founded Greystar, a global real estate firm, in 1993 and continues to serve as chairman and CEO. Throughout his career, Faith grew Greystar from 9,000 units in the US to more than 850,000 units across five continents, worth more than $290 billion, the company reported in an April press release. The company also has an investment management platform with $34 billion in assets under development.

    Residence: Charleston

    SOUTH DAKOTA: T. Denny Sanford
    University of Minnesota alum T. Denny Sanford donated $35 million to the school for a new football stadium in 2003.
    T. Denny Sanford.

    Net worth: $2.1 billion

    Age: 88

    Source of wealth: The University of Minnesota alum made his fortune as the owner of First Premier Bank. Despite having just 17 branches across South Dakota, the bank is one of the largest issuers of Mastercards, in part because it specializes in offering credit cards to those with low credit scores. Often, the cards have low limits and high interest rates.

    Residence: Sioux Falls

    TENNESSEE: Thomas Frist Jr. and family
    Nashville.
    Nashville.

    Net worth: $26.2 billion

    Age: 85

    Source of wealth: Frist Jr. cofounded Hospital Corp. of America with his father in 1968. According to its website, the for-profit healthcare company is responsible for 186 hospitals and over 2,400 care sites (like urgent care centers, surgery clinics, and physician clinics) across the US and UK. He and his family own over 20% of the company, and his sons, Thomas Frist III and William Frist, are board members.

    Residence: Nashville

    TEXAS: Elon Musk
    Elon Musk attends the 10th Annual Breakthrough Prize Ceremony in April 2024.
    Elon Musk.

    Net worth: $195 billion

    Age: 52

    Source of wealth: Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos are in a continuous battle for the title of richest person in the US. Musk is cofounder of tech giants Tesla and SpaceX, neurotechnology startup Neuralink, and tunneling company The Boring Company. He also helped found OpenAI, but he left in 2018 and announced his own AI endeavor, xAI, in 2023. He also owns an estimated 74% of social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter.

    Residence: Austin

    UTAH: Gail Miller
    Gail Miller speaks to the crowd before a game between the Utah Jazz and the Minnesota Timberwolves in 2019.
    Gail Miller.

    Net worth: $3.9 billion

    Age: 80

    Source of wealth: Miller owns the Larry H. Miller Company, which she founded with her husband, Larry H. Miller, in 1979 after purchasing their first Toyota dealership. The LHM Company's car dealership business became the eighth-largest in the US, and she sold it for $3.2 billion in 2021, Forbes reported. (Larry H. Miller died in 2009.) LHM's portfolio also includes companies in real estate, entertainment, sports, and insurance, among others. In 2020, after more than 30 years of owning the Utah Jazz, Miller sold the team and their home arena for $1.66 billion.

    Residence: Salt Lake City

    VERMONT: John Abele
    Boston Scientific advertisement in 2024.
    Boston Scientific advertisement.

    Net worth: $1.9 billion

    Age: 87

    Source of wealth: In 1979, Abele cofounded Boston Scientific, a medical device manufacturer, alongside Peter Nicholas. Boston Scientific focuses on developing more accessible medical technologies, and its products include pacemakers, defibrillators, and stents.

    Residence: Shelburne

    VIRGINIA: Jacqueline Mars
    Jacqueline Mars (L) and Anne Chao (R) attend the ArtSense Gala 2023.
    Jacqueline Mars.

    Net worth: $38.5 billion

    Age: 84

    Source of wealth: As the granddaughter of Mars Incorporated founder Frank C. Mars, Jacqueline owns an estimated one-third of the legendary candy, food, and pet-care company responsible for treats like Snickers, Juicy Fruit, and Milky Way. (Her brother owns another third and is the richest person in Wyoming, per Forbes.) She served on the board of directors until 2016, having spent nearly 20 years with the company.

    Residence: The Plains

    WASHINGTON: Bill Gates
    Bill Gates at The New York Times Climate Forward Summit in 2023.
    Bill Gates.

    Net worth: $128 billion

    Age: 68

    Source of wealth: Bill Gates is best known as the cofounder of the software company Microsoft. However, he also has an impressive investment portfolio, including companies like Carbon Engineering, EarthNow, Deere & Co., and Republic Services. As of March 2020, Gates owns about 1.3% of Microsoft, which is worth trillions.

    Residence: Medina

    WEST VIRGINIA: Brad Smith
    Brad Smith, CEO of Intuit
    Brad Smith.

    Net worth: $900 million

    Age: 60

    Source of wealth: During Smith's time as CEO and then executive chairman of the finance and business software company Intuit, the company's revenue almost doubled, Forbes reported. The success came after Intuit revamped its desktop software into a digital cloud-based platform. Now the president of Marshall University, he also chairs Nordstrom's board of directors and sits on the boards of Amazon and SurveyMonkey.

    Residence: Huntington

    WISCONSIN: John Menard Jr.
    John Menard Jr.
    John Menard Jr.

    Net worth: $25.2 billion

    Age: 84

    Source of wealth: Menard Jr. founded Menards, the third-largest home-improvement chain in the US behind Home Depot and Lowe's. With over 300 locations across 15 Midwestern states, the company earned $13.4 billion in 2023.

    Residence: Eau Claire

    WYOMING: John Mars
    John Mars receives an honorary knighthood from Queen Elizabeth
    John Mars.

    Net worth: $38.5 billion

    Age: 88

    Source of wealth: Mars — whose sister is Jacqueline Mars, Virginia's richest person — is another heir of the Mars family fortune amassed from candy products such as Snickers, Mars Bars, and M&M's, as well as Pedigree pet food and Uncle Ben's rice. He owns a third of the $45 billion business.

    Residence: Jackson

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Why giant oak barrels are key to making some of the world’s most expensive wine

    Luxury winemakers producing some of the most expensive wine in the world will pay up to $50,000 for a single barrel to age their wine. But not just any barrel — a foudre. A foudre is a massive wooden vat that impacts and preserves the overall taste of the wine. Making a foudre starts with French oak, a tightly grained wood that adds unique flavoring to the wine. Cooperages like Foudrerie François pay close attention to the quality of the wood they source to make the foudres they sell and ship worldwide. The wood is so precious — and so expensive — that the French government heavily regulates its sales through annual auctions of oak forest plots.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Severe turbulence launches passengers to the ceiling of Singapore Airline flight

    A passenger died and 30 other people were injured on a Singapore Airlines flight when the plane hit severe turbulence, prompting an emergency landing in Bangkok.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Bumble’s CEO says AI could give you fewer matches — but better ones

    new bumble CEO Lidiane Jones
    Bumble's leaders have been vocal about their plans and hopes for using AI.

    • Bumble wants to use AI to give you fewer matches on its app.
    • But the people you do match with will be better, CEO Lidiane Jones said at a conference Tuesday.
    • Bumble has floated several other ideas for using AI, such as "dating concierges." 

    Some day, AI could mean you get matched with fewer people on Bumble.

    But that actually wouldn't be a bad thing, according to the company's CEO.

    "We really want to emphasize a smaller number of matches, but ones that truly, truly feel great to you and not just from a romantic perspective," Lidiane Jones told an audience at The Future of Everything Festival hosted by The Wall Street Journal on Tuesday.

    Until now, Bumble relied on a mostly predictive model. "You get a system to look at your previous behaviors and determine to the best of its ability what you're going to like," Jones said.

    But using generative AI, Bumble wants to pick up on other cues, such as how people on dates interact with each other and even your tone of voice.

    The goal, Jones said, is to figure out what people actually want in a relationship instead of relying on self-written descriptions. People often ask for help from friends when they write blurbs for their profiles, but those aren't always accurate, she said. "It's OK to start with a very optimistic view of ourselves, but we can learn with you along the way," she said.

    AI could also draw on other details of your life to provide better matches, Jones said, such as whether you're new to a city.

    "There's all these phases in life that are extremely vulnerable for people and we think we can play a role in helping you navigate," she added.

    Bumble has been considering ways of integrating AI into its app for months. Last year, founder Whitney Wolfe Herd said AI could even help users flirt and interact with others.

    Wolfe Herd has also suggested that dating on the app could one day happen through "dating concierges," or AI models that could quickly review thousands of other users to narrow your choices to a few likely candidates.

    Already, AI can become your date, offering advice and companionship.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • The US economy is headed for a hard landing this year, and deep rate cuts are the only solution, Citi chief economist says

    Recession hard landing stock market
    • The US economy is headed for an economic hard landing driven by a deteriorating labor market, Citigroup's chief US economist told CNBC.
    • "Gradual softening has already started. That tends to snowball," Andrew Hollenhorst said about the job market.
    • He's calling for four interest-rate cuts this year at a time when other forecasters are being more conservative.

    A deteriorating labor market will be what causes the US economy to quickly turn sour, according to Andrew Hollenhorst, Citigroup's chief US economist. In fact, he sees an abrupt economic comeuppance later this year.

    "Firms are hiring at a lower rate, firms are having workers work less hours," he told CNBC on Tuesday. "So this gradual softening has already started. That tends to snowball and end up in something that looks more like a hard landing."

    While recent labor-market data doesn't necessarily point to such a dire situation, Hollenhorst says certain reports reveal a more pessimistic environment than many realize.

    "Small businesses are telling us that their hiring intentions are at the lowest levels that we've seen since 2016," he said, citing survey data from the National Federation of Independent Business. "And if I look overall at the economy, the hiring rate right now is at the lowest rate that it's been at since 2014. So we're at the lowest hiring rate in a decade."

    And although NFIB data has fueled bearish sentiment for a while, Hollenhorst added that it's recently seen a sharp drop compared to the past months, making it worth paying attention to.

    Even when taking on a holistic perspective, there's reasons to worry. For instance, he noted that while the national unemployment rate remains contained at 3.9%, that's a big shift from its previous low of 3.5%.

    If unemployment ticks up above 4%, it could trigger the Federal Reserve to start lowering interest rates as soon as July, Hollenhorst predicted. Overall, he thinks four cuts will come before the end of 2024.

    Other analysts have also voiced hard-landing calls similiarly pegged to labor-market deterioration. In fact, veteran forecaster Danielle DiMartino Booth says a recession has already arrived when looking at one unemployment indicator.

    Meanwhile, weaker economic activity data and an impending hard landing also support prospects of a July cut, Hollenhorst said. That's because the Fed's higher-for-longer interest rate policy is grinding down on corporate earnings, he said, at a time when consumer savings have run through.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Walmart just opened two new Neighborhood Markets with a larger layout. Take a look.

    The new Walmart Neighborhood Market in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida.
    The new Walmart Neighborhood Market in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida.

    • The first two new stores in Walmart's 150-location plan have opened in Florida and Georgia.
    • The Neighborhood Markets are almost 50 percent larger than Walmart's typical grocery-focused store.
    • More space means wider aisles and designated areas for pickup and delivery order fulfillment.

    The first two locations in Walmart's five-year, 150-store expansion plan have opened in Florida and Georgia.

    The pair of grocery-focused stores are the first new openings in Walmart's Neighborhood Market segment in more than four years.

    Kyle Kinnard, Walmart's head of Neighborhood Markets
    Kyle Kinnard, Walmart's head of Neighborhood Markets.

    Both locations boast a 57,000 square foot floorpan — almost 50 percent bigger than the segment's typical size — which allow for wider aisles and more space for pickup and delivery order fulfillment.

    They also include amenities found in larger Walmart stores, like pharmacy and financial services, a private health consultation room, and a mother's room for nursing and infant care.

    The front end at a new Walmart Neighborhood Market.
    The front end at a new Walmart Neighborhood Market.

    While the Florida location in the panhandle seaside town of Santa Rosa Beach is an entirely new construction, the location in Atlanta is a conversion of a former Walmart discount store that was set on fire twice in 2022.

    City officials made a special appeal to Walmart to remain in the Vine City neighborhood, including a $1.5 million initiative to expand fresh grocery access in low-income communities.

    The location also made headlines last year, as it was set to include a workstation for on-duty law enforcement officers.

    The frozen food section at a new Walmart Neighborhood Market.
    The frozen food section at a new Walmart Neighborhood Market.

    At the start of May, Walmart had over 4,600 retail locations in the US, including 3,559 Supercenters, 357 discount stores, and 673 Neighborhood Markets.

    Walmart has closed at least nine locations this year so far, but the company plans to open or begin construction another dozen locations for a total of 14 new stores this year.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Apple says its latest iOS update fixes the issue that caused some NSFW deleted photos to reappear

    iPhone ios 17 update
    A new update is available about a week after iOS 17.5 released.

    • Apple has addressed a "rare" issue that iPhone users complained about after a software update.
    • iOS 17.5.1 fixes a "database corruption" problem that made deleted pictures reappear for some.
    • Despite the fix, some Apple users said they're still concerned about privacy.

    Another iOS update is available after several Apple users complained about a concerning issue with their Photos app.

    On Monday, the tech giant released iOS 17.5.1 and iPadOS 17.5.1, just a week after its 17.5 updates. The change came days after iPhone owners said they noticed pictures they believed were permanently deleted reappearing in their Photos library, including some NSFW ones.

    ios 17.5.1 update
    Apple iOS 17.5.1 is now available for installation.

    In the description, Apple said the update "addresses a rare issue where photos that experienced database corruption could reappear in the Photos library even if they were deleted."

    Users experiencing the issue said they were freaking out to see content come back into their library after years of thinking they were long gone.

    "I have four pics from 2010 that keep reappearing as the latest pics uploaded to iCloud. I have deleted them repeatedly," one user commented to a thread on the r/iOS subreddit.

    Despite the fix, commenters on a MacRumors post about the update said they were still concerned about privacy and whether or not any of their deleted photos are actually gone.

    "So they just going to ignore the photos returning as a bug? It's just an oops?! That's not good enough. So are photos deleted or not? We want details not a note on an update screen," one user commented.

    Apple didn't immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • A millennial couple bought an abandoned cottage for half the price of nearby houses. It’s a major fixer-upper, but it’s worth it.

    A photo of Greer Gagnier and Kyle Verma standing next to a for sale sign in front of their home (right) next to an exterior shot of the house during construction (left).
    Greer Gagnier and Kyle Verma bought an abandoned fixer-upper in Rhode Island after two years of looking for a starter home.

    • Greer Gagnier and Kyle Verma bought an abandoned house in a bucolic riverside town in Rhode Island. 
    • Buying "worst house in the best neighborhood" helped them score a home in a tough market, they said.
    • They said buying a fixer-upper was worth it even though renovating added costs and took hard work.

    Buying the worst house on the best street is one of the oldest tricks in the real-estate book.

    While not everyone agrees with the proverb, a millennial couple who landed a house in a bucolic Rhode Island neighborhood for half what homes in the area usually cost swears by it.

    The last year has been filled with milestones for Greer Gagnier, a property manager for her family's real-estate business, and Kyle Verma, who works in finance. After years of dating, the couple, both 30, got engaged.

    And, after two years of looking for a starter home in Rhode Island's Pawtuxet Village, a town near Providence where Gagnier moved after college, amid an increasingly challenging housing market, they found it — take a look.

    The couple's house is a fixer-upper in every sense of the word.
    The exterior of a white-panelled cottage in a state of construction.
    Gagnier and Verma were looking for a starter home for two years before they found their fixer-upper cottage.

    Their "cozy little cottage," as Gagnier calls it, had been foreclosed.

    Gagnier said neighbors told her the previous owner had abandoned it.

    "He just stopped making payments on the house, moved into an RV or something, and got out of town," she added.

    Gagnier and Verma had seen the home before because it's right down the street from the rental they currently live in.

    But they had never ventured inside until Gagnier's sister — who had gone to scope it out as a potential investment property — called them up in the fall of 2023.

    "She's like, 'You gotta take a look at this. You would love it.' So we ran right over there and fell in love with it," Gagnier said.

    The decrepit house was "scary-looking," Gagnier said. The couple knew it would need a lot of love — and sweat equity.
    A bathroom in a cottage during construction with bits of dirty and dust lining the floor.
    The cottage was covered in grime, dust, and dog hair when they bought it.

    "It was probably empty for about a year, at least. But it honestly looked like it was empty for 40 years," Gagnier said, recalling her first impressions.

    Dog hair, grime, and dust coated surfaces, paint was peeling, and the wallpaper was ripping off the walls. But with a little imagination, the couple saw past what initially looked like the set of a horror movie.

    They envisioned a home where they could spend at least the next five to 10 years — a home where they could start a family. A quarter of a mile from the water, the roughly 1,500-square-foot property came with three bedrooms, two bathrooms, a basement, and an attic.

    "The bones were really good, and it just had a really nice flow. The layout was great. The size was perfect for what we need: a starter home," Gagnier said.

    Verma and Gagnier made an offer in the low $300,000s that was accepted in early 2024.
    Kyle Verma and Greer Granier are renovating the "worst house" in their favorite neighborhood in Rhode Island.
    Verma and Gagnier are renovating the "worst house" in their favorite neighborhood in Rhode Island.

    Because the house was foreclosed on, Gagnier and Verma were dealing with a bank rather than a seller, which was "frustrating," she said.

    "They took days and days just to respond to emails and wouldn't answer phone calls," Gagnier said. "We were supposed to close a month or two before we actually did."

    Nevertheless, they came to an agreement and had their offer in the low $300,000s accepted just after New Year's Day 2024. According to Realtor.com, the median listing house price in Pawtuxet in the Providence area is $684,500, about double what the couple paid.

    The price was right in line with their budget, Gagnier added. They were willing to pay up to $525,000 for a finished house, so she said they "figured, 'OK, if we buy it for low threes, we can put maybe $75,000 to $100,000 into it and then be within our budget."

    The couple also thinks that the house's value will double to the high $600,000s post-renovation.

    Originally built in the 1920s, the house came with beautiful hardwood floors, an original fireplace, and a basement bar.
    A view of a room in a cottage under renovation with ladders and construction materials.
    The cottage now has an open-plan kitchen and dining area.

    "You open the front door, and the living room is actually fairly big," Gagnier said.

    The living room leads into the kitchen, which they have gutted and expanded into what used to be a separate dining area. French doors in the kitchen will eventually lead out onto a porch, Gagnier added.

    Upstairs are three bedrooms; the couple is converting one into a study. There is also an attic with built-in cabinets that has the potential to be turned into another room if they need it down the line, she said.

    One of the most exciting features is in the basement, Gagnier said. Lined with knotty pine paneling, the basement came fitted with a full bar area and gives off a "totally '60s vibe," Gagnier said.

    "I really want to lean into the speakeasy-cool vibes down there," she said, adding that one day, it'll be a "party space" where friends and family can congregate.

    Location was everything to the couple — they only house-hunted in a small Rhode Island enclave about five miles south of Providence.
    A view of a marina lined with boats and houses in Pawtuxet Village, Rhode Island.
    Pawtuxet Village is close to Providence and Warwick in Rhode Island.

    Nestled by a river of the same name, Pawtuxet Village is known for its quaint shops and riverside restaurants. The marina and little cove make it a "classic New England coastal town," Gagnier said.

    Gagnier, who grew up in Massachusetts, has ived in Pawtuxet since she graduated from Rhode Island University in 2016. Members of her family have lived there, too.

    "We've been coming here since we were little just for vacationing in the summers," she said. "We never left. And now I live within a mile radius from my dad, and my brother, and my mom. Everybody's in this little bubble."

    Pawtuxet Village is such a "hidden gem" that Gagnier said many people from Providence don't know it exists. Verma, she added, didn't know about it until they met after college.

    Home prices in that part of Rhode Island have jumped, just like they have across the US.
    A marina and houses on a sunny day in Pawtuxet Village, Rhode Island.
    The median price of listed homes in Pawtuxet Village is $684,500.

    When they first set out on their journey to buy a starter home, Gagnier and Verma quickly realized how much of a challenge it would be.

    According to Realtor.com, the median listing price for homes in the Pawtuxet area of Providence jumped from $512,000 in August 2021 to $684,500 in May 2024.

    Gagnier said that there aren't many new houses being built in Rhode Island, adding to the struggle. In January, local outlet WPRI reported that the state is lagging behind a recommendation from 2016 report commissioned by Rhode Island Housing, a quasi-public agency, to build between 34,000 to 40,000 housing units by 2026 to accommodate growing demand.

    It's 2024, though, and Gagnier said it's still "slim pickings for what you can get."

    "We looked around, put in an offer on probably six or seven houses, lost them all to cash buyers — or people would bid like $70,000 over asking," Gagnier said. "It was just emotionally exhausting, you fall in love with the house and then lose it."

    The couple is doing many of the renovations themselves — with the help of Gagnier's dad.
    An empty room with a wood floor and light blue painted walls.
    Gagnier said they kept the original wood flooring in the cottage.

    What helps is that Gagnier, who works for her family's short-term and long-term-rental company, grew up around homes under construction. Her dad, she said, loves old houses and has been renovating them as a side project for years.

    Verma, on the other hand, wasn't as familiar with renovation projects and has had to get used to trusting the process, she added.

    "It's been a little bit hard for him to adjust," Gagnier said. "We've learned so much along the way, but we really learned a lot from my dad because he's done it all before."

    After deep-cleaning the entire house, the biggest project so far was gutting the kitchen.
    A man stands on top of a kitchen counter as he's renovating the space.
    The kitchen had to be gutted.

    The couple's "biggest project" so far is the kitchen, which dated back to the 1950s. They ultimately hired a professional construction crew.

    "That's the only room we completely demoed in the whole house," Gagnier said.

    The couple not only wanted to modernize it but expand it by knocking down the wall separating it from the formal dining area, which they didn't really see a need for anyway.

    "We wanted to have just a big kitchen space," she said.

    Gagnier has been documenting the renovation and their DIY work on Instagram.
    A side by side image showing a bathroom with pink tiling and the same space under construction to cover up the pink tiling with neutral colors.
    The couple decided to cover up the pink tiling in the upstairs bathroom.

    The couple also hired professionals to handle getting the electrical and plumbing systems in working order.

    But they have taken on many of the aesthetic renovations themselves. Gagnier is documenting their DIY handwork on Instagram to over 155,000 followers.

    A major change they made and shared on social media is covering up bubblegum pink tiles in the upstairs bathroom.

    Gagnier said she's gotten a lot of "flak" on social media for layering over the 1950s decor with waterproof plaster and temporary laminate peel-and-stick tiles in a more neutral tone, but she has no regrets.

    "You just can't take it personally," said Gagnier, noting that most negative comments come from people with young-looking profile photos.

    "They're like, 'Why don't you find another house?'" she said. "And I'm like, 'Do you know what the housing market is doing right now? We're in a crisis. I can't buy another house.'"

    Gagnier and Verma are almost ready to move into their fixer-upper, but the renovation work will continue.
    An exterior shot of a cottage in Rhode Island that has brown wooden paneling, white windows, and a dark green front door.
    There have been days when Gagnier and Verma have wanted to give up on their fixer-upper, but the end is now in sight.

    Verma and Gagnier have been living in a rental nearby while they work on the house.

    On weekday evenings and on weekends, they are at the cottage, getting it livable enough to move in.

    "We definitely have those days where we cannot see the light at the end of it all and want to give up, but we have to keep going," Gagnier said.

    Like any fixer-upper, it's been a challenge, but one that the couple doesn't regret taking on.

    Soon, they will no longer have the worst house in the best neighborhood, but a starter home they got for a "really great deal."

    "We hope to be in the next three to four weeks," Gagnier said. "We're in the home stretch."

    Read the original article on Business Insider