Cristina Zenato, a professional diver and marine conservationist based in the Bahamas who has dedicated over 20 years to pulling fishing hooks out of wild.
Known as the "Shark Whisperer," she is an Italian-born conservationist who has spent decades working with Caribbean reef sharks off the coast of Grand Bahama Island.
Over the years, she has safely removed more than 300 fishing hooks embedded in the sharks' jaws.
Through patience and specialized diving techniques, she built so much trust with the sharks that they swim up to her and patiently wait for her to remove the rusted metal.
"Hurt" is not an original by Johnny Cash. The song was written by Trent Reznor (Nine Inch Nails) in 1994 for the album The Downward Spiral. Rick Rubin had to insist several times on Cash recording his version, at first Johnny found the idea completely insane because the original version is industrial and noisy. At 71, already very ill, almost blind and with trembling hands, Cash completely transformed the band.
The iconic video, directed by Mark Romanek, was filmed at the House of Cash (his own museum). June Carter Cash appears looking at him fondly, the video was shot in February 2003, a few months before she died (May) and Johnny himself (September).
Trent Reznor was so moved that he declared, "This song is not mine anymore." It is considered one of the best covers of all time.
In 1962, Brendon Grimshaw purchased Moyenne Island in the Seychelles for roughly $11,000. At the time, the small island was completely barren and uninhabited.
Over the following decades, Grimshaw dedicated his life to restoring its ecosystem. He personally planted more than 16,000 trees, created walking trails, and reintroduced endangered species — most notably giant Aldabra tortoises — transforming the once-desolate island into a lush, thriving nature sanctuary.
Despite numerous offers from wealthy developers eager to turn the island into a luxury resort, Grimshaw consistently refused. He famously rejected a $50 million bid, determined to keep Moyenne Island as a protected natural haven open for people to enjoy rather than a private commercial venture.
In 2009, his vision was permanently secured when Moyenne Island was incorporated into the Sainte Anne Marine National Park, becoming the smallest national park in the world.
Grimshaw lived on the island until his death in 2012, leaving behind a remarkable legacy of conservation and environmental stewardship that continues to protect this unique paradise for future generations.
An 85-year-old North Carolina widow named Nana Abernathy called Brittain’s Tree and Crane Service for help. She was out of firewood, had recently lost her husband, and couldn’t afford more until her next Social Security check.
Owner Paul Brittain delivered a generous load for free on a chilly December day. The emotional moment—Nana’s tearful gratitude and hug—went viral.
But Paul didn’t stop there. He and his team returned to fix her car tires, repair her leaking roof, restore her heating and air conditioning, and organize yard cleanup—all at no cost.
They also launched a community fundraiser that raised about $20,000 to support her.
Yale charges $80,000/year for access to Professor Ben Polak!
They put his most important lecture on YouTube for free.
Every negotiation you have ever entered. Every salary you have ever accepted. Every price you have ever set.
The other person was running game theory. Payoff matrices. Dominant strategies. Nash equilibrium. Backward induction.
You were hoping for the best.
That is not a skill gap.
That is a universe gap.
And it has been costing you $20,000. $50,000. $100,000 every single year, without you knowing the name of the thing taking it.
1 hour today closes most of that gap permanently.
The lecture MBAs pay $150,000 to access inside a degree.
Free for you right here.
Bookmark so you do not lose it!
This is the most OUTRAGEOUS deal I've seen in my 45 years on Wall Street.
SpaceX just disclosed Musk's new compensation package:
He gets up to 200 million super-voting shares if SpaceX hits a $7.5 trillion valuation, establishes a permanent human settlement of at least ONE MILLION people on Mars, and deploys roughly 100 terawatts of space-based computing power.
Let me put the 100 terawatts in perspective:
The entire electricity generation capacity of the United States is around 1.2 terawatts. The comp plan asks Musk to build more than 80x America's entire power grid... in orbit.
This is a science fiction screenplay that somehow landed in front of the SEC.
But here's why it actually matters for your portfolio...
The S-1 reportedly claims a $28.5 trillion total addressable market, with over 90 percent attributed to AI. CapeFearAdvisors flagged this one cleanly: when Palantir went public, it disclosed a $119 billion TAM and the SEC reviewed and accepted it.
SpaceX is claiming a market roughly 240x BIGGER.
Now let's talk about what is actually being sold here:
Reported 2025 revenue is approximately $15.5 billion. Starlink delivers around $11 billion of that with healthy margins, and the launch business is genuinely dominant. The problem is xAI - the AI piece doing all the heavy lifting in the trillion-dollar valuation pitch.
xAI generated just $210 million of revenue in the first 3 quarters of 2025 while burning through $9.5 billion in cash.
Ben Brey and Rupert Mitchell - a former Fidelity portfolio manager and a former head of equity capital markets at Goldman and Citi between them - ran a serious discounted cash flow on the actual operating businesses and arrived at roughly $400 billion. Lawrence Fossi covered their work recently and the math holds up.
The IPO is being marketed at $1.75 TRILLION.
The gap between what these businesses support and what Musk is asking the public to pay is roughly $1.35 trillion of pure narrative.
Then layer on what we just learned last week...
The New York Times investigation revealed Musk personally borrowed $500 million from SpaceX between 2018 and 2020 at rates as low as 1%, while bank prime rates sat around 5%. The same SpaceX has been used to bail out SolarCity, prop up Tesla during cash crunches, and absorb xAI when the AI losses became unmanageable.
This is the same playbook he's run for two decades.
Use a privately controlled entity as a personal piggy bank, and when the bills come due, find new investors to absorb the losses.
The IPO is structured to keep that game going FOREVER.
The Texas reincorporation strips away Delaware's fiduciary protections. Controlled-company status on the Nasdaq eliminates independent board requirements. And retail is being offered up to 30% of the offering (3x the normal allocation) because the institutions who actually do the math are quietly stepping away.
Here is the part that finishes the case for me:
Roughly $40 billion of the IPO proceeds are already spoken for before a single dollar reaches operations. About $23 billion retires SpaceX debt. Another $17 billion retires the high-interest debt sitting on xAI and X.
This raise is not funding the future. It's just plugging existing holes that retail investors will now own.
In my 45 years I've never seen a deal where the comp hurdle is colonizing another planet.
I've never seen a disclosed TAM that exceeds verified comparables by two orders of magnitude.
I've never seen a company asking the public to fund the retirement of debt incurred by separate private entities controlled by the same individual.
Every red flag I've watched precede a major bust over four decades is sitting in this prospectus, in plain sight.
The Tesla mispricing is being repeated on a far larger scale.
And this time the bag is being handed directly to retail.
Don't be the one holding it.
everytime i watch one of these videos i think that its very important that we learn at least how to do the first step, never know when we actually need it
This hacker is trying to break into Trezors for $75 million
The biggest wallet he's trying to hack holds $66 million in a single device
Joe Grand spent 3 years refining a method to recover hardware wallets for people who locked themselves out years ago
The technique came from a 15 year old in the UK who figured it out in his bedroom in 2017 and used it to save a Wired editor $30,000
9 years later the same exploit is saving MILLIONS from a single Trezor
The most valuable lockpicking in history is happening out of a backyard lab