He was the captain of the New York Yankees.
At the peak of his career…
everything ended in an instant.
Most people remember how it ended.
Almost no one remembers how dominant he really was.
👉 Read the story.
The Captain and the City - Short Stop Media
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The Seven Founders of General Wisdom
They left the most powerful AI laboratory in the world — not for money, not for fame, but because they believed something essential was being forgotten.
Who are the Seven Founders of General Wisdom?
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A Leathersmith Left a Medieval Hilltop in Tuscany.
His son grew up to build a $965B company.
The story of the seven founders of Anthropic — who they are, where they came from, and why they walked away from OpenAI when it was at its peak.
👇 LINK BELOW:
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The $1 Trillion Bet on Humanity's Future
Anthropic files IPO that could be the largest in history — and one of the most consequential.
Inside the numbers, the risks, and the ambition of the Company that wants to build God-level AI safely.
https://t.co/MCBY5lveve
Three of the Most Important IPOs in History are Coming!
Here's what you need to know:
1 -- It starts with Alan Turing in 1950. It ends with a question no investment bank has ever had to answer: how do you price existential risk to humanity in an S-1?
2 -- Anthropic just filed confidentially for an IPO at a $965B valuation. $47B revenue run rate. $1.2B monthly cash burn. 8 of the Fortune 10 as customers.
3 -- And they're not alone. SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic are all heading to market — three companies at $1 trillion valuations. Something that has never happened once is about to happen three times.
4 -- Follow along — the SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic IPOs are the most consequential capital markets events of our lifetime, and we'll be covering every twist as it happens — the filings, the numbers, the people, and what it all means
Follow and Subscribe and you won't miss a word!
5 -- Full Deep Dive
👇 LINK & STORY BELOW
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The $1 Trillion Bet on Humanity's Future
Anthropic files IPO that could be the largest in history — and one of the most consequential. Inside the numbers, the risks, and the ambition of the Company that wants to build God-level AI safely.
👇 FULL STORY:
https://t.co/MCBY5lveve
Alan Turing cracked Nazi codes, saved 14 million lives, and was chemically castrated by the British government for being gay.
75 years later, the math he invented is powering a $965B company about to do the largest IPO in history.
👇 LINK BELOW:
TWO TOWERS, TWO PLAYERS
On September 11, the lacrosse world lost two of its own.
Welles Crowther — the Man in the Red Bandana — climbed back into the South Tower again and again to save strangers.
Eamon McEneaney — Cornell legend, poet, and Cantor Fitzgerald executive — had once led roughly sixty people to safety during the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.
One wore a red bandana.
One was known as Cornell’s Wild Irish Rose.
Both had learned, on lacrosse fields, what courage looks like before the world ever demanded it from them.
Part Eight of Eight — the Final Story in our Memorial Day Series — is live now.
👇
READ HERE:
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TWO TOWERS, TWO PLAYERS
On September 11, the lacrosse world lost two of its own.
Welles Crowther — the Man in the Red Bandana — climbed back into the South Tower again and again to save strangers.
Eamon McEneaney — Cornell legend, poet, and Cantor Fitzgerald executive — had once led roughly sixty people to safety during the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.
One wore a red bandana.
One was known as Cornell’s Wild Irish Rose.
Both had learned, on lacrosse fields, what courage looks like before the world ever demanded it from them.
Part Eight of Eight — the Final Story in our Memorial Day Series — is live now.
👇
READ BELOW:
THE MACHINE
Every Memorial Day Weekend, college lacrosse awards its highest individual honor: the Lt. Raymond Enners Award.
Most fans never know the story behind the name.
Raymond Enners was a Long Island lacrosse star, West Point graduate, and Army lieutenant killed in Vietnam at 22 while trying to rescue a wounded soldier under enemy fire.
His teammates called him “The Machine.”
Part Seven of our Memorial Day series “Fields of Friendly Strife” is live now.
👇
READ BELOW:
🇺🇸
THE MACHINE
Every Memorial Day Weekend, college lacrosse awards its highest individual honor: the Lt. Raymond Enners Award.
Most fans never know the story behind the name.
Raymond Enners was a Long Island lacrosse star, West Point graduate, and Army lieutenant killed in Vietnam at 22 while trying to rescue a wounded soldier under enemy fire.
His teammates called him “The Machine.”
Part Seven of our Memorial Day series “The Fallen and the Final Four” is live now.
👇
READ HERE:
https://t.co/fusmCN6YFT
🥍
THE GREATEST ATTACKMAN OF HIS AGE
In 1932, Jack Turnbull stood at the summit of American lacrosse — captain of the U.S. Olympic team, Johns Hopkins legend, and widely considered the best attackman in the sport.
Twelve years later, he was dead in a crashed B-24 bomber over occupied Europe.
Every Memorial Day Weekend, college lacrosse still speaks his name.
The nation’s top attackman receives the Jack Turnbull Award — named for a man who traded stadiums for the skies over Germany during World War II.
Part Six of “The Fallen and the Final Four” is now live.
👇
READ BELOW:
THE GREATEST ATTACKMAN OF HIS AGE
In 1932, Jack Turnbull stood at the summit of American lacrosse — captain of the U.S. Olympic team, Johns Hopkins legend, and widely considered the best attackman in the sport.
Twelve years later, he was dead in a crashed B-24 bomber over occupied Europe.
Every Memorial Day Weekend, college lacrosse still speaks his name.
The nation’s top attackman receives the Jack Turnbull Award — named for a man who traded stadiums for the skies over Germany during World War II.
Part Six of “The Fallen and the Final Four” is now live.
👇
READ HERE:
https://t.co/6BWkcVaOJ2
🇺🇸🥍
🇺🇸THE RANGER FROM MANHASSET
Jimmy Regan was a Long Island lacrosse star from Manhasset and Chaminade who helped lead Duke lacrosse to national prominence.
After 9/11, he turned down law school and Wall Street to become an Army Ranger.
He deployed four times to Iraq and Afghanistan before being killed in Iraq at just 26 years old.
Years later, a photograph taken at his grave in Arlington became one of the defining images of America’s post-9/11 wars.
Part Five of Eight of our Memorial Day series The Fallen and the Final Four is live now.
READ BELOW:
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The Ranger From Manhasset
Jimmy Regan had a place waiting for him at law school. He chose the Army instead. A photograph taken at his grave became one of the most haunting images of the wars.
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PAT TILLMAN WALKED AWAY FROM A $3.6 MILLION NFL CONTRACT AFTER 9/11...
AND REFUSED TO LET ANYONE TURN HIM INTO A SYMBOL.
He wanted to serve quietly.
Instead, after his death in Afghanistan at age 27, the country was given a story that was not true.
“The Cardinal” is Part Four of our Memorial Day Series:
THE FALLEN AND THE FINAL FOUR
A story about Pat Tillman, the distance between sports and war — and the truth his family had to fight to uncover.
Alongside stories on Lt. Michael Murphy and Brendan Looney, with more released throughout Memorial Day Weekend.
⬇️ Read here and follow the full series
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#PatTillman #MemorialDay #NFL #ArmyRangers #ArizonaState #Veterans #SportsWriting #Longform #CollegeFootball #MilitaryHistory
THE PROTECTOR
Long before Afghanistan, before the Medal of Honor, before the movie “Lone Survivor,” Michael Murphy was just a kid from Patchogue who stepped in when bullies shoved a special-needs child into a locker.
His classmates gave him a nickname:
“The Protector.”
Years later, on a mountainside in Afghanistan, Lt. Michael Murphy left cover and walked into enemy fire so his men might survive.
He never came home.
Today, thousands honor him through “The Murph.”
Long Island never forgot him.
Part Four of our Memorial Day series “Fields of Friendly Strife” is live now.
🇺🇸⬇️
READ BELOW:
#MemorialDay #NavySEAL #Murph #LongIsland #Lacrosse #NeverForget
THE HONOR MAN
Brendan Looney arrived at the Naval Academy as a football player who had barely played lacrosse.
He walked onto one of the best programs in the country and became an All-American captain.
Then he became a Navy SEAL.
In BUD/S training, after losing his best friend Travis Manion in Iraq, Looney graduated as the “Honor Man” — the top trainee in his class.
Ten days before he was scheduled to come home from Afghanistan, the helicopter carrying him crashed.
At Navy, his No. 40 jersey is still passed down each season to the teammate who best represents leadership, toughness, and sacrifice.
Part Two of our Memorial Day series “The Fallen and the Final Four” is live.
READ BELOW⬇️
The Fallen and the Final Four
Every Memorial Day, college lacrosse crowns a national champion. This is the story of its history, its meaning, and the eight athletes this series remembers.
⬇️⬇️⬇️
PLUS:
Our 8-part Memorial Day series
The Fallen and the Final Four
on lacrosse, heroism, sacrifice & remembrance.
https://t.co/3zYXzdQaoq
New UVA men’s lacrosse coach Kevin Cassese thanks Lars Tiffany for his 22 years of mentorship.
Addressed the rumors about his relationship with Tiffany.