What's the hottest World Cup collectible? A $30 beer can, apparently.
Coors Light’s limited-edition “Tallerboy” sold out almost immediately after going live online, with just 125 available in the first release.
The $30 collectible holds three full-sized cans at once and went viral as part of the brand's World Cup marketing push.
Another 125 are expected to be released next week.
BREAKING: Elon Musk has become the world's first trillionaire.
After SpaceX raised a record $75 billion in its IPO, Musk’s net worth shot up to top $1.1 trillion when the stock began trading Friday, putting him in an economic class of his own.
Combined with his holdings in electric vehicle maker Tesla, as well as other investments and assets, Musk's net worth is now estimated at about $1.1 trillion.
Musk's stake in the rocket and satellite company alone is now estimated at a staggering $690 billion, but it's also a life-changing moment for thousands of workers at the company who hold equity.
Investors who watched Musk help turn Tesla into an automotive giant are now betting he can do the same in space and artificial intelligence, as SpaceX launches the largest IPO in history.
BREAKING: "Our mandate at the Fed is to promote price stability and maximum employment."
"When we pursue those aims with wisdom and clarity, independence and resolve, inflation can be lower, growth stronger, real-take home pay higher, and America, can be more prosperous. And no less important, America's place in the world more secure."
"These duties are now mine, Mr. President, because of the trust you have placed in me."
“Chaos.”
That’s the word one Meta employee is using to describe the mood inside the company ahead of reported mass layoffs.
According to an internal document obtained by Reuters, the layoffs are expected to happen in three phases, with affected employees receiving notification emails starting at 4 a.m. local time in their regions.
The cuts come after Reuters reported in April that Meta had installed tracking software on the computers of U.S.-based employees to monitor mouse movements, clicks, and keystrokes, with internal memos showing the data collection was tied to a broader push to train Meta’s AI models and build AI agents capable of autonomously handling workplace tasks.
Elon Musk is joining President Trump on a major trip to Beijing, signaling a notable shift after the pair’s well-documented falling out in 2025.
The Tesla CEO will be traveling alongside other corporate heavyweights like Apple's Tim Cook and BlackRock’s Larry Fink as part of the U.S. delegation, as more than a dozen business leaders from Wall Street to Silicon Valley join the trip.
Trump is preparing for a high-profile meeting with President Xi, with economic cooperation and corporate ties expected to take center stage in a rare show of business alignment alongside a presidential visit.
The trip could shape the tone of economic relations between the two countries going forward, as U.S. officials say the president wants to discuss the creation of a board of investment and a board of trade with China, as business leaders may prove to be just as much in the spotlight as the bilateral meeting itself.
Apple pitched the future — now it’s paying for over-promising.
The company has agreed to a $250M settlement after a lawsuit claimed customers were misled about its Apple Intelligence features on newer iPhones.
Buyers of iPhone 16 and 15 Pro models could get around $25 per device — possibly more depending on how many claims are filed.
At the center of it: allegations that Apple created clear expectations those AI features would be ready at launch or soon after… but delivered a much more limited version instead, with customers still waiting for many of the AI Siri features that were promised years ago.
NEW: Tim Cook reflects on his time as Apple CEO while preparing to hand off the role to longtime executive John Ternus.
"I love Apple with all of my being," Cook says, while saying he strongly believes in his successor's abilities to lead the tech giant.
“John Ternus has the mind of an engineer, the soul of an innovator, and the heart to lead with integrity and with honor... I could not be more confident in his abilities and his character," Cook said in a statement.
Cook is set to step down and transition into his new role of Apple's executive chairman in September, when Ternus will take over as CEO.
Allbirds ❌️ NewBird AI ✅️
The notorious shoemaker is losing the laces and rebranding as “NewBird AI” - moving into the race for computing power, backed by a $50M financing deal to start buying GPUs used to train AI models.
In a major shift, the sneaker business is getting handed off to new ownership, while the new company builds toward offering GPU access and AI cloud services.
Allbirds has been quietly shutting down most of its physical stores over the past few months as demand has softened and the company shifts its focus toward online partnerships. Just last month, it also announced it sold its brand and footwear assets to American Exchange Group for $39 million.
Now the question is whether investors follow it into a completely different industry.
After years on top, Google could lose its grip on digital ads.
Meta is projected to pull ahead by 2026, with $243.46B in global ad revenue — just edging out Google’s $239.54B.
Much of that push is coming from Advantage+, Meta’s automated ad system that’s quickly gaining adoption.
The gap is tight, but the direction is getting harder to ignore.
JUST IN: The NFL’s streaming play just got flagged — and the feds are reportedly stepping onto the field.
The Justice Department is apparently zeroing in on whether the league boxed out fans by using anticompetitive tactics while airing their games.
And now revising the rules that built the NFL’s media empire could be back in play to keep the league consumer friendly as it embraces streaming.
SHOP THE LOOK: Fans are flocking to buy the $125 blue polo Tiger Woods wore during his DUI arrest.
Demand for the "Sun Day Red" shirt spiked after the golf legend's recent accident, despite him facing charges for DUI and property damage after a high-speed rollover crash in Florida.
EXPENSIVE AND FRUSTRATING: FCC Chairman Brendan Carr is targeting the skyrocketing cost of watching sports as the NFL and other major leagues move games to pricy streaming services.
NFL fans who want to watch every game would be forced to shell out over $1,500 a year to pay for the growing list of streaming services now covering games across the league.
Carr says it's too expensive and inconvenient for consumers to watch their favorite teams:
"Americans are frustrated when they sit down and can’t find the game they want to watch. And that feeling grows only worse when they realize that they might need to sign up for another streaming service to watch the game."
'ONE NATIONAL POLICY': The White House is urging Congress to pass a “commonsense” national AI standard this year, aiming to prevent a confusing 50-state patchwork of laws while stopping censorship and protecting free speech.
The Trump administration says the plan will secure U.S. dominance in AI and strengthen protections for children online. @foxnews
MONITORING THE SITUATION: Online betting platform Polymarket is introducing the world's first bar dedicated to "monitoring the situation," turning a popular online joke about betting on world-altering events into a physical reality.
Polymarket is taking over Proper 21, a local sports bar in DC, but ditching the standard game-day vibes for Bloomberg terminals, flight radars, and live Polymarket screen bets.
"Imagine a sports bar… but just for situation monitoring."
BREAKING: Federal Reserve holds interest rates unchanged, the second pause this year after three straight rate cuts as policymakers try to navigate through sticky inflation readings, mixed signs on the labor market, and wars overseas.