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Another crosses the floor to Carney!


By The Canadian Press

OTTAWA — Marilyn Gladu became the fifth opposition member of Parliament to cross the floor to Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Liberals on Wednesday, a day before the Liberal party convention in Montreal.

The MP from Sarnia, Ont. is also the fourth to quit the Conservative caucus for the Liberals in recent months.

Floor-crossing MPs have changed the face of the House of Commons since the 2025 election, allowing the Carney Liberals to slowly inch their way toward a majority government.

Here’s a quick look at floor crossings in the current Parliament:

Nov. 4, 2025

Nova Scotia MP Chris d’Entremont became the first to leave the Tory caucus, citing a better alignment with Carney’s economic agenda and vision.

Soon after d’Entremont crossed the floor, Carney said his Liberal party was open to welcoming any opposition MPs who wanted to join his team and champion its agenda. The Liberals also publicly declared at the time that they had been courting d’Entremont for years.

D’Entremont said at the time there were likely more Conservatives “in the same boat” but they would share their own stories “if the time comes.”

He also turned heads in political Ottawa when he said in a television interview that House leader Andrew Scheer and party whip Chris Warkentin “barged” into his office and called him a “snake” for changing in his party stripe — an episode he said “sealed the deal” for him.

Dec. 11, 2025

Michael Ma, an MP from Markham, Ont., became the second to leave the Tories for the Liberals, citing a need for “unity and decisive action for Canada’s future.”

And he apparently packed his bags for the Liberal party quickly. Ma defected the day after he attended the Conservative caucus Christmas party and accepted an office Christmas gift from a colleague, though he did not contribute to the “secret Santa” exchange himself.

By early January, Ma was jetting off with the prime minister on a high-profile trip to Beijing, where Carney met with President Xi Jinping and set to work on thawing relations by removing mutual trade irritants.

Feb. 18, 2026

Edmonton MP Matt Jeneroux had been rumoured in the fall of 2025 to be considering leaving Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre’s team, but did not cross the aisle until late winter.

In early November, he instead abruptly announced his resignation, days after d’Entremont’s defection. Poilievre declared at the time that Jeneroux would step down from his seat in the spring. Jeneroux said in a Nov. 6 statement he was not being coerced into resigning but wanted to spend more time with his family.

Three months and 12 days later, on Feb. 18, he became the third Conservative to cross the floor, averting the need for a byelection in Edmonton Riverbend.

Jeneroux said he arrived at his final decision after watching Carney’s January speech in Davos, Switzerland to the World Economic Forum about the need for middle powers to band together in a threatening new global political landscape. The speech made headlines and captured the attention of diplomats around the world.

Jeneroux also suggested his decision was driven in part by a looming national unity crisis brought on by separatist movements in Alberta and Quebec.

March 11, 2026

Lori Idlout, the MP for Nunavut MP, left the NDP caucus for Team Carney, becoming the fourth to leave for the governing caucus.

Idlout told The Canadian Press that she felt she would be “betraying” her constituents by staying on with the NDP. The northern MP said she would be a better advocate on Arctic issues from within the Liberal party.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 8, 2026.

— With files from Kyle Duggan, David Baxter, Catherine Morrison and Nick Murray

The Canadian Press

 

An Invitation to Lead America’s Foiling Future

 An Invitation to Lead America’s Foiling Future

Something important is already happening in American sailing. Foiling is no longer experimental or exclusive. It is becoming accessible, structured, and repeatable at the club level. The USFoil organization exists to accelerate that momentum.

Across the country, local HUBs are activating fleets, training coaches, and giving sailors a clear line of sight from first flight to serious competition. Families see continuity. Clubs see energy. Young athletes see a future in the sport that feels modern and attainable. Standards are rising as participation expands.

Now, USFoil is seeking a visionary American leader willing to stand behind this national movement and help it scale with discipline. The foundation is operating. The pathway is aligned. What is needed is sustained support to turn momentum into durable advantage.

The objective is clear: by 2030, the United States can be one of the deepest and most competitive foiling nations in the world. The next five years will determine whether we follow that future or lead it.

Learn more: foilfast.com/blogs/news/usfoil

Jim Whittaker, First American to Reach Everest’s Summit, Dies at 97 - The New York Times

Jim Whittaker, First American to Reach Everest’s Summit, Dies at 97 - The New York Times

Seattle University

Jim Whittaker, First American to Reach Everest’s Summit, Dies at 97

As an executive with the outdoor-supply retailer REI and an experienced climber, he conquered Mount Everest in 1963, when fewer than 10 people were known to have done so.


Seattle UniversityCredit...

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By John BranchApril 8, 2026


Jim Whittaker, the first American to summit Mount Everest, whose myriad climbing achievements and longtime leadership at REI, the outdoor-supply retailer, helped establish a global mountaineering craze that continues today, died on Tuesday at his home in Port Townsend, Wash. He was 97.

His death was confirmed by his son Leif.

On May 1, 1963, a decade after Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary became the first climbers confirmed to have reached the summit of Mount Everest, and at a time when fewer than 10 people were known to have matched that feat, Mr. Whittaker set out into a storm with his climbing partner, Nawang Gombu, a Sherpa guide.

The conditions on the South Col of Everest were less than ideal for a summit push, but Mr. Whittaker did not hesitate.

“You always start up,” he told The Seattle Times in 2013. “Because you can always turn around.”

Mr. Whittaker became the first American to top Everest at about 1 p.m. local time on May 1. He and Mr. Gombu were the 10th and 11th climbers known to have gotten there and part of the only expedition to reach the summit that season.

ImageJim Whittaker in 1975, before his unsuccessful attempt to summit K2, the world’s second-highest mountain. More than a decade earlier, he had successfully topped Mount Everest, the first American to do so.Credit...Associated Press


Their accomplishment was seen as a rare, otherworldly feat, not unlike the string of moon landings to follow. Mr. Whittaker, slender at 6-foot-5 and known as Big Jim, returned home as a national hero, a graceful Everyman that one reporter in 2003 called “an Alpine Jimmy Stewart.” He was featured on the covers of National Geographic and Life magazines and that July received the National Geographic Society’s highest honor, the Hubbard Medal, from President John F. Kennedy at the White House.

The next year, sales at REI, where Mr. Whittaker was a general manager and later chief executive and president, reached $1 million for the first time (about $10.7 million in today’s money), spurred in part by his fame.

“It wasn’t that steep,” he said of the climb years later. “You could walk — stumble — up. The hardest thing was the altitude. Even with the oxygen tanks, we were just sucking air. Put a pillow on your face, run around the block and try to suck oxygen through that pillow. It will give you an idea.”

James Warren Whittaker was born in Seattle on Feb. 10, 1929, to Charles and Hortense (Gant) Whittaker. His father, an alarm salesman, and his mother, a homemaker, raised three boys: Barney and identical twins, Jim and Lou.



The twins attended West Seattle High School and played basketball at Seattle University.

Image
Mr. Whittaker, right, with his twin brother, Lou, on Mount Rainier in Washington in 1981.Credit...Barry Wong/The Seattle Times, via Associated Press


They found their passion, however, in outdoor pursuits, guiding climbing trips in the Cascade Mountains in the summer and working as ski patrollers in the winter. They were members of the Mountaineers, a Seattle-based climbing club founded in 1906, and as 16-year-old Boy Scouts in 1945, they reached the summit of Mount Rainier, at 14,410 feet the highest peak in the Cascades.


How The Times decides who gets an obituary. There is no formula, scoring system or checklist in determining the news value of a life. We investigate, research and ask around before settling on our subjects. If you know of someone who might be a candidate for a Times obituary, please suggest it here.
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Drafted into the U.S. Army during the Korean War, the twin brothers stayed stateside, in Colorado, as teachers at the newly created Mountain and Cold Weather Training Command at the high-altitude Camp Hale, home to the 10th Mountain Division.

It was a climbing friend, Lloyd Anderson, who invited Jim to manage a small outdoor-gear store on Pike Street in downtown Seattle in 1955: Recreational Equipment Co-op, a mostly mail-order supply business. Founded in 1938 by Mr. Anderson and his wife, Mary, it served a growing niche market of mountaineers in the Northwest.

Mr. Whittaker managed the store and stockroom, situated above a restaurant. At the time, the co-op had about 600 members.

“It was too good to pass up,” he recalled in an interview. “What a job. I was the only one in the place. I opened the store, stocked the shelves, talked with customers, rang up sales, cleaned the place, locked up and made the bank deposit.”

The co-op soon incorporated, becoming Recreational Equipment Incorporated, or R.E.I. Mr. Whittaker oversaw sales, and then succeeded Mr. Anderson as president and chief executive in 1971. Stirring and riding a boom in outdoor recreation during the 1970s, the company saw sales increase eightfold from 1969 ($3.5 million) to 1977 ($28 million).

R.E.I. also expanded far from Seattle, established itself as a progressive steward for conservation, and gave rise to a phalanx of other outdoor-gear imitators. It helped turn a gritty, niche sector of the sporting-goods world into a glossy purveyor of sport, culture and fashion.

Still based in Seattle, the company — now known simply as REI — reported $3.5 billion in sales and 25 million members in 2024, with more than 190 stores in the United States.

Image
Mr. Whittaker in 1963, checking his climbing equipment in Nepal, several months before he scaled Mount Everest. He returned home a national hero — “an Alpine Jimmy Stewart,” as one reporter put it.Credit...Associated Press



Mr. Whittaker’s work at REI allowed him time for outdoor exploits.

For his 1963 expedition to Everest, his first trip to the Himalayas, he took off from work for several months, joining a group of other American climbers. He had never been higher than the summit of Alaska’s Mount McKinley. But he proved himself to be the strongest climber in the group, passing time by doing push-ups and spending weeks above Base Camp, preferring not to make multiple trips from there through the dangerous Khumbu Icefall.

On a wind-whipped morning, when Norman D. Dyhrenfurth, the expedition leader, decided to delay a final push to the summit, Mr. Whittaker and Mr. Gombu set out after a breakfast of tea and hot Jell-O, carrying heavy packs with oxygen bottles.

Three weeks after Mr. Whittaker’s successful summit, the American climbers Thomas Hornbein and Willi Unsoeld reached the top of Everest by establishing a new route, on the West Ridge, a feat that many serious mountaineers hold in higher esteem.

The Hubbard Medal that Mr. Whittaker and other expedition members received in 1963 recognizes achievements in research, discovery and exploration. It was previously bestowed on Robert Peary, Charles Lindbergh and, in 1962, John Glenn. Later, it was awarded to Neil Armstrong and other astronauts in the Apollo missions.

Image
Mr. Whittaker guided Senator Robert F. Kennedy to the top of Mount Kennedy, in the Yukon Territory of Canada, in 1965. The peak was named after President John F. Kennedy.Credit...Associated Press



In 1965, Mr. Whittaker guided Senator Robert F. Kennedy to the top of Mount Kennedy in Canada’s Yukon Territory, named for his assassinated brother. They became close friends, and Mr. Whittaker helped lead Mr. Kennedy’s presidential campaign in Washington in 1968. He was in the hospital room when Mr. Kennedy was pronounced dead after being shot in Los Angeles.

Mr. Whittaker was a pallbearer at Mr. Kennedy’s funeral, along with Mr. Glenn, the athlete Rafer Johnson and others.

Two of Mr. Whittaker’s sons, Bobby (named for Robert Kennedy) and Leif, and Mr. Kennedy’s son Christopher returned to Mount Kennedy 50 years later to repeat their fathers’ climb.

In 1975, Mr. Whittaker attempted to reach the summit of K2, the world’s second-highest mountain, but the effort fell short. Three years later, he led a 14-person expedition to K2, along the China-Pakistan border. Four members of the group — though not Mr. Whittaker — reached the summit, the first Americans and the third team to do so.

REI’s leadership, facing a plateauing industry, was less smitten with Mr. Whittaker after the K2 expeditions. He resigned in 1979, the year he turned 50, after 25 years with the company. From a co-op devoid of stock options, he received a $52,000 parting check.


Image
Credit...Jeff Chiu/Associated Press


Mr. Whittaker’s fame later led him to various business and climbing ventures, many with an environmental mission and a message of harmony. He coordinated a 1990 expedition to Everest (partly funded by L.L. Bean) that combined teams from the United States, the Soviet Union and China. At the summit, climbers from those superpowers clasped hands.

“We took the three countries that were enemies during the Cold War and demonstrated what could be done through friendship and cooperation,” Mr. Whittaker told National Geographic in 2003. “We also hauled garbage off the top, sending a message that climbers had to start packing out what they packed in, and started that campaign from the highest point on Earth.”

An adept sailor as well, Mr. Whittaker competed in two Vic-Maui International Yacht Races, skippering his own boats in that 2,400-mile race between Victoria, British Columbia, and Maui in the Hawaiian Islands. Mr. Whittaker, his wife and their sons also sailed from their home in Port Townsend, northwest of Seattle, to Australia and back on the family’s 54-foot ketch.

Mr. Whittaker published an autobiography, “A Life on the Edge: Memoirs of Everest and Beyond,” in 1999.


Image
Mr. Whittaker’s autobiography was published in 1999. In addition to mountaineering, he was adept at sailing, competing in long-distance races.Credit...Mountaineers Books

In addition to his son Leif, from his second marriage, to Dianne Roberts, he is survived by Ms. Roberts, who photographed the K2 expeditions and accompanied her husband to a camp above 26,000 feet; another son from that marriage, Joss; his son Bobby, from his first marriage, to Blanche Patterson; three grandchildren; and one great-granddaughter. His twin brother, Lou, a longtime mountaineer and guide on Mount Rainier, died in 2024. His older brother, Barney, and two other sons from his first marriage, Scott and Carl, also died.

Mr. Whittaker stayed connected with Mr. Gombu, his partner on Everest. In 2003, when Mr. Whittaker was 74, the men and their families trekked to Base Camp to commemorate the 40th anniversary of their historic summit.

These days, Everest is crowded. Hundreds reach the summit in a typical year, guided by companies from around the world, with climbing routes and ropes established and maintained by Sherpas.

“I think nature is a great teacher,” Mr. Whittaker told The Seattle Times in 2013, 50 years after becoming the first American to top Everest. “Being in nature that way is a good way to find out who the hell you are.”

Ash Wu contributed reporting.
A correction was made on
April 8, 2026:

An earlier version of this obituary misstated at one point how many climbers reached the summit of Mt. Everest in the 1963 season. Four other climbers on Jim Whittaker and Nawang Gombu’s expedition also reached the summit that year; it was not the case that they were the only two.

OpenAI wants a sexy ChatGPT

 

TALK FLIRTY TO ME

Illustration of the ChatGPT interface showing a risque conversation between the user and ChatGPT, with suggestive emoji and censor bars.

Morning Brew Design

“It’s smut, not pornography” may sound like something Doug would tell Carrie on The King of Queens, but it’s also OpenAI’s justification for pushing forward with “adult mode” for ChatGPT, which will allow for sexy chats despite objections from the company’s advisory council:

  • Insiders told the Wall Street Journal that those advisors were freaking out about the plans to bring Her closer to reality, since AI-powered erotica could create unhealthy emotional dependence, and minors could access the sex chats despite safeguards.
  • One expert said that, following at least one documented suicide involving a child having sexualized chats with a Character.AI bot, adding a seductive tone to ChatGPT may turn the bot into a “sexy suicide coach.”

OpenAI has delayed the release of “adult mode,” but still reportedly plans to launch it later this year.

Sex sells…but at what cost?

xAI has a scantily clad avatar named Ani within its Grok chatbot, while Meta’s bot can engage in romantic roleplay. With AI erotica expected to be a source of major revenue, ChatGPT making users think its signature AI is into them is likely inevitable.

Despite OpenAI’s “it’s not porn” stance, others outside the company believe problems lie ahead. Billionaire Mark Cuban has argued that kids could develop dangerous relationships with AI, leading to a loss of trust among parents, who could turn elsewhere for their AI needs. Per Ars Technica, OpenAI’s age-verification system was misclassifying minors as adults 12% of the time.

Zoom out: While one side of the building figures out how to get neon “XXX” signs on the facade, another told the Wall Street Journal on Monday that top executives want OpenAI to stop focusing on “side quests” and put more attention on its core business products. The AI giant is chasing Anthropic’s Claude Code and Cowork, which have emerged as the go-to options for businesses. Fidji Simo, OpenAI’s CEO of applications, said Anthropic’s success should serve as a “wake-up call.”

State of the Economy in Numbers

 


State of the Economy in Numbers


SOTU 2026 Home
Economy


In 2025, the economy expanded as GDP increased, inflation decreased slightly, and the size of imports and exports shifted. These and other measures provide a snapshot of economic activity, prices, and the labor market heading into 2026.


The basics


$31T
Gross domestic product (2025)


2.4%
12-month percent change in CPI (January 2026)


$901B
Trade deficit (2025)


How is the economy doing?


In 2025, the economy grew and employment remained steady, while inflation and interest rates fell.


Gross domestic product (GDP) reached $30.8 trillion in 2025. Real GDP (rGDP), which accounts for inflation, increased by 2.2%, equal to the 2000 to 2024 average annual rate.


Real GDP increased 2.2% from 2024 to 2025.


Annual percent change in real gross domestic product (GDP)


Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis
Read more about GDP



Year-over-year inflation — the rate at which consumer prices increase — was 2.4% in January 2026. The average monthly inflation rate in 2025 was 2.6%, slightly lower than the 2024 average rate of 2.9%. Housing was the largest contributor to monthly inflation growth.


Year-over-year inflation — the rate at which consumer prices increase — was 2.4% in January 2026.


Year-over-year percent change of CPI-U, all items, seasonally adjusted

Due to the 2025 government shutdown, the BLS did not publish October 2025 data.

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics
Read more about inflation and the CPI



The Federal Reserve (Fed) lowered the federal funds rate three times in 2025; it currently sits between 3.5% and 3.75%. This range guides the rate at which banks lend to each other, while the effective federal funds rate reflects the average rate banks actually pay. Adjusting this target range is one way the Fed pursues its dual mandate of controlling inflation and maximizing employment.


The Federal Reserve lowered the federal funds rate. It sits between 3.5% and 3.75%.


Federal funds effective rate, by month


Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Read more about interest rates



The unemployment rate was 4.3% in January 2026. A couple months prior, in November 2025, the rate was the highest since late 2021, at 4.5%.


The unemployment rate was 4.3% in January 2026.


Unemployment rate, seasonally adjusted

Due to the 2025 government shutdown, the BLS did not publish October 2025 data.

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics
Read more about the unemployment rate


The average annual labor force participation rate decreased slightly to 62.4% in 2025 after staying the same from 2023 to 2024. The rate is the percentage of the population ages 16 and older who are either employed or actively seeking work. It's been trending downward since 2000, due to the nation's aging population.


The average annual labor force participation rate decreased to 62.4% in 2025.


Labor force participation rate, annual average

Due to the 2025 government shutdown, the BLS did not publish October 2025 data. Annual estimates for 2025 are 11-month averages that exclude October.

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics
Read more about labor force participation


What's going on with international trade?


New tariffs and global economic shifts altered US trade flows in 2025. Looking at how imports and exports changed helps explain the nation’s trade balance and its connection to the global economy.


In 2025, the US imported $4.3 trillion and exported $3.4 trillion in goods and services, resulting in a $901.5 billion trade deficit. This deficit was lower than in 2024 due to higher exports and lower imports throughout 2025.


In 2025, the US had a $901.5 billion trade deficit.


Trade balance, by component, not adjusted for inflation


Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis
Read more about the trade balance


In 2025, the average monthly effective tariff rate was 7.9%. The rate shows how much the US collects in customs duties as a percentage of the total value of imported goods. However, imports may have different tariff rates (or none at all) depending on various factors like country of origin, product type, trade agreements, and much more.


In 2025, the average monthly effective tariff rate was 7.9%.


Monthly average effective tariff rate (customs duty revenue as a share of good imports)


Source: Census Bureau
Read more about tariff rates



In FY 2025, the federal government collected $194.9 billion, or 4% of total revenue, from customs duties (tariffs and other import fees). It was more than two times larger than it was in FY 2024. As of January, approximately $117.7 billion in customs duties have been collected for FY 2026, already exceeding the FY 2024 total.


The federal government collected nearly $200 billion from customs duties in FY 2025.


Cumulative monthly customs duties revenue, not adjusted for inflation


Source: Department of the Treasury
Read more about tariff revenue



The nation's top trading partners in 2024 were Mexico, Canada, and China (when adding imports and exports). Mexico became the nation’s top trading partner for the first time. Trade with the top six trading partners accounted for 48% of the total.


The nation’s top trading partners in 2024 were Mexico, Canada, and China.


Share of total trade value (imports + exports), by country


Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis
Read more about US trading partners

About The Crown

 

About The Crown

Canada is a constitutional monarchy. The Crown in Canada was first established by the kings of France in the sixteenth century. Organized as a royal province of France, both French and British kings and queens have reigned over Canada since 1534. Under Canada's sovereigns, the country has evolved from a French colony to an independent nation.

Canada’s Head of State

In today's constitutional monarchy, His Majesty King Charles III is King of Canada and Canada's Head of State. He is the personal embodiment of the Crown in Canada.

In Canada’s system of government, the power to govern is vested in the Crown but is entrusted to the government to exercise on behalf and in the interest of the people. The Crown reminds the government of the day that the source of the power to govern rests elsewhere and that it is only given to them for a limited duration.

The governor general and lieutenant governors

The governor general and the 10 lieutenant governors represent the Crown in Canada and act on the Monarch’s behalf.

The governor general’s role and responsibilities consist mainly in carrying out many of the duties on behalf of The King. For example, he or she presides over the swearing-in of the prime minister, the Chief Justice of Canada and cabinet ministers. However, there are powers that can only be exercised by The King. The lieutenant governors of the provinces perform similar duties at the provincial level.

The Parliament of Canada

The Parliament of Canada consists of The King, the Senate and the House of Commons. In the provinces, legislatures consist of the lieutenant governor and the elected assembly.

His Majesty's representatives act on the advice of the prime minister or ministers responsible to the House of Commons or the provincial legislative assemblies.

Some fear Dubai won’t be the same after attacks

 

Explosion at Dubai airport

AFP/Getty Images

Since the war in Iran began, drone attack videos have coexisted with photos of influencers sipping on gold-flaked cocktails when it comes to Dubai’s image. Yesterday, an Iranian drone struck the Dubai International Airport, causing a fire. There were no injuries, but flights were paused for hours at what is, in peacetime, the world’s busiest airport for international travel.

Iranian attacks have killed four people in the UAE as Iran has retaliated against the campaign being waged by the US and Israel with strikes throughout the region. Shrapnel damaged several luxury landmarks in Dubai—shaking its reputation as an amenities-rich playground for the world’s wealthy that’s shielded from nearby regional conflicts.

Flight not flights

Dubai’s location between Europe and Asia made its main airport a natural global hub connecting 291 cities and serving 95 million passengers last year—among them 19.6 million tourists flocking to Dubai’s clubs, beaches, and shopping malls.

Now, the UAE’s flagship carrier, Emirates, famous for in-flight bougieness, has cut US-bound Airbus A380 flights by 51% in March, according to a Simple Flying analysis. Passengers flying to Dubai in recent days posted videos of eerily empty planes—to complement photos of the city’s usually bustling beaches and markets looking like ghost towns.

Besides tourists, Dubai’s economy rests on millionaires and white-collar expats continuing to live and spend there:

  • Some worry about permanent capital flight, with lawyers and asset managers telling the Wall Street Journal that clients have inquired about transferring money out of Dubai amid the conflict.
  • Dubai is particularly vulnerable to population loss as almost nine in 10 residents don’t have citizenship status and many lack a sense of rootedness in the city, urbanist Richard Florida argued in the New York Times.
  • Dubai has over 80,000 millionaires who are able to pack their bags in the case of a calamity.

Keep calm and carry on…appears to be the message from UAE authorities, who have banned posting photos of damage from Iranian attacks. The country’s president visited a Dubai luxury mall in the conflict’s early days to project business-as-usual vibes.

The changing face of the beauty industry

 

Makeup products on yellow background

Getty Images

Close your eyes and picture someone at the store buying makeup. If you’re not picturing a five-year-old kid or a grown man, you’re living in the past. The beauty industry has gotten a makeover in recent years, thanks to changing social attitudes and glam brands eager to explore untapped markets.

A new foundation

More men are beginning to appreciate the power of concealer. According to Statista data cited by CNBC:

  • In 2019, more than 90% of US males said they never wear makeup.
  • In 2024, that number dropped to 75%.

The share of Gen Z men who reported using facial skincare products also jumped 68% from 2022 to 2024, per market intelligence firm Mintel. Retailers have responded by bulking up their men’s offerings or dialing back gender distinctions altogether for a more neutral presentation.

Age-defying products: Sorry, Dr Pepper lip gloss, you’re not the only makeup game in town anymore for elementary school kids. Per the Wall Street Journal:

  • Klee Naturals has built a multimillion-dollar business selling products like $10 mineral eye shadows and $15 lip glosses to girls ages 5 to 7.
  • Evereden had $100 million in global sales in 2024, according to CEO and co-founder Kimberley Ho. The company makes moisturizers and body washes for children ages 3 and up.
  • Actress Shay Mitchell’s brand Rini sells sheet masks for children, as well as face crayons.

International appeal: K-beauty (Korean cosmetics) has taken off on social media, exposing swaths of Americans to things like snail-mucin serums and salmon-sperm skincare. For South Korean beauty products, the US is a relatively new market. (Dr Pepper has yet to partner on a snail-mucin serum.)

K-beauty currently only accounts for about 2% of the overall US beauty market, but that’s changing. According to NielsenIQ data, US sales more than doubled from 2023 to 2025, Bloomberg reported.

Going the distance

 Going the distance

Moon seen from Artemis II

NASA

Here’s something to one-up your friend whose pics are always geotagged in exotic locales: On April 6 2026, the crew of the Artemis II set the record for the farthest humans have ever travelled from Earth (watch the live video here).

  • At 1:57pm ET, the four astronauts flew 252,752 miles from Earth, surpassing the previous record set by the Apollo 13 crew in 1970 by ~4,102 miles.
  • “We most importantly choose this moment to challenge this generation and the next to make sure this record is not long-lived,” Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen said from the ship.

The crew then proceeded to complete a flyby of the moon—including a planned 40 minutes without communication with Earth as they passed the moon’s far side—reaching their maximum distance from Earth of 252,756 miles just after 7pm ET. The crew, who are slated to splash down back on Earth on Friday, did take photos as they travelled, but mostly for science and not for the ’gram.

Millions of Americans can now claim Canadian citizenship by descent


Millions of Americans can now claim Canadian citizenship by descent. But they have to prove it
Bill C-3, which came into effect Dec. 15, removes first-generation limit for citizenship


Annabelle Olivier, Alexandre Silberman · CBC News · Posted: Mar 08, 2026 12:00 AM PST | Last Updated: March 8


Listen to this article
Estimated 9 minutes

Mary and Ryan Hamel show some of the documents they've collected to prove they are Canadians by descent. (Alexandre Silberman/Radio-Canada)

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Amid rising tensions in the United States, many Americans are looking to Canada — and their roots — for a possible way out.

Lynn Rutman, a Cape Cod, Mass., resident with family ties to Quebec and Nova Scotia dating back centuries, said she’s worried about the political situation in her country, citing recent events surrounding controversial immigration enforcement policies and long-standing ideological divides.

“It's not just me, many of us are concerned,” she said.

She’s now one of thousands who have begun the process of applying for proof of Canadian citizenship following recent changes to Canada’s citizenship rules.

Prior to Bill C-3, An Act to Amend the Citizenship Act (2025), citizenship by descent for those born abroad was limited to the first generation.

But now, Canadian citizenship is being retroactively granted to people born before the new law came into effect on Dec. 15, 2025, who would have been citizens if not for the first-generation limit. Different criteria, however, apply to those born on or after that date.

“We feel like we want that Plan B so that we know we have a place to go in the event that things get even worse here,” Rutman said, “which you know, you see it's getting worse by the day.”


The change in law came following a 2023 Ontario Superior Court of Justice decision that found the first-generation limit was unconstitutional, making the certificate “the hottest ticket in 2026,” according to Cassandra Fultz, a regulated Canadian immigration consultant.
Bill restoring citizenship for 'Lost Canadians' becomes lawKristi Noem stands by remarks accusing U.S. citizens killed in Minneapolis of terrorism

Fultz said because the legislative changes coincide with a time of increased global volatility, many Americans are seeking a second passport of any kind.

“There's no limit on how many generations you can go back, as long as you can prove it,” Fultz said.
New pathway to citizenship

For Mary and Ryan Hamel, the new legislation has brought a sense of relief.

The family of four came to Quebec from Massachusetts as temporary foreign workers during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I thought Montreal would be the best place for me and my kids and my job allowed me to do that,” Ryan said, adding that becoming a Canadian citizen was always the end goal.

With a new pathway to permanent residency now open to them, both Mary and Ryan, who have French Canadian roots, started digging into their family history and tracking down official documents showing their lineage.

Fultz said the main documents that are required include baptismal or birth certificates, to show parentage and place of birth, and marriage certificates to show any name changes, which was common practice when women were married.

Unofficial name changes are also a frequent issue, says Fultz, who says she has helped numerous clients apply for a certificate of Canadian citizenship over the years. French names like Pierre, for example, were often anglicized and became Pete when the person moved to the United States.

In those cases, she said, any substantiating documents to fortify a claim, such as death certificates, census records, property deeds, court records or criminal records might be helpful in showing the ancestor is who the applicant says they are.
Over 3,000% growth in requests for certified documents

In Quebec, official documents dating back to 1621 and up to 100 years ago are kept by the Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec (BAnQ), with more recent records available through the Directeur de l'état civil.

Sarah Hanahem, an archivist with the BAnQ office in Montreal, said while there’s always been an interest from Americans looking into their ancestry, requests for certified copies have exploded.

“In January 2025, we had 32 requests for certified copies of vital records and this year in January 2026, we've had over 1,000,” she said, adding most of those requests were made by Americans.

Sarah Hanahem, an archivist at the BAnQ, said original registers can be old and need to be handled with care. (Alexandre Silberman/CBC News)

In statements to CBC, other archives across the country, including New Brunswick, British Columbia, Newfoundland and Ontario, have also seen a sizable increase in requests from the same time last year.

Because of the sudden surge in demand, Hanahem warned that international applicants should expect delays.

The priority, she said, is to fulfil requests by Quebec residents.“BAnQ is a government entity and we are paid with Quebec tax dollars.”

But more than that, Hanahem said the process itself is lengthy and can involve a lot of research.

There are sometimes discrepancies with the spelling of names, some of which might have changed over time, she said. Other times, critical information like which parish someone was born in, is unknown or key dates are approximate when actual dates are required.

“We have to go back to the original register,” Hanamen said, explaining some of the bound volumes are very old and need to be handled carefully.

A parish register at the BAnQ from the 1800s. (Alexandre Silberman/CBC News)

The Hamels said they were able to obtain the needed Quebec documents – a birth certificate in their case – through the Directeur de l’état civil and not the BAnQ , but warned nonetheless that the undertaking wasn’t for the “faint of heart.”


It required several phone calls, appointments and was in general a time-consuming pursuit.

“We had to prove why we needed this document,” Mary said. “Then we had to go to a commissioner of oath, swear that we would not use this document for malintent or bad purposes.”
Historical ties to Quebec

David Vermette, an author and researcher specializing in Franco-American history based in Maryland, isn’t surprised the BAnQ is being flooded with requests.

He says the legislative change has been creating quite the buzz on social media – and not only among those looking for an exit strategy.

“There's a lot of people who still feel very much connected to their Québécois heritage. They're very much connected to some kind of a French Canadian identity,” he said.

Textile workers in 1909 are seen outside the Amoskeag Manufacturing Company in Manchester, N.H., where many French Canadians worked. (Lewis Wickes Hine/Library of Congress )

That’s the case for Patricia Evan Martins, whose Québécois grandmother, one of 12 children, was sent to Maine when she was around 11 years old to work in a mill.

Evan Martins, who herself grew up in Maine and still calls it home, said she learned to speak French before English, went to a French Catholic school, sang French songs and ate French food.

Ryan, for his part, said he grew up with a dad who spoke better French than English and where Québécois staples like meat pies and split pea soup were part of the regular fare. Their situation is hardly unique.
Welcome to Little Canada, the Minnesota city founded by a Winnipegger who fled the floods

Between 1840 and 1930, close to one million French-speaking Canadians, mostly Québécois but also some Acadians from Eastern Canada, emigrated to the United States in a mass migration movement known as the Great Hemorrhage.

They mostly settled in New England factory towns, with the majority working in the textile industry, Vermette said, leading to the creation of French Canadian neighbourhoods known as Little Canadas.


While many families have since returned home to Canada, the number of descendants remaining in the United States could number in the millions, according to Vermette.
Canadians at heart

Vermette says many Franco-Americans have long felt invisible on both sides of the border.

He believes Bill C-3 presents Quebec with a unique opportunity to repatriate or reclaim those who feel a connection to the province’s culture and language, even amid heightened controversy surrounding immigration and pressures linked to cultural and linguistic preservation.

"The Franco-American population is an untapped natural resource for Quebec," he said.
She was recruited by Quebec. Now she may not be able to stay under new immigration rulesQuebecers banned over religious symbols hope court challenge changes secularism laws

Whether or not they intend to move back to Canada, for many in the community, an official recognition by means of Canadian citizenship legitimizes a long-held sense of belonging.

“I always have felt Canadian and this would make me just so happy,” Evans Martin said.

That is a feeling that resonates with Ryan.

“My mindset is much more Canadian than American,” he said. “So it will feel very natural for me.”

Both his and Mary’s sense of connection to the country has also been deepened by living here and learning more about their family histories through the application process.

“I can look in the maps and say, ‘Oh, this is where Nana was born,’ or ‘This is where Papa's family was from,’” Mary said.

Ryan Hamel, accompanied by his mother, visited the location of Montreal's first well which was built by his ancestor in 1658. (Submitted by Ryan Hamel)


Ryan, meanwhile, has traced his ancestors all the way back to Jacques Archambault, who dug Montreal’s first well in 1658.

Now that their paperwork is done, the next step for the Hamel family is to wait for a decision from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC).

In a statement to CBC, the IRCC said it does not have an exact estimate of how many people might be affected by Bill C-3, but says it expects tens of thousands of requests for Canadian citizenship certificates over time.

According to the IRCC website, at the beginning of March, almost 48,000 people were waiting for a decision pertaining to their certificate application, with an estimated processing time of 11 months.

CorrectionsThe change in legislation came following a 2023 Ontario Superior Court of Justice decision. A previous version of this story erroneously stated that the change followed a decision of the Supreme Court of Canada.
Mar 08, 2026 6:58 AM PDT

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Annabelle Olivier

Journalist

Spirits are low in the alcohol biz

 

Johnnie Walker barrels

Malcolm Dunbar/Getty Images

Boozemakers are about as content as someone arriving at a wedding to find out that it’s dry. Alcohol sales are slumping, as many young people trade tipsiness for non-alcoholic drinks and become stoners instead proclaim themselves “California sober.”

The teetotalism trend is fueled by rising health consciousness, more studies showing the harms of even moderate drinking, weight loss drugs reducing drinking desires, and tightening budgets. According to Gallup, only 54% of Americans said they consumed alcohol last year, the lowest since the analytics company began polling in 1939. And surveys from abroad suggest the trend is global.

To add insult to injury, President Trump’s trade wars have led to Canadian boycotts and many Europeans opting for domestic drinking options, stymying the flow of drink across borders.

Iconic brands feel the imbibing recession

As the global blood-alcohol content level hits an all-time low, alcohol companies worldwide are facing some sobering realities:

  • Global wine-sipping dropped 12% between 2020 and 2024 to the lowest rate in over six decades, as weather events impacted production and drove up prices. Several California wineries shuttered this year, while a recent government survey showed that 20% of French vineyards were considering closing.
  • Sales for the British spirits juggernaut Diageo—which owns Guinness, Smirnoff, and Johnnie Walker—dropped by almost 3% in the first half of this fiscal year.
  • Jim Beam paused distillation for a year at its flagship facility in Kentucky amid a global bourbon glut. And MGP, the Kentucky-based distiller for famed brands like Bulleit, saw its sales drop 24% last year as bourbon purveyors cut production.
  • Heineken is cutting 6,000 jobs after selling 1.2% fewer liters of beer in 2025 than in the previous year.

Investors betting on booze are in the red, too. The market cap of the world’s top publicly listed alcohol producers was down 46% last fall from its peak in June 2021, according to Bloomberg.

But some drinks are thriving alongside sobriety…with US sales of cheap tequila and premixed cocktails growing in the past year. Plus, while people are drinking less at home, spending at bars was up 4% in January from the same time last year, according to data from the Bank of America Institute.

Missiles Are “Depleted.” Defense Contractors Are Cashing In


Missiles Are “Depleted.” Defense Contractors Are Cashing In

The Lever · 2 days ago
by Veronica Riccobene · International


In the weeks before launching strikes in Iran, the Trump administration had a problem: figuring out how to spend the $500 billion in extra Pentagon money the White House plans to request from Congress next year. Just two days later, the administration told Congress that in the next year alone, it plans to burn through $153 billion in additional military funding approved in 2025 — money Congress expected to be spent over five years.

Now, less than a week after the strikes, executives representing weapons manufacturers including RTX (formerly Raytheon) and Lockheed Martin are scheduled to meet with President Donald Trump to discuss the nation’s “diminishing” munitions stockpiles.

While the president insists U.S. munitions stockpiles have “never been higher or better,” defense-industry funded consultants and lobbyists are warning that in less than a week, the U.S. has “burn[ed]” through its precision-guided long-range missile reserves. They argue that a shrinking industrial base and declining productivity could undermine U.S. military objectives in places like Ukraine and Israel. Of particular concern are the country’s stockpile of precision missile interceptors, a quarter of which were reportedly depleted in just 12 days of fighting between Israel and Iran last summer and are on track to be further drained in the Iran war.

Yet, since the 1990s, U.S. military spending has nearly doubled, exceeding the combined spending of the next nine largest militaries.

So where has all that money gone? Into the pockets of top shareholders.

The weapons industry has become incredibly concentrated: Since the 1990s, the number of “prime” contractors working with the Defense Department has shrunk from 51 to five. And in recent years, these giants — propped up by trillions in taxpayer spending — have spent more enriching investors than in expanding production.

Migration north for the yachting season

 Migration north for the yachting season

A new offshore race in 2026 will begin May 9 from St. Barths in the Caribbean and finish off Fort Adams in Newport, RI.

Organized by US Sailing, the US Open – Offshore will be approximately 1,500 nautical miles and supported by Saint Barth Yacht Club and New York Yacht Club. For subsequent editions, yacht clubs and race organizers will be invited to bid annually for hosting rights.

“This is an exciting milestone for offshore racing in the Americas,” said Bryon Ehrhart, Event Chairman. “The course from St. Barths to Newport presents a terrific tactical challenge and establishes a high standard for future editions.” - Full report

The app that alerts you if smart glasses are close by

 

An illustration of smart glasses

Niv Bavarsky

If you’re wondering if that guy (you know it’s a guy) at the table across from you might be recording you with his smart glasses, there’s a new app called Nearby Glasses that detects surveillance spectacles, giving you a good reason to pay your tab and leave.

The app, which is only available for Android, was created in response to reports that Meta Ray-Ban smart glasses have been used in immigration raids and to harass sex workers, per 404 Media, and as a way to guard against the potentially invasive tech.

Here’s how the app works:

  • It searches for Bluetooth signals, like the ones assigned to smart glasses, and sends the user a notification.
  • It won’t give a precise location (it’s Nearby Glasses, not Exact Glasses), but it does find signals within 10 to 32 feet of the user indoors, and 32 to 50 feet outdoors.

Only getting more intrusive: The New York Times reported last month that Meta is considering adding facial recognition technology to its glasses.

Meanwhile…on Tuesday, Deveillance announced Spectre I, a device it says prevents smart devices and AI recorders from “collecting conversations and turning them into data.”

70 days out, concerns loom over World Cup

 

Security lock with soccer goal net

Nick Iluzada

As yesterday marked 70 days until the World Cup kickoff, some fans wagered on tournament favorites Spain and England clinching the trophy, while others worried about whether North America is even ready to host.

Safety concerns are top of mind for the dozens of crowded events set to take place across the US, Canada, and Mexico:

  • The US and Israel’s military campaign in Iran has compounded existing security anxieties related to the cartel violence in Mexico last week.
  • Mexico’s government and FIFA assured the games there will be safe.

In addition, there are now doubts about whether Iran’s national team will participate in stateside matches.

Cash-strapped cities

US host city officials warned lawmakers last week that World Cup safety is in jeopardy due to funding chaos and a lack of security coordination between local and federal agencies. Uncle Sam earmarked $875 million to enhance game security, but that cash is being held up by a standoff over Homeland Security funding in Congress.

Mundial has run into municipal hitches…with the Boston-area town of Foxborough threatening to block the matches set to take place there until someone fronts $7.8 million in security costs.

Friends are splitting on home ownership

 

Two friends and roommates moving into new home

Getty Images

The high cost of buying a home has helped some reimagine the concept of friends with benefits. Instead of cramming into an overpriced studio rental to save money, buddies are splitting the cost of owning a property they couldn’t afford individually.

Zillow reported that US home values skyrocketed 45% between February 2020 and February 2025, which it called “more than a decade’s worth of typical growth” in only five years. And the rental market saw a similarly large increase over that time, per Rental Housing Journal, making co-buying a consideration for younger generations.

Per a 2025 FirstHome IQ survey of 1,000 respondents between the ages of 18 and 44:

  • Sharing a home with your bestie is particularly appealing to Gen Zers (classified here as ages 18 to 24), as 32% said they would consider co-buying.
  • Millennials (ages 25 to 44) aren’t against the idea either—18% said they were up for it.

A 2024 report by JW Surety Bonds found that 15% of Americans have made home purchases with a friend or relative, and another 48% would consider doing so.

Home security: Since this isn’t the same as roommates splitting the cost of a couch, it’s recommended to put the partnership in writing. Two options are a joint tenancy agreement or a tenancy-in-common agreement. These arrangements allow partial ownership of the property (and theoretically, the couch, too) to be sold or inherited if circumstances change.

End of an era? Zillow home trends expert Amanda Pendleton told CNBC that one reason why only 5% of homes were co-bought last year is that rent prices are stabilizing. According to the new Apartment List National Rent Report, the national median rent has fallen for six straight months, not that anyone looking for a place in New York or San Francisco will believe that.

Is it Live Nation’s turn to face the music?

 

live nation and ticketmaster logos

Sopa Images/Getty Images

Live Nation may have finally found a venue it wants nothing to do with. The live entertainment company will be in a Manhattan court today for jury selection in a federal antitrust case that could result in a breakup.

Who is suing? The Department of Justice, 39 states, and the District of Columbia argue that Live Nation has maintained an illegal monopoly over live entertainment since it merged with ticket provider Ticketmaster in 2010, and that customers are paying the service and processing fees price. Specifically, the DOJ alleges:

  • Live Nation, which has partnerships with hundreds of concert venues, pressures artists to use its promotion services in exchange for access to those venues.
  • Live Nation also forces venues to use Ticketmaster for ticketing.

The company maintains that artists can perform wherever they want and sell tickets however they want.

What next? Live Nation has been trying to settle the case for months, per Bloomberg, and that could still happen. But for now, the case is going to trial, with testimony possible from singer Kid Rock, Roc Nation CEO and co-founder Desiree Perez, and SeatGeek CEO Jack Groetzinger, which would actually make an amazing cast for the next season of The Traitors.

RG Richardson Communications News

I am a business economist with interests in international trade worldwide through politics, money, banking and VOIP Communications. The author of RG Richardson City Guides has over 300 guides, including restaurants and finance.