
Adam Neumann and the Art of Failing Up
WeWork’s chief risk-taker found a kindred spirit with an open checkbook: SoftBank’s Masayoshi Son. Now he’s walking away from the wreckage with more than $1 billion.
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WeWork’s chief risk-taker found a kindred spirit with an open checkbook: SoftBank’s Masayoshi Son. Now he’s walking away from the wreckage with more than $1 billion.
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Scorsese’s Netflix gangster epic will play in select theaters before it streams. “It’s a disgrace,” says John Fithian, the head of the theater owners organization.
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The bankruptcy saga of the famed New York department store involved last-minute alliances and vain attempts to cobble together competing bids.
By Vanessa Friedman and

The review comes after lawmakers raised concerns about TikTok’s growing influence in the United States.
By Jack Nicas, Mike Isaac and

Dara Khosrowshahi, Uber’s chief executive, is pushing employees to do more with less and to perform better, as he battles skepticism over the ride-hailing firm’s business.
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The company is spending more to promote the iPhone than it is on ads for ‘The Morning Show’ and other programs on Apple TV Plus.
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The site’s editorial team, more than 20 journalists, resigned after an instance of what they saw as meddling by G/O Media.
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The endowment model and the 60/40 split offer different risks and returns. Investors should examine the pros and cons before embracing either strategy.
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Make sure you know how much you owe and to whom. Then, look at your payment options.
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The government has been handing over more responsibility to manufacturers for years. The new law makes it even harder for regulators to review Boeing’s work.
By Natalie Kitroeff and

The heir to a foam-cup fortune is believed to own more land than anyone on the storied tax haven of Grand Cayman, just as rising seas threaten to engulf it.
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Millions of Flickr images were sucked into a database called MegaFace. Now some of those faces may have the ability to sue.
By Kashmir Hill and

Deutsche Bank. North Korea. The Intelligence Committee’s investigation of the president. Again and again, one man has taken his trove of secret documents — and uncanny nose for scandal — to the center of the news.
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Mr. Gates has minimized his ties to Mr. Epstein. But a Times investigation reveals they had a closer relationship than previously known.
By Emily Flitter and
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