News that the Washington Post had laid off hundreds of workers and scrapped several sections of the storied paper altogether stunned the journalism community last week. The Post cut roughly one-third of its staff, reduced local coverage, and completely destroyed its sports and international departments.
The paper is owned by Jeff Bezos. The Amazon founder, who has a staggering net worth of approximately $250 billion, bought the Post for $250 million in 2013. The newspaper has consistently lost more money than it has made since the 2020 election, yet has long been considered a stalwart of American dailies.
But last week, The Posts editor-in-chief Matt Murray told employees the layoffs were part of a strategic reset meant to attract more customers. Though he acknowledged the cuts were painful, the overall messaging seemed to be that they were necessary.
Of course, not everyone agrees. Martin Baron, who served as the outlets executive editor until 2021, told The Guardian, This ranks among the darkest days in the history of one of the worlds greatest news organizations.
But one question has persistently risen out of the fog of disappointment and disillusionment: if Jeff Bezos understood that owning such a vital newspaper was a “sacred trust,” why is he no longer willing to keep it running at a loss for a tiny percentage of his net worth?
Yes, the financial optics for the Post arent the most promising: the New York Times reported in 2022 that the papers online ad revenue fell to $70 million that year, a 15% drop from 2021. Last year the number of print subscriptions fell to below 100,000 for the first time in 55 years. The Post hoped to gain 5 million digital subscribers by 2025; in late 2024, the outlet reported having approximately 2.5 million digital subscribers. And the Post lost $177 million in 2023 and 2024 combined, per the New Yorker.
Trebor Scholz, a scholar-activist and Associate Professor for Culture & Media at The New School in New York who has authored several books on labor and economics, hinted that it might just be that Bezos simply doesnt find the Post useful anymore. Bezos is a businessman first and foremost, and if the paper isnt making money, cuts have to be made. I think financially, [the Post] is not a great consideration for him, right? Scholz says. He also pointed out that Bezos may have lost interest in the newspaper after owning it for several years and called to mind Elon Musks decision to purchase X, then Twitter, in 2022.
Musk intended to own the social media platform as a means to control discourse and swing the political atmosphere in a particular direction, Scholz says. That plan appears to have worked, he added, as X, which was considered an online gathering space for politically engaged people of all persuasions during Twitters heyday, is now fairly useless for social movements and has really turned into this sort of toxic right-wing space.
(The platform has spent considerable time and money battling a surge in bots and misinformation since Musks takeover.)
The Post isnt the only newspaper thats been taken over by a seemingly benevolent billionaire, Christina Bellantoni, director of USCs Annenberg Center and former Los Angeles Times editor told Fast Company by phone. Patrick Soon-Shiong swooped in to save the Los Angeles Times in 2018, when he paid $500 million for the paper, a transaction that was initially celebrated by the media.
But Soon-Shiongs decision to order the paper to cancel its endorsement of Kamala Harris ahead of the 2024 election pushed most of its editorial staff out, and the outlet began to lose money. He fired 20% of the papers staff in the same year, and in late 2025 Soon-Shiong announced plans to take the paper public.
Soon-Shiong didnt buy the paper just to come in and fire people, Bellantoni said. I think he really did believe in himself and the ability to save it, to turn it around and make it this thing he’d be very proud of and also make money on, she added. That’s not what happened, and I think people are really angry about him but also because they’re mad they put him on a pedestal.
Both newspapers benefitted from the surge in public interest in reading the news that marked the first Trump administration; both ended up gutted by their owners after later declining to endorse a political candidate in 2024 (on top of that, both owners have been criticized for their professional and personal ties to the Trump administration). That decision caused a lot of damage for the Post and the Times, Bellantoni also said. Subscribers departed both in large numbers despite the pleas of journalists to stick with them.
But things can also work out: in 2013 John Henry (who founded his own investment firm and is the owner of several sports teams, including the Boston Red Sox and Pittsburgh Penguins), paid $70 million for the Boston Globe. Though print subscriptions to the paper have dropped, digital subscriptions are over 250,000.
The intersection of morality and business isnt one-size-fits-all, which makes questions of Bezos own internal philosophy toward the Post and the value of the free press difficult to discern. After all, he could have just shut the paper down, Bellantoni noted, but he didnt.
Obviously, he knows how important the Post is that’s why he bought it, she said. And I think he does know its value and in the end, you know, if he wanted to kill it, he could do that too.
The Post is still doing great journalism every day, and there are a lot of people there who really care about their work, Bellantoni concluded. And so the question is: whats next?
To that end, Bezos has praised the newspapers essential journalistic mission and said he will continue to focus on the data that tells us what is valuable and where to focus. Though conversations about data over the enormous benefits the public can reap from a fully-staffed, storied news outlet such as the Post raise the hackles of some (as former Post Opinions writer Molly Roberts put it, Democracy dies in The Data), business owners have been data-driven for years.
The Post is and will continue to produce great work, Bellantoni said, and in the end, there will always be that institutional love for the Washington Post because it has been there forever, and it has had such an important place in society, whether it is struggling inancially or not.
The tale of what happened after Jeff Bezos bought the Washington Post may be a cautionary tale to billionaires everywhere who invest in the news in the future.
This is not a recipe for lining your pockets with money anymore. Its a hard, expensive industry to finance.
Somewhere around the turn of the 20th century, archaeologists in Heerlen, Netherlands, came across an odd-looking smooth white stone. They knew the territory was once the Roman settlement of Coriovallum, but had never seen anything like it and had no idea what it was for.
For the better part of the next 100 years, the stone sat in a storage unit at the Thermenmuseum (Thermal Bath Museum), a mystery taunting researchers. Then, six years ago, archaeologist Walter Crist spotted it while wandering the museum. Crist specializes in ancient board games and recognized it as one, though not a game he had ever seen before. That sparked his curiosity. Now, with the help of artificial intelligence, Crist thinks he has figured it outand even knows how to play.
The stone isnt much to look at. Its an 8-inch piece of white Jurassic limestone. Lines etched into it form an oblong, diamond-like shape within a rectangle. But in a paper published Wednesday in the journal Antiquity, Crist and his team discuss what happened when they programmed two AI agents from the AI-driven play system Ludii to try to solve it.
Playing Ludus Coriovalli
The researchers had the AI play the game against itself thousands of times, testing more than 100 different sets of rules drawn from other known European games, both modern and ancient. They compared the AIs moves with patterns of wear on the board, tracking which gameplay styles most closely matched the grooves on the stone.
The board, it appeared, was used for a blocking gamea type of board game in which the goal is to prevent your opponent from moving. (Think of modern titles like Go or Blokus.) Blocking games were rare in ancient Europe and, before this, had only been dated to the Middle Ages. This discovery suggests they were played several centuries earlier.
In the end, the AI and the team identified nine sets of rules consistent with the boards wear. Crist and his team named the game Ludus Coriovalli, the game from Coriovallum.
“By combining AI simulation with use-wear analysis to identify and model traces of game play, it is possible to not only identify potential game boards, but also to rebuild playable rulesets that may provide indications regarding the ways that people played games in the past,” the paper reads.
So what were the rules? Here’s what researchers determined.
One player controls four dogs. The other controls two hares.
The dogs start on the four leftmost points; the hares start on the inner two points on the rightmost side.
Players take turns moving a piece to an adjacent empty spot on the board.
The dogs attempt to block the hares, while the hares try to remain unblocked for as long as possible. If the hares are blocked, players swap roles and play again.
The player who lasts the longest as the hares wins.
Got it? Good. Because this isnt just a theoretical reconstruction. Its a game you can actually play online now. Crist and his team uploaded a simulation of Ludus Coriovalli to Ludii, and its available to anyone who wants to give it a try.
So why study the games that ancient civilizations played? Beyond simple curiosity, Crist notes, they offer a clearer picture of everyday life in the pastand a connection to history that isnt just dry numbers or broken pot shards.
“The ability to identify play and games in archaeology strengthens the understanding of our ludic heritage, and makes ancient life more accessible to people in the present, as the act of playing a board game is fundamentally the same today as it was in past millennia,” he writes in the paper.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) made some long-awaited permanent changes to the tax code. It also introduced short-term tax breaks that come with strict limits and phaseouts, and many of them are only available through 2028 or 2029. Here are four ways to get the most out of the OBBBA’s temporary provisions as you file your 2025 taxes and plan ahead.
Don’t dismiss itemizing your deductions
The OBBBA temporarily boosts the state and local tax deduction cap, or SALT, from $10,000 to $40,000 (for married couples filing jointly and single filers). This higher cap applies from 2025 through 2029.Run the numbers: For 2025, the standard deduction is $31,500 for married couples and $15,750 for singles. If your total itemized deductions including mortgage interest, charitable giving, and state and local taxes (up to the new $40,000 cap) add up to more than your standard deduction, you should itemize.Watch your income: The new $40,000 SALT cap isn’t for everyone. It begins to phase out if your modified adjusted gross income is over $500,000 (for all filers). If your MAGI reaches $600,000, your SALT deduction reverts to the original $10,000 limit.
Maximize the new targeted deductionsif you qualify
The OBBBA introduced several temporary above-the-line deductions (available whether you itemize or not) to help middle-income workers. But they have very strict income and benefit limits.The qualified overtime pay deduction: Capped at $25,000 for married couples filing jointly and $12,500 for singles. Only the extra “half-time” portion of your time-and-a-half pay qualifies for the deduction. For a married couple, this benefit begins to disappear if your MAGI hits $300,000 and is entirely gone once your MAGI reaches $550,000.The qualified tips income deduction: Allows you to write off qualified tip income up to $25,000 per tax return, whether you file as married or single. The deduction is only available for tips that are formally reported on a Form W-2 or Form 1099. It phases out sharply for higher earners, starting at a MAGI of $300,000 for married couples and $150,000 for singles, and is fully eliminated at $550,000 and $400,000, respectively.The auto loan interest deduction: This temporary deduction allows you to write off up to $10,000 of interest paid on a loan for a new, personal-use vehicle with final assembly in the US. (Leases are excluded.) It starts to phase out at $200,000 for married couples and $100,000 for singles and is completely gone by $250,000 and $150,000.
Seniors, time your 2026 Roth conversions carefully
If you are 65 or older, the OBBBA offers a new, temporary deduction for seniors of up to $12,000 for married couples ($6,000 per eligible spouse) and $6,000 for single filers. This is a welcome tax break, but it’s fragile.Beware the MAGI trap: This deduction begins to disappear for married couples with a MAGI over $150,000 and for singles over $75,000.Model Roth conversions for 2026: If you are a senior who is close to the $150,000 MAGI limit, a Roth conversion done in 2026 could push your income over the threshold, causing you to lose this entire $12,000 deduction. Work with your adviser to model any planned 2026 conversions.
Optimize income to qualify for the best breaks
Many of the OBBBA’s most valuable temporary provisions are income-sensitive, particularly those new targeted deductions and the elevated SALT cap. Keep these rules in mind for 2025 filing and 2026 tax planning.For your 2025 return: You can still influence your 2025 MAGI by:
Making 2025 HSA contributions (before the April 2026 tax deadline).
Making 2025 deductible IRA contributions, if you’re eligible.
Plan for 2026 income: If your 2026 income is likely to approach any phaseout thresholds (such as the $300,000 limit for tips/overtime or the $500,000 limit for the elevated SALT cap), consider strategies that help keep it within the qualifying range.
Postponing the sale of highly appreciated stock to avoid realizing large capital gains in 2026.
Delaying the exercise of nonqualified stock options if doing so would push you over a phaseout threshold.
Maximizing 401(k) and health savings account contributions to reduce your 2026 MAGI.
Holding off on large Roth conversions if they would increase your income above key limits.
Don’t let the technical limitations and phaseouts catch you by surprise. With a little smart planning, you can lock in significant tax savings.
This article was provided to The Associated Press by Morningstar. For more personal finance content, go to https://www.morningstar.com/personal-finance.Sheryl Rowling, CPA, is an editorial director, financial adviser for Morningstar.Related Links
How to Name a Charity as Your IRA Beneficiaryhttps://www.morningstar.com/personal-finance/how-name-charity-your-ira-beneficiary
6 Steps to Claiming Your Baby’s Free $1,000 From Uncle Samhttps://www.morningstar.com/personal-finance/6-steps-claiming-your-babys-free-1000-uncle-sam
8 Tips to Stop Worrying About Running Out of Money in Retirementhttps://www.morningstar.com/personal-finance/8-tips-stop-worrying-about-running-out-money-retirement
Sheryl Rowling of Morningstar
Leica is perhaps the most storied brand in photography. A portmanteau formed from the name of founder Ernst Leitz and the word camera, the first Leica popularized 35 milimeter photography, while the legendary M system standardized the modern rangefinder in 1954 and has a hallowed reputation to this day.
Leicas stewardship of its brand, however, has not always quite lived up to its history. The company historically outsourced most of its point-and-shoot camera design to Panasonic, slapping its iconic red dot on existing compacts and charging an unwarranted markup. Early smartphone collaborations with Huawei and Sharp were similarly surface-level.
But for the past few years, a partnership with Xiaomi has quietly been producing what I would say are the best phone cameras in the world. And for the Chinese smartphone makers latest flagship device, the Xiaomi 17 Ultra, Leicas branding and influence takes greater prominence than ever.
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[Photo: Xiaomi]
Two Models
Available in China now, the 17 Ultra is sold in two variants; theres the regular model, and another version called the Xiaomi 17 Ultra by Leica. Ive been using the latter model, though the camera hardware is nearly identical across the two.
This is a sleekly designed phone, and its the first to carry the Leica red dot. When Steve Jobs announced the iPhone 4 in 2010, which is still for my money the best-looking iPhone ever, he said its closest kin is like a beautiful old Leica camera. Well, the 17 Ultra really is like a Leica cameraand not just because it also looks like an iPhone 4, right down to the circular volume buttons.
The camera hardware is more capable and impressive than on any phone sold in the United States. The main sensor is a 1-inch type, the same used in enthusiast compact cameras like the Canon G7 X or Sonys RX100 series. The telephoto camera, meanwhile, has a 200-megapixel 1/1.4-inch sensorhuge for a telephotoand a lens that actually physically zooms. You get 3.2 times magnification at the wide end and it goes as far as 4.3 times before digital zoom kicks in, amounting to a 75 millimeter to 100 millimeter-equivalent focal length.
That might not sound like a huge zoom range, and in practice it isnt. But with a sensor this size, results remain extremely sharp by making use of a 2 times crop. That means that you can still get high-resolution images at optical zoom quality all the way through the range between 150 millimeters and 200 millimeters.
The Leica model of the 17 Ultra has a control ring around the sizable circular camera module, which can be customized to adjust various functions. Ive set mine to swap between preset focal lengths before reaching the physical zoom range, making it easy to make sure Im always getting the best optical quality. Theres satisfying haptic feedback as you turn the ring, lending the phone a more tactile, camera-like feel.
I do wish the 17 Ultra had a physical shutter button. Xiaomi sells more substantial photography kit cases that add extra grip and battery to the phone, but no ones quite gotten the built-in camera button design right yet and this would have been the perfect phone to do it on.
[Photo: Xiaomi]
The Software
But hardware aside, the real reason behind the success of the Xiaomi and Leica collaboration has been the software. The two companies work together on the image processing pipeline, and the results are beautiful, subtle colors that make for images that just dont look like they came from a phone. There are two default settings, Leica Vivid and Leica Authentic; I prefer the latter, which gives a vignetted, desaturated, and contrasty look that is not unlike the way I prefer to edit photos taken with dedicated cameras.
And the Xiaomi 17 Ultra by Leica takes this to the next level with a mode called Leica Essential, giving you more options inspired by two classic cameras. These arent like built-in filters, as they totally overhaul the phones image processing pipelines. The M9 setting emulates the CCD sensor of Leicas first full-frame digital rangefinder with always-on warm white balance, while the monochrome M3 setting is named after the first 35 millimeter M-mount camera and delivers gorgeously deep, fine-grained photos reminiscent of Leicas own Monopan 50 film.
These Leica Essential modes arent what youd want to use for casual snapshots or pictures of documents, but they put you in a different mindset as a photographer. In the same way that I choose a dedicated camera to take out for the day and work within its limitations until I get home, theres something fun and freeing about committing to a virtual M9 or M3 and seeing how it performs. The reslts are often stunning.
The Xiaomi 17 Ultra by Leica is the most advanced phone camera anywhere in the world on conventional metrics. But its more than thatits also by far the most enjoyable to actually shoot. By getting away from the sterility of excessively flattened and over sharpened iPhone or Pixel photos, Xiaomi and Leica have delivered a phone that really does feel like an actual camera.
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A Massachusetts-based seafood importer and distributor has recalled salmon that was sold across multiple states due to concerns that the product may be contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes, a potentially deadly bacteria.
The company, Slade Gorton & Co., says the recall affects one lot of Wellsley Farms Farm-Raised Atlantic Salmon. The two-pound packages of frozen salmon were sold at BJs Wholesale Club across seven states.
A recall notice was published Thursday, February 12, by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). To date, no illnesses have been reported.
Heres what you need to know.
What product is included in the recall?
The recall applies to one lot of two-pound packages of Wellsley Farms Farm-Raised Atlantic Salmon.
The salmon was sold at BJs Wholesale Club locations in seven states between January 31, 2026, and February 7, 2026. The impacted bags of the frozen salmon were sold in the freezer section at BJs Wholesale Club locations in these states:
Delaware
Maryland
New Jersey
New York
North Carolina
Pennsylvania
Virginia
Recalled product packaging details
Each two-pound bag of recalled Wellsley Farms Farm-Raised Atlantic Salmon features the Wellsley Farms logo and the text “Farm-Raised Atlantic Salmon” on the front.
The UPC code 888670025963 and lot number 3896 are listed on the back of the recalled product packaging, below the cooking instructions and nutrition facts panel.
Recall is due to a risk of Listeria contamination
Slade Gorton & Co. announced the recall on February 11 after a sample collected and randomly tested by the FDA tested positive for Listeria monocytogenes.
The FDA recall notice mentions that the seafood distributor is investigating the contamination and taking steps to prevent it from happening again.
Dont consume the recalled product
BJs Wholesale Club is notifying members who have purchased the affected product.
If you purchased the recalled product, dont consume it. Customers can call 1-888-628-0730 for details on how to get a full refund and what to do with the remaining product.
What is Listeria, and who is most at risk of Listeria infection?
Listeria is a disease-causing bacteria that can be spread through food. Listeria infection is caused by eating food contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes.
According to the Mayo Clinic, healthy people rarely become very ill from Listeria infection. But the disease can turn deadly for some.
Those more at risk of Listeria infection include pregnant women, people older than 65, and people with weakened immune systems.
Mild symptoms of Listeria infection include:
Fever
Muscle aches
Nasuea
Vomiting
Direeah
More severe symptoms of Listeria infection include:
Headache
Stiff neck
Confusion
Loss of balance
Convulsions
If you think you have developed symptoms of Listeria infection, contact a healthcare professional.
Investors in Pinterest (NYSE: PINS) are waking up to a wall of red this morning. The stock price of the popular digital image-sharing board has fallen off a cliff after the company reported its Q4 2025 results yesterday. Heres what you need to know.
Pinterests Q4 2025 results
From a quick glance, Pinterests results for its fourth quarter of fiscal 2025 didnt look too bad. The company reported some impressive gains in a couple of key metrics. Those metrics include:
Total revenue: $1.32 billion (up 14% year over year)
Global Monthly Active Users (MAUs): 619 million (up 12% year over year)
However, despite those gains, the company’s $1.32 billion in revenue came in below what analysts were expecting. As noted by CNBC, LSEG consensus estimates were that Pinterest would post $1.33 billion in revenue.
The company also reported an adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of 67 cents. That was below analyst expectations of an EPS of 69 cents.
Worse, Pinterest said it expects its current-quarter revenue, for Q1 of its fiscal 2026, to be between $951 million and $971 million.
While that range represents year-over-year growth of between 11% and 14%, even the high-end estimate is well below the $980 million analysts were expecting.
Pinterest blames tariffs for earnings miss
So what is behind the worse-than-expected results? The company blamed one primary thing: tariffs.
At first, a tariff’s impact on Pinterests revenue might seem a little unbelievable. After all, Pinterest does not import and sell physical goods, which would seem to lessen any potential impact that President Trumps erratic tariff policies could have on the companys bottom line.
The problem for Pinterest is that while the company may not be in the business of selling imported goods, many of Pinterests main customersits advertisersare. And those advertisers are responding to increased tariff costs by cutting back on their ad spend, which impacts Pinterests bottom line.
Many of the largest retailers have been disproportionately impacted by tariffs and have been pulling back on advertising spend across the industry as they seek to protect their margins, Pinterests CEO, Bill Ready, said on the companys financial call, according to a PitchPook transcript of the call. Our higher mix of large retailers relative to some of our peers has resulted in us feeling more of an impact.
But while Ready shifted the blame to tariffs, he also conceded that the company wasnt diversified enough when it came to its range of advertisers.
This highlights the need for us to further accelerate our growth with a broader set of mid-market, SMB, and international advertisers with less than $30 billion of GMV [gross merchandise volume], Ready said. This is the next phase of our sales and go-to-market transformation.
Pinterest’s stock price has had a bad year
Even before todays 20% premarket decline, PINS stock has been having a rough time lately. The companys stock price closed at $18.54 yesterday. That represented a fall of more than 28% since the year began, and a staggering 52% drop over the past twelve months.
At its current premarket price of around $14.56 a share, PINS stock has not seen a price this low since early 2020.
To put Pinterest’s recent share price doldrums into a broader context, the stock market Pinterest trades onthe New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)has seen gains while PINS continues to drop.
Data from Yahoo Finance shows the NYSE Composite Index has risen 5.3% year to date, and more than 15.5% over the past 12 months.
Since Spencer Rascoff took over as Match Group CEO in early 2025, he has set about trying to revive its portfolio of dating apps, in part by winning back user trust and courting Gen Z. Trust is the foundation of real connections, and we are committed to rebuilding it with urgency, accountability, and an unwavering focus on the user, Rascoff said last March in a letter to employees sharing his vision.
As part of that turnaround and effort to cultivate trust, Match Groupthe parent company of Tinder, Hinge, and OkCupidhas also sought to revamp its internal culture over the last year, in the interest of imbuing the company with greater transparency. A few months into Rascoffs tenure as CEO, the company also announced layoffs, which affected 13% of its workforce.
In a LinkedIn post today detailing Match Group’s culture shift, Rascoff argued that transparency had been critical to the companys transformation over the last year. Ive seen a noticeable shift: stronger collaboration, faster ideas sharing, and sharper execution, he wrote. It’s a sign to me that the culture of transparency has taken hold.
Rascoff shared how, exactly, Match Group fostered that transparency, starting with giving employees a direct line to ask questions or provide feedback.
Employees have the option of remaining anonymous or including their name and engaging in a back-and-forth with Rascoff if appropriate. I read every single submission, and I respond to every message that comes in, he wrote, adding, If the sender includes their name, I follow up with that person directly, and many great conversations have been sparked in this way. If the sender chooses to remain anonymous, then I write up an answer and share it broadly with the company monthly.
This feedback channel has prompted more than 300 messages and led to several changes at Match Group, including a shared GitHub repository for engineers across the company and a standing monthly meeting between Rascoff and the Gen Z employee resource group. Rascoff also claims to answer every question that is submitted prior to the companys all-hands meetings.
Transparency only works if it goes both ways, he wrote on LinkedIn. You cant expect people to speak up if you dont show them it makes a difference.
Rascoff has also taken the unusual step of not only asking for feedback but actually receiving feedback on his own performance in a public forum. Match Groups head of talent management conducted his mid-year review in an all hands meeting last year, allowing employees to listen in on his performance evaluation and see the goals that would govern his priorities for the rest of 2025. In March, Rascoff also plans to share his 2025 self-assessment with the whole company.
Its not yet clear whether Match Groups overhaul will prove successful. But Rascoff claims the push for transparency has already moved the needle on company culture.
At Tinder, employee engagement has jumped by 10% over the last six months. And in Match Groups annual employee survey, there was a 13% increase in the share of people who agreed with the statement that the executive team keeps them informed.
One year as CEO, whats mattered most to me is creating the conditions where great people can thrive, Rascoff told Fast Company. When teams are trusted and aligned, they move faster and feel more connected to the work. Watching that happen has been deeply motivating for me, and it makes me excited about the progress we can continue to make from here.
Kathy Ruemmler, the top lawyer at storied investment bank Goldman Sachs and former White House counsel to President Barack Obama, announced her resignation Thursday, after emails between her and Jeffrey Epstein showed a close relationship where she described him as an “older brother” and downplayed his sex crimes.Ruemmler said in a statement that she would “step down as Chief Legal Officer and General Counsel of Goldman Sachs as of June 30, 2026.”Up until her resignation, Ruemmler repeatedly tried to distance herself from the emails and other correspondence and had been defiant that she would not resign from Goldman’s top legal post, which she had held since 2020.While Ruemmler has called Epstein a “monster” in recent statements, she had a much different relationship with Epstein before he was arrested a second time for sex crimes in 2019 and later killed himself in a Manhattan jail. Ruemmler called Epstein “Uncle Jeffrey” in emails and said she adored him.In a statement before her resignation, a Goldman Sachs spokesperson said Ruemmler “regrets ever knowing him.”In her statement Thursday, Ruemmler said: “Since I joined Goldman Sachs six years ago, it has been my privilege to help oversee the firm’s legal, reputational, and regulatory matters; to enhance our strong risk management processes; and to ensure that we live by our core value of integrity in everything we do. My responsibility is to put Goldman Sachs’ interests first.”Goldman CEO David Solomon said in a separate statement: “As one of the most accomplished professionals in her field, Kathy has also been a mentor and friend to many of our people, and she will be missed. I accepted her resignation, and I respect her decision.”During her time in private practice after she left the White House in 2014, Ruemmler received several expensive gifts from Epstein, including luxury handbags and a fur coat. The gifts were given after Epstein had already been convicted of sex crimes in 2008 and was registered as a sex offender.“So lovely and thoughtful! Thank you to Uncle Jeffrey!!!” Ruemmler wrote to Epstein in 2018.Historically, Wall Street frowns on gift-giving between clients and bankers or Wall Street lawyers, particularly high-end gifts that could pose a conflict of interest. Goldman Sachs requires its employees to get preapproval before receiving or giving gifts from clients, according to the company’s code of conduct, partly in order to not run afoul of anti-bribery laws.As late as December, Goldman CEO David Solomon described Ruemmler as an “excellent lawyer” and said she had his full faith and backing.
Ken Sweet, AP Business Writer
If you are dealing with an employee or colleague who consistently underperforms and makes excuses, it can be extremely frustrating. When someone underperforms it not only slows down team progress and lowers the quality of work, but also forces others to take on extra tasks. This increases the workload for the rest of the team, which often means more stress and potential burnout for those left picking up the load.
It can also create a sense of unfairness and lead to conflicts among team members due to the uneven distribution of effort and responsibility. For managers, handling underperformance adds extra work as well, taking up valuable time and energy that could be spent on other important tasks.
If the issue goes unaddressed, it can erode trust among team members. When leaders fail to act, people may see the situation as unfair and believe there is little accountability for behavior. This doesnt just impact how the team works together in the short term; over time, it can lower team morale and slow down progress toward goals. If leaders dont step up, people dont feel safe. When someone keeps making excuses, it’s important to approach the situation constructively.
Here are some steps you can take as a colleague, team, or leader.
Be clear on your goals
Whatever your companys style, one thing is key: Make sure the goals you are working on are crystal clear and connected to the teams overall purpose. If you are a leader, you can schedule a team meeting or, if needed, a one-on-one meeting in advance to discuss the team members role and responsibilities within the team. If you notice behavior that’s full of excuses and lacks focus on goals: Spell out what good, bad, and totally unacceptable results look like. Clearly communicate what you require from your colleagues or the team, including deadlines, outcomes, and standards. Once you agree on these expectations, you can hold them accountable and give specific feedback if the work isn’t meeting expectations. Make sure everybody understands the importance of their responsibilities. Next, get on the same page about the process. Together break down the steps needed to do their job well, maybe even walk them through it or ask what they need. And answer any questions they have early on to avoid future excuses about not knowing what to do.
Find out why
It’s important to delve deeper by asking open-ended questions to uncover the root cause if somebody is not working as expected or needed. Why are you not meeting your goals? can be a simple but helpful question. Start by listening to their explanations without jumping to conclusion or immediate judgment. Sometimes, what initially appears as an excuse may actually come from valid concerns or obstacles that you hadn’t previously recognized. There might be underlying issues that individuals may be hesitant to tell you directly.
If we know what the reasons are behind their excuses, we might be able to help them. Is the task too challenging for them? Are they bad at time management? Do they need training or other resources? Ask them what support they need to overcome their challenges and see if you are able and willing to offer it.
Explain the impact
We should communicate to people the impact their behavior has on the work, themselves, or others. This way, they’ll understand how their actions slow everyone down and why it’s important to do better. If they dont know, they cant change their behavior. Give feedback that is specific, objective, and focused on behavior and outcomes, not personality.
Ive noticed that youve missed a deadline three times now. You often have an explanation, which I understand, things come up. But when it happens more than once, it comes across as avoiding ownership and it impacts the teams momentum. Meeting deadlines is a basic expectation, so I need you to take full responsibility and let me know early please if something might slip.
Explain clearly what happens if they don’t improve and what they gain if they do.
Adjust the work
If things aren’t working out, as a leader you may decide it’s time to rethink an employees tasks. Instead of letting excuses become a pattern, encourage a shift towards finding solutions. If necessary, consider reassigning some of their tasks (temporarily) to better align with their capabilities.
The feedback may not only focus on their content or goals but also on their overall approach to life. It’s important to address how their actions affect both others and their own professional development. Encourage them to reflect on why they often resort to making excuses.
Set Boundaries
Sometimes enough is enough. You have to let people know in advance what’s at stake. Explain how doing their job successfully can create opportunities and build their reputation. On the flip side, not getting the job done will have consequences. If after support and opportunities to improve, the behavior doesnt change, it may be necessary to take more formal steps depending on the context. At that point you may need to have that difficult conversation and part ways. Sometimes reaching a breaking point is unavoidable.
With these actions, you can help your colleagues or employees step up their game and create a more productive work environment. Remember, the goal is to create a safe culture of accountability and growth that benefits everyone involved. Keep motivating and supporting your team towards excellence but dont be afraid to set boundaries along the way.
You can always remember the phrase: We help first, but we hold firm.
From AI tools to self-driving cars, new technologies regularly tout themselves as being autonomous. Yet, their companies often have to recruit us humans for help in unexpected ways.
The most recent example comes courtesy of Waymos self-driving cars. The Alphabet-owned company has been hiring DoorDash drivers to close vehicle doors after a passenger leaves them open, CNBC reports.
Yes, Waymos whole thing is driverless cars, but it needs another type of driver to show up and fix the simplest things.
The arguably embarrassing predicament came to light when an Atlanta-based DoorDash driver shared Waymos request on Reddit. It reportedly offered the gig worker $11.25 to close a Waymo door less than a mile away. The driver was guaranteed $6.25 with the remaining $5 sent after verified completion.
The request also showed a deadline to complete the task and clearly stated that it didnt require pickup or delivery.
Waymo and DoorDash have confirmed to CNBC that the companies are running a pilot program in Atlanta to get cars quickly on their way. Waymo claims that automated door closures are coming to future vehicles.
Fast Company has reached out to Waymo and DoorDash for more information, including when Waymo will roll out automated door closures. We will update this post if we hear back.
Atlanta is one of the limited cities where Waymo vehicles operate without a safety driver. Notably, though, riders in Atlanta call the cars through Uber, which operates UberEats, a DoorDash competitor.
However, Waymo and DoorDash announced in October that they would be testing autonomous delivery services in Phoenix.
Waymo has also used Honk, an independent roadside assistance company, to shut doors. The Washington Post reports that users have received $24 a door in Los Angeles.
Fleet response workers on call from abroad
This isnt Waymos first time relying on humans for support. Earlier this month, Waymos chief safety officer, Mauricio Pea, told senators during a hearing that the company has some fleet response workers stationed abroad.
These individuals, based in countries such as the Philippines, can provide suggestions when a vehicle is in an unusual circumstance.
Senator Ed Markey of Massachusetts called this unacceptable, Business Insider reports. He continued: Having people overseas influencing American vehicles is a safety issue.