A signature documentary series that follows Bloomberg's most exclusive journalism, including Businessweek's biggest stories. It breaks down the most interesting business story of the week, and explains why it matters.
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A 10-year-old boy's local lemonade business attracts some big corporate support. Then there's Nia the Loc God, a 21-year-old who started her own haircare enterprise, including a salon and a burgeoning product line, becoming a millionaire CEO in the process. Finally, meet the guy who goes from Major League ballpark to ballpark, catching more baseballs than anyone else.
Rail Strikes May Cost Tourism and Leisure Industries Over £1 Billion
Musk Signals ‘Maybe More Down the Road’ for Dogecoin After Merch
Payment Technology Company Paya to Explore Sale
Rogers, Shaw to Sell Mobile Unit to Quebecor for $2.2 Billion
Congo’s M23 Rebels Plan to Take Trading Hub Goma, UN Report Says
Biden Says He and China’s Xi to Talk ‘Soon,’ Weighing Tariffs
America’s Top 1% Lose $1.5 Trillion on Stocks Before Bear Market
Gold Billionaire to Moonlight as DJ at Sold-Out Cairo Club
Naomi Osaka Won't Play at Wimbledon, Citing Achilles Tendon
US Open Updates: Slow Going in Opening Hours of US Open
Why Is the Cost of Rent Going Up? Ask the Fed
Extra Fees Are Adding Insult to Consumers’ Injury
Why Is It So Hard to Find a Decent Public Bathroom?
Adults Who Love Toys? The Toy Industry Loves Them, Too
ESPN’s NHL Deal Shows Broadcasters a New Way to Profit From Sports Rights
America’s Convention Center Kings Want You Wearing Lanyards Again
‘Banking While Black’ Is the Next Target for Civil Rights Lawyer
NYC Mayor Adams Allocates $6.7 Million Toward LGBTQ Social Services
A Quarter of All Abortion Clinics Would Close in US If Roe Is Overturned
Yellowstone Flooding Rebuild Could Take Years, Cost Billions
Hot Weekend for Europe, Officials Warn of Extreme Fire Risk
The Museum Seeking to Unlock a War-Hit Nation’s Mineral Wealth
Rikers Jail Replacement Plan Pits Chinatown Against New York City
Without Commuters, US Transit Agencies Are Running Out of Options
DeFi Platform MakerDAO Pauses Some Aave-Related Lending Activity
Memories of Bitcoin-Beating Returns Keep Hex Holders Hanging On
Musk Signals ‘Maybe More Down the Road’ for Dogecoin After Merch
The region is on high alert after Russia made its biggest moves yet to use energy as a weapon.
Gauges at the natural gas receiving station for the European gas connection pipeline, in Lubmin, Germany.
Photographer: Stefan Sauer/picture allianceGetty Images
Throughout the entire Cold War and in the decades since, Russia was a stable supplier of gas to Europe. That changed this week.
Russia slashed gas supplies in apparent retaliation over Europe’s support for Kyiv. After its biggest moves yet to use energy as a weapon, gas rationing in the region is now a very real prospect.