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Andy Burnham vows to be ‘pro-business Prime Minister’ and to reindustrialise Britain

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Andy Burnham has been elected as the new Labour leader and will become the UK’s next Prime Minister on Monday

Andy Burnham giving his first speech as leader of the Labour Party

Andy Burnham giving his first speech as leader of the Labour Party(Image: Getty Images)

Andy Burnham has promised to be a ‘pro-business’ Prime Minister who will reindustrialise Britain and champion the nation’s small businesses.

Addressing party members following his coronation as Labour leader on Friday, the former Manchester mayor launched an attack on “four decades of neoliberalism” he argued had concentrated political power in Westminster while “economic power was privatised”.

Echoing themes from his initial speech upon returning to Westminster last month, Mr Burnham vowed to transfer greater control to local communities, arguing that “political power was centralised and economic power was privatised” during the 1980s, as reported by City AM.

“We will take back power from Westminster and Whitehall and give it to the place where you live,” he declared to Labour members. “Power to improve your high street, backing local businesses such as the pubs and the shops that bring them to life.

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“And make no mistake, everybody, I will be a pro-business leader of the Labour party as I was a pro-business mayor of Greater Manchester.”

Mr Burnham’s comments followed his victory in an uncontested leadership race triggered by Keir Starmer’s resignation.

He successfully fended off Nigel Farage’s Reform UK in last month’s Makerfield by-election. During Friday’s address, he promised to extend the pledge he made to “restore hope” in the Greater Manchester seat across the entire country.

“This is… a plan to give people more power to bring back the hope that we have all been missing too much, and people are looking for us to deliver,” he said. “And we will.”

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Mr Burnham’s formal election as Labour leader means he is now officially in line to succeed Keir Starmer as Prime Minister on Monday, when the London MP tenders his resignation to the King. In doing so, he will become the UK’s seventh Prime Minister within a decade.

The newly elected Labour leader chose not to unveil any specific policies or announce cabinet appointments. Instead, he outlined a series of broad pledges to reverse the “wrong turns the country has taken since the 1980s” and breathe new life into the nation’s industrial heartlands.

“The country surrendered control of the essentials: housing, water, energy, transport, and left people exposed to higher costs,” he told members. “That, in turn, led to the concentration of more wealth and power in the hands of fewer people and fewer places.

“Large parts of Britain were deindustrialised without the power to set new ambitions for themselves.”

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Mr Burnham has previously indicated he will push through a further shake-up of business rates upon taking office, which would impose higher levies on out-of-town warehouses to finance tax relief for high-street retailers and pubs. Michael Kill, chief executive of the Night Time Industries Association, said the new Labour leader’s address marked an opportunity for his sector to “move beyond survival towards sustainable growth.

“Our night time industries, from hospitality and nightlife to music, culture and entertainment, are central to Britain’s social and cultural economy,” he said. “They create jobs, drive investment and bring people together. They are the heartbeat of our high streets, towns and cities.”

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Deadliest Catch Dedicates Episode to Capt. Keith Colburn’s Nephew Gregory Colburn, Who Died Suddenly at 32

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Deadliest Catch Dedicates Episode to Capt. Keith Colburn's Nephew Gregory

Discovery Channel’s “Deadliest Catch” paid tribute to a former member of its Wizard crew during Friday’s episode, honoring Gregory Colburn, the nephew of longtime captain Keith Colburn, who died in May at the age of 32.

At the close of the July 17 episode, the network aired a dedication reading, “This episode is dedicated to Monte’s son Gregory Colburn, Wizard crewman 2018–2022,” accompanied by a video montage chronicling Gregory’s time aboard the vessel. Gregory, whose full name was Gregory Martin Urjevich Colburn, died on May 19 in Chico, California. According to a recap of the episode published by TV Insider, his death followed an unexpected motorcycle accident that month, though his family’s published obituary does not specify a cause of death and no official cause has been publicly confirmed.

Gregory served as a crewman aboard the F/V Wizard, the commercial crab fishing vessel captained by his uncle, Keith Colburn, from 2018 through 2022. Keith has appeared on “Deadliest Catch” since the show’s third season, which aired in 2007, making the Wizard and its crew a long-running fixture of the Discovery Channel series. Gregory’s father, Monte Colburn, serves as relief captain and mate aboard the Wizard, having worked alongside his brother Keith in the Bering Sea crab fishing industry for decades.

Born November 21, 1993, in Lakeview, Oregon, Gregory grew up in Kings Beach, California, on the North Shore of Lake Tahoe, where he attended school from kindergarten through 12th grade within the Tahoe Truckee Unified School District. Before finding his way to commercial fishing, he worked in restaurants around the North Lake Tahoe area. According to his obituary, Gregory eventually “found his calling fishing crab on the Bering Sea in Alaska,” a pursuit that connected him to generations of his family’s long history in the demanding commercial fishing industry.

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His obituary describes a deep sense of pride in both his work at sea and his time on television. “Gregory was proud of his time at sea and of being on The Discovery Channel reality show Deadliest Catch,” the obituary reads. Viewers who followed his appearances on the series came to know him for his dedication and resilience navigating one of the most physically demanding professions in the country, often cited as among the most dangerous jobs in America due to the harsh conditions of Bering Sea crab fishing.

Between fishing seasons, Gregory made his home in Chico, California, where he met his fiancée, Caitlin Nenadal. The couple became engaged, and according to his obituary, Gregory “lived for Caitlin, to whom he was engaged, and for riding his Harley Davidson motorcycle.” Those who knew him remembered him for the warmth he brought to his relationships both on and off the boat. “Gregory had a heart of gold which shone through his eyes and his smile; his kind heart was rivaled only by his loyalty to his family and friends,” his obituary states. “Gregory impacted all whose lives he touched and he will be sorely missed.”

Gregory is survived by his fiancée, Caitlin Nenadal; his daughter, Scarlette Colburn; his parents, Catherine and Monte Colburn; his grandfather, Martin Urjevich; five siblings; and a wide circle of aunts, uncles, cousins and friends. His family has not publicly disclosed additional details surrounding the circumstances of his death and has asked for privacy as they continue to grieve.

The tribute aired during an episode that also captured a tense moment for the Wizard crew, as the show documented a life-threatening incident in which a crew member fell overboard amid severe weather and 22-foot seas. According to the episode, the crew managed to complete a successful rescue without serious injury, with Keith Colburn reflecting afterward on how close the situation had come to a far worse outcome. The crew then returned to work, hauling in a full quota of crab despite the dangerous conditions, before the episode closed with the dedication to Gregory.

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Gregory’s death adds to a series of losses the “Deadliest Catch” community has experienced over the show’s nearly two-decade run. The series has previously paid tribute to other crew members and captains who have died, including longtime captain Phil Harris, who died in 2010 following a stroke, and deckhand Todd Meadows, whose death was similarly honored on the show earlier this year with a posthumous appearance and tribute alongside his children. The recurring losses reflect both the physical risks inherent to commercial fishing in the Bering Sea and the close-knit nature of the fishing families the show has followed since its debut.

“Deadliest Catch” airs Fridays at 8 p.m. Eastern and Pacific time on Discovery Channel, continuing to follow multiple fishing vessels and their crews as they navigate the Bering Sea’s crab fishing seasons, an industry the show has documented for nearly 20 years. The Wizard, under Keith Colburn’s command, remains one of the program’s central vessels, with Monte Colburn continuing to serve alongside his brother in the years since Gregory’s departure from the crew in 2022.

Fans of the series took to social media following Friday’s broadcast to share their condolences after learning of Gregory’s death, with many recalling his presence on the show during his four seasons aboard the Wizard. The tribute marked one of the more emotional moments of the current season, offering viewers a chance to remember a young man whose family’s connection to Bering Sea crab fishing spans multiple generations, and whose own passion for life at sea became a defining part of his identity both on camera and off.

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White House Backs Argentina World Cup Players Over Falklands Banner Amid UK Calls for FIFA Investigation

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A November 2020 file photo of a Mexican flag in Mexico state, Mexico

The White House has defended Argentina’s football players after they displayed a banner asserting the country’s claim to the Falkland Islands following their World Cup semifinal victory over England, setting up a diplomatic disagreement with the United Kingdom just days before Argentina’s championship match against Spain.

Following Argentina’s 2-1 win in a tense semifinal in Atlanta on Wednesday, several players held up a banner reading “Las Malvinas son Argentinas,” using Argentina’s own term for the disputed South Atlantic islands. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer supported calls Friday for FIFA to investigate the display and appeared to voice support for Spain ahead of Sunday’s World Cup final against Argentina.

Andrew Giuliani, head of the White House’s FIFA taskforce, pushed back against criticism of the banner, framing the players’ actions as a matter of free expression protected under the U.S. Constitution. “We believe in our first amendment rights here in the United States of America,” Giuliani said, adding that Argentina’s players would have the “opportunity to be able to make statements” while competing in the U.S.

The disagreement arrives at a delicate moment for British politics, with Andy Burnham set to take over as prime minister on Monday. England and Argentina are separately scheduled to face off in rugby’s Nations Championship on Saturday in Argentina, a fixture where England players have reportedly threatened to walk off the field if any of their teammates are subjected to racist abuse.

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Starmer’s spokesperson addressed the banner controversy directly on Thursday, reaffirming Britain’s longstanding position on the islands’ sovereignty. “The World Cup might not be ours, but the Falkland Islands definitely are. Our position is unchanged. Self-determination rests with the islanders and our commitment to the Falklands will never waver,” the spokesperson said, adding that “potential action is a matter for FIFA, but it’s been a fantastic World Cup and we’ve said throughout that politics should stay out of football.” The spokesperson also passed along Starmer’s good wishes to both finalists, adding pointedly, “especially Spain.”

Business Secretary Peter Kyle offered a sharper assessment of the incident earlier Thursday, telling the BBC that the banner represented “an egregious violation of the rules of not having political activity as part of the football.” Kyle added, “The World Cup has [as] one of its central tenets that politics is separate from football. That is now a matter for FIFA. I expect FIFA to do its investigation thoroughly.” Starmer’s spokesperson confirmed the prime minister endorsed Kyle’s remarks urging FIFA to open a formal investigation.

FIFA has confirmed it is reviewing the incident through its standard disciplinary process. In a statement, the organization said, “As is standard procedure, FIFA’s independent disciplinary committee is assessing the match reports and considering the relevant circumstances before deciding on potential further steps based on the FIFA disciplinary code.” No timeline has been given for when that review might conclude or what sanctions, if any, might follow.

The episode is not without precedent within international football’s governing bodies. In 2024, Spain players Rodri and Álvaro Morata were suspended for one match by UEFA after chanting “Gibraltar is Spanish” during celebrations in Madrid following Spain’s win over England in the Euros final, a separate territorial dispute between Spain and Britain over the peninsula at the southern tip of the Iberian Peninsula.

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Wednesday’s semifinal had been anticipated as a potential flashpoint for tensions between Argentina and England well before kickoff, given the countries’ shared history tied to the Falklands. More than 900 people were killed during the 1982 war that erupted after Argentina invaded the islands, a conflict that ended with British forces retaining control of the territory, which remains a British Overseas Territory to this day.

The banner controversy follows a separate diplomatic dispute that emerged earlier this month, when Argentina complained that a Royal Navy vessel, HMS Medway, had passed through what it considers its national waters without permission while sailing from the Falklands to Chile. Starmer’s spokesperson rejected that characterization, saying Britain had notified the Argentine government in advance of the voyage. “We notified the Argentinian government in advance of HMS Medway undertaking a routine logistics visit to Chile between 5 and 8 July to support British Antarctic Survey operations, which will deliver essential stores and supplies to sustain scientific research in Antarctica,” the spokesperson said. “The Royal Navy always operates in full compliance with international law and the transit from the Falkland Islands to Chile was carried out via the most direct practicable route, considering operational safety and weather factors to ensure timely delivery.”

The Falkland Islands government issued its own statement responding to the banner display, expressing disappointment though not surprise at the players’ actions. The government said it was “disappointed – though regrettably not surprised” that Argentina’s footballers had “decided to tarnish” the semifinal, describing it as “a game that did not in any case involve the Falkland Islands.” The statement continued: “That said, it is hardly news to anyone that the people of the islands were victims of an aggressive invasion in 1982, which left many traumatised. The banner displayed by Argentina last night, therefore, was particularly insensitive for many people in the Falklands … We hope FIFA will make good on their promise to keep politics out of sport and sanction all behaviour of this nature in line with its own rules.”

The controversy adds a geopolitical subplot to a World Cup final already carrying significant weight on the pitch, with Argentina seeking to become the first nation in more than six decades to win consecutive World Cup titles when it faces Spain on Sunday at New York New Jersey Stadium. Whether FIFA ultimately issues any formal sanction against the Argentine Football Association over the banner display remains uncertain, though the governing body’s past handling of similar politically charged celebrations, including the 2024 UEFA suspensions of Rodri and Morata, suggests some form of disciplinary response is possible in the days following the tournament’s conclusion.

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BUZZ Investing: BUZZ Lags As Market Leadership Broadens

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BUZZ Investing: BUZZ Lags As Market Leadership Broadens

VanEck is a global asset management firm offering ETFs, mutual funds, private funds, model portfolios, institutional strategies, separately managed accounts, as well as UCITS funds. Since our founding in 1955, putting our clients’ interests first, in all market environments, has been at the heart of the firm’s mission. VanEck has a long history of looking beyond financial markets to spot trends that create meaningful investment opportunities. We were one of the first U.S. asset managers to give investors access to international markets, which set the tone for identifying asset classes and themes such as gold investing in 1968, emerging markets in 1993, and exchange traded funds in 2006 that later helped shape the investment industry. The firm oversees $161.7 billion in assets as of September 30, 2025. Disclosures: http://ow.ly/SZ9450N5qTJ.

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Osterweis Capital Management Q3 2026 Equity Outlook

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Marex Group Stock Impresses With Q4 Results (NASDAQ:MRX)

Osterweis Capital Management was founded in 1983 to serve the portfolio management needs of high net worth individuals and institutions. We believe the best way to protect and grow assets is through carefully selected, high conviction portfolios that are designed to capture upside in favorable markets and limit downside during selloffs. We manage equities and fixed income, which are available through mutual funds and separate accounts. Note: This account is not managed or monitored by Osterweis Capital Management, and any messages sent via Seeking Alpha will not receive a response. For inquiries or communication, please use the firm’s official channels. Mutual fund investing involves risk. Principal loss is possible. Distributed by Quasar Distributors, LLC.

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Wall Street Raises Expectations for Goldman, Other Banks After Strong Earnings

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Wall Street Raises Expectations for Goldman, Other Banks After Strong Earnings

Wall Street Raises Expectations for Goldman, Other Banks After Strong Earnings

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Chevron: Solid Energy Demand Ahead

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Chevron: Solid Energy Demand Ahead

Chevron: Solid Energy Demand Ahead

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Why I’m 80% Cash While Everyone’s Busy Blaming Kimi K3 (SP500)

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Why I'm 80% Cash While Everyone's Busy Blaming Kimi K3 (SP500)

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Thematic. Top down. I often find the theme before I find the stock. My philosophy is that themes are often born quiet and die loud. I try to catch them while they’re still finding their voice. When the music plays, I mainly chase pockets that rhyme with growth, momentum, perception shifts, and sometimes even the most absurd narratives (mostly AI-related). When the music slows and the tape deteriorates, I don’t wait around. I raise cash/rotate out, and watch for the next setup. A parabolic run may trigger a similar move. During a bull run, you won’t find much common ground between the deep value crowd and me. I liked the core ideas of deep value investors, and I briefly followed that philosophy. However, it demands patience, and the AI supercycle broke whatever patience I had left. The market changed, and so did I. My style is not set in stone. I’m mostly long when the music is playing. When it stops/slows down, I may dabble with shorts via put options, although it’s not my forte. My style is highly speculative. I have a high risk tolerance that most rational investors would find alarming. I don’t have a favorite timeframe. That said, I trade mostly the mid-term and the short-term. I have a pathetic low six-digit portfolio, and I consider myself part of the mid to low end of the K-shaped economy. It sometimes drops to the five-digit range when life has other plans. I’ve been in the game since mid 2024, although my first dabbles with stocks (i.e., burning $100 trading accounts in a matter of days) go back to the early/mid 2010s. I have a B.Sc. in aeronautical engineering and experience as a consultant in the aerospace sector. The latter statement is not relevant to my investment style, but I thought to add it for self-indulgent purposes. I live on the wrong side of the Atlantic. The opening bell is my lunch bell. I like astrology, so I’m a follower of technical analysis (mainly trends and support/resistance/psychological levels). I also look at the fundamentals of individual names, although the theme and the macro often prevail in my decision-making. I dislike empty suits, high-level BS, deep-level BS (especially), unnecessary jargon, and self-indulgent, third-person written introductions with an air of superiority.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

I may initiate a long position in any of the securities named in this piece within the next 72 hours.
I am not a registered investment adviser, broker, dealer, or tax professional. This article, including any comments or replies I post, reflects my personal opinions only and is provided for informational and educational purposes. Nothing I write is investment, legal, tax, or financial advice, or a personalized recommendation to buy, sell, hold, or short any security. My views may change without notice. Nothing I write is tailored to any reader’s objectives, financial situation, risk tolerance, or portfolio. Investing involves risk, including possible loss of principal. Readers should conduct their own research and consult a qualified professional before making investment decisions.

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Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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X (Twitter) Down? Users Report Widespread Outage Early Saturday Morning as Downdetector Complaints Surge

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Elon Musk has overhauled X including changing its name from Twitter since his purchase in 2022

Users of the social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter, began reporting widespread access problems early Saturday morning, according to outage-tracking service Downdetector, which recorded a sharp spike in user complaints beginning at 3:46 a.m. Eastern time.

Downdetector, which aggregates real-time reports from users to identify potential service disruptions across websites and apps, flagged the surge in its social media post, prompting the hashtag #XTwitterDown to begin trending on the platform as affected users shared their experiences. As of Saturday morning, X had not issued a public statement addressing the reported outage, and the platform’s official developer API status page had not shown any confirmed incident, a pattern that has occurred during several of the platform’s previous disruptions this year.

Saturday’s reported outage adds to what has become a recurring pattern of service disruptions for X throughout 2026. The platform has experienced at least one notable outage roughly every month this year, according to tracking by multiple outlets, with incidents ranging from brief, localized disruptions lasting under an hour to more severe events affecting tens of thousands of users across multiple countries.

One of the year’s most significant disruptions occurred in February, when users across the United States, United Kingdom and India reported widespread access issues beginning early Monday morning. Downdetector recorded more than 40,000 user reports of problems with the platform as the outage unfolded, with the number continuing to climb throughout the morning. That February incident came not long after X owner Elon Musk announced plans to make the platform’s recommendation algorithm, including the code determining which organic and advertising posts are shown to users, fully open source, with updates to be released every four weeks alongside developer notes explaining any changes.

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X has also experienced more severe, longer-lasting outages tied to issues beyond its own infrastructure. In November 2025, the platform suffered what was described as its most significant outage of that stretch, when Cloudflare, a major cloud and network services provider used by X and numerous other websites, experienced its own outage that left multiple platforms without service for several hours. Cloudflare said at the time that it did not immediately know the direct cause of the disruption affecting its network.

Other outages this year have varied in scope and duration. One incident saw reports spike suddenly around 1:45 p.m. Pacific time, surpassing 4,000 reports within the first 20 minutes, with the disruption lasting just over an hour and primarily affecting the platform’s browser-based version rather than its mobile app. During that particular incident, X’s official developer API status page never reflected any issues, remaining green throughout the disruption despite the surge in user-reported problems, a discrepancy that has become a recurring feature of how the platform’s outages are tracked and confirmed.

A separate January outage struck significant numbers of users shortly after Musk’s algorithm transparency announcement, though it remains unclear whether the two events were directly connected. In each case, the platform’s outages have tended to follow a similar pattern: a sudden spike in Downdetector reports, often numbering in the thousands within a short window, followed by a gradual decline in complaints as service is restored, typically without an official public explanation from X regarding the underlying cause.

X’s ownership structure adds another layer of scrutiny to its recurring reliability issues. Musk acquired the platform, then known as Twitter, for $44 billion in 2022, later rebranding it to X in July 2023. The service reports having up to 650 million monthly active users globally, with more than 132 million users accessing the platform daily, figures that underscore the scale of disruption even relatively brief outages can cause when they affect a meaningful share of that user base.

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Common symptoms reported during X’s past outages have included persistent “Something went wrong” error messages, timelines that fail to refresh or remain stuck displaying older posts, and inconsistent access between the platform’s desktop website and its mobile applications, with one often continuing to function while the other fails entirely. Users experiencing access problems are typically advised to check both the official X Support account and third-party monitoring tools, since the platform’s own status indicators have not always reflected ongoing incidents in real time during past disruptions.

As of Saturday morning, it remained unclear how many users were affected by the reported outage, which specific features or platforms were experiencing the most significant disruption, or how long the issue might persist before service is fully restored. Given the pattern established by X’s previous outages this year, affected users may see intermittent functionality return gradually throughout the morning, though the platform’s history suggests the precise cause of Saturday’s disruption may not be publicly disclosed even after service is restored.

Users seeking updates on the status of Saturday’s reported outage were directed to monitor Downdetector’s live reporting page, along with X’s own official accounts, for further information as the situation develops. Given the frequency of similar incidents throughout 2026, technology analysts have continued to raise questions about the platform’s underlying infrastructure reliability, even as X has maintained that the vast majority of its service remains operational on a day-to-day basis despite the recurring disruptions.

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(VIDEO) BTS Breaks Spotify Record With ‘NORMAL’ Music Video, Most-Streamed K-Pop Video in a Single Day

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Deadliest Catch Dedicates Episode to Capt. Keith Colburn's Nephew Gregory

BTS set a new streaming milestone this week after releasing the music video for their song “NORMAL” exclusively on Spotify, with the platform confirming Friday that the video became the most-streamed K-pop music video in a single day in Spotify’s history.

The video, released Friday at 1 p.m. Korea Standard Time, marks the latest visual from the group’s fifth studio album, “ARIRANG,” which itself became the most-streamed K-pop album in Spotify history on March 20. Spotify announced the new record on its Instagram and X accounts shortly after the video’s release, according to reporting from The Music Universe.

“NORMAL” offers what Spotify described as a deeply personal look at the seven-member group, moving between scenes captured during a late-night celebration and the quieter moments of the following morning. The video follows each member through that arc, portraying what daily life looks like for BTS when they step away from the stage and the spotlight that typically surrounds them. According to Big Hit Music, the group’s label, the setting was a deliberate creative choice intended to offer fans an unfiltered look at the band’s everyday, private side in contrast with their more polished on-stage personas.

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One of the video’s most talked-about moments recreates a viral promotional image the group had teased in the lead-up to the release, showing all seven members standing in a row in front of a set of urinals with their backs to the camera. That image originated from a midnight teaser clip posted to HYBE Labels’ YouTube channel the night before the video’s release, which showed the members in the restroom setting before BTS leader RM squeezed past the group in an unguarded, comedic moment. The teaser also resolved a mystery that had been circulating online for days, tied to a series of attention-grabbing advertisements that ran earlier in July in print newspapers including the San Francisco Chronicle and the New York Post. Those ads featured the urinal-themed photo beneath a tabloid-style headline reading, “BTS Members Seen in Bathroom Amid Mysterious Gathering,” part of a broader promotional campaign that the music video ultimately brought full circle.

Alongside the video, BTS released three additional versions of “NORMAL,” including a Korean-language rendition that had first been revealed during the group’s concert in Busan, as well as an instrumental version. A physical single CD is also being made available through the Weverse platform. “NORMAL” serves as the second single from “ARIRANG,” following the album’s lead single, “SWIM,” and originally debuted at No. 41 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart dated April 4, drawing praise for its understated vocal delivery and conversational sing-rapping style.

“ARIRANG” itself has continued performing strongly on the Billboard charts in the months since its March release. The album spent three consecutive weeks atop the Billboard 200, the top albums chart in the United States, and remained at No. 25 on the chart dated July 18. “SWIM” has extended its own run on the Hot 100, sitting at No. 84 in its 16th consecutive week on that chart as of the same date.

The “NORMAL” video’s Spotify-first release continues a broader partnership between BTS and the streaming platform that began earlier this year to mark the group’s return following an extended hiatus. As part of that collaboration, Spotify hosted a series of immersive live events bringing fans, known collectively as ARMY, together in cities around the world. Among those events, BTS performed at Pier 17 in New York City in March, marking the group’s first U.S. performance in four years. Spotify also introduced in-app features tied to the album’s release, including an interactive experience called Decoding ARIRANG and a dedicated BTS Music Quiz, giving fans new ways to engage with the group’s music directly within the app.

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The video’s exclusive debut on Spotify, rather than a traditional platform such as YouTube, reflects a broader strategy tied to the group’s digital footprint on the streaming service, where BTS draws roughly 35.5 million monthly listeners. The video is currently available only in select beta markets for Spotify Premium subscribers, part of the platform’s ongoing rollout of music videos as a feature alongside exclusive content such as live performances and cover recordings. Spotify noted that the “NORMAL” release followed closely behind another artist’s video exclusive on the platform, with country singer Jelly Roll launching the video for his song “Hands Up” exclusively on Spotify for 48 hours just days earlier.

The “NORMAL” video itself is set to remain a Spotify exclusive for 48 hours before becoming available on other streaming and video platforms, following the same release pattern used for the platform’s other recent artist exclusives.

BTS’s commercial dominance extends well beyond this latest record. According to Spotify, the group’s tracks appear on more than 130 million user-generated playlists on the platform, and BTS has had six songs inducted into Spotify’s Billions Club, a designation reserved for tracks that surpass one billion streams. Those songs include “Dynamite,” “My Universe,” “Butter,” “Boy With Luv” featuring Halsey, “FAKE LOVE” and “Life Goes On.” Listenership for the group spans a wide global footprint, with the United States, Japan and Peru currently ranking among the top countries streaming BTS’s music.

The group’s promotional push around “NORMAL” arrives during an active stretch on the touring front as well. BTS is currently wrapping up the European leg of its Arirang World Tour, with concerts scheduled at Paris’s Stade de France. The group is also set to make a high-profile appearance this weekend, joining Justin Bieber, Madonna and Shakira as co-headliners of the halftime show for the FIFA World Cup final, scheduled for Sunday, July 19, at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, adding another major milestone to what has already been an eventful comeback year for the group following their extended hiatus.

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Beacon Financial: Q2 Earnings Preview, With Shares Still Cheap (NYSE:BBT)

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Beacon Financial: Q2 Earnings Preview, With Shares Still Cheap (NYSE:BBT)

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My name is Maxell Agustin Aguiran. I have a background in finance and have been interested in financial markets since I began following and trading stocks at the age of 15. Over time, this interest developed into a broader focus on investment research, quantitative analysis, data analysis, and financial modeling.My investment approach is primarily data-driven. I combine traditional fundamental analysis with quantitative evidence, historical data, and independent judgment. When evaluating a company, I consider factors such as earnings, valuation multiples, revenue growth, cash flow, financial strength, competitive position, and market expectations. I also use analytical methods to test investment ideas and identify patterns that may not be immediately visible through conventional research alone.My main areas of interest include equities, quantitative investing, predictive analytics, machine learning, and systematic trading. I develop models designed to analyze financial instruments such as stocks, commodities, futures, and foreign exchange markets. I am particularly interested in using historical data to identify relationships, recurring patterns, and potential predictive signals.I write independent investment research because I enjoy transforming complex financial information into clear and understandable investment theses. My goal is to produce analysis that combines fundamental valuation, quantitative evidence, and independent thinking. I am especially interested in undervalued companies, potential value traps, overlooked opportunities, and situations where data may challenge the prevailing market view.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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