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How WME Sports uses Masters Tournament week to drive golf brand deals
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The week every golf fan looks forward to is upon us, as the Masters Tournament begins at the iconic Augusta National Golf Club with practice rounds beginning on Monday.
It’s not only the first major tournament of the PGA Tour schedule every year, but from a business perspective, the Masters acts as a massive hub for new deals, networking and much more for the golf industry.
In short, think of the Masters as the Super Bowl of golf.
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The main leaderboard is seen following the final round of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur at Augusta National Golf Club, Saturday, April 4, 2026. (Kieran Cleeves/Augusta National / Getty Images)
But the traditional business behind golf, especially the marketing side of the industry, has completely changed the sport. It requires a new playbook, as the nine-figure tour and player sponsorships just to get visibility on brands has become a thing of the past.
WME Sports, which represents some of the best athletes, coaches, broadcasters, executives and more across all sports, has been leading the charge on that altered playbook, and this week is critical in doing so with golf above all else in the industry.
WME Sports golf agents Sean Guerrero and Jordan Lewites gave an inside look at Masters week within the industry during an interview with FOX Business, where they shared insight and their own excitement for what this week means for them and their clients.
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“Masters week within the golf industry is interesting,” Guerrero, who has been in the golf business for well over a decade, explained. “Obviously, it’s the most magical week of the year, and all of us getting into the golf industry have had so many different memories along our journey. As you enter the golf industry, you find it’s a unique opportunity where all of the decision makers are in one concentrated area, and everybody’s obsessed with golf. They want to grow how they show up in the sport in new, creative ways.
“While in the industry, we’re excited for the glitz and glam of the Masters, we’re also excited that we all get to gather together to meet, catch up, and really network across the industry to provide new ways, at least from our perspective, to create how these companies show up in the sport we love.”
Lewites, who works with PGA Tour star Jordan Spieth, golf influencer Paige Spiranac and many more, echoed Guerrero’s sentiment, as he believes the Masters allows access to every sector of the industry.
“We’re so lucky in the golf industry, especially us that work around the PGA Tour and LPGA Tour and any professional golf tours, there’s one event per week that is the focus. Specifically, there’s four weeks a year – I’ll even throw The Players in there. There’s five times a year where it becomes an industry conference for us,” he said. “… We can see everyone from the brand side, the media side, the talent side, and the event side of the business. The governing bodies, everybody’s there. And the Masters is our kick-off to start having latter half of ’26 and ’27 discussions for new deal flow, pipeline and see what folks have planned. It’s everybody’s big launch. Domestically, half the country is going to start playing golf for weather changing. So, it’s the biggest week for the golf industry and kinda kicks off the year.”

Jordan Spieth walks on the 17th green during the second round of the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club on April 11, 2025, in Augusta, Georgia. (Ben Jared/PGA TOUR / Getty Images)
The Masters is built on tradition, and it’s why so many, from the casual fan to the golf superfan, tune in to watch every April. But golf has seen a tremendous shift in how brands can get involved in the sport, and agents like Guerrero and Lewites are helping those brands make an impact they didn’t think was possible in the past.
While meetings “under the tree” by the clubhouse still occur, as Lewites mentioned considering the technology ban at Augusta National, brand activations, dinners, conferences and much more occur in town all week long. Whether it’s stepping into a brand’s hospitality house to check out new gear and interact with their visionaries, or meeting PGA Tour legends during a dinner after watching some golf, or even playing at courses around the area, this is where agencies like WME Sports thrive in building connections and bridging gaps for their clients to enter the golf space.
“I think it’s like 500-plus corporate houses that we have through (WME’s sister company) On Location, and a lot of our golf consulting clients use On Location as well for their corporate housing meetings. Whereas we used to do it ourselves, we have an amazing sister company to do that with. It’s become very structured and very detailed-oriented,” Lewites detailed.
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“There are hosted dinners every single night that we are providing talent to on most cases. Cameron McCormick, Jordan’s coach, Sean Foley is booked every single night at the Masters, doing speaking engagements sometimes as intimate as six people.
“We’re seeing a lot of inbound finally across the board from companies that realize the Masters is truly the ultimate hospitality opportunity.”
A prime example of the type of opportunities WME Sports is creating for their clients is what Guerrero did with a great Masters tradition – John Daly’s “home” for the week.

A detailed view of a pin flag on the ninth green during a practice round prior to the 2025 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club on April 7, 2025, in Augusta, Georgia. (Harry How/Getty Images / Getty Images)
While he hasn’t played in the Masters in years, Daly, a fan-favorite in the golf world, would stay in an RV, specifically at a Hooters restaurant in town, where he would interact with fans with autograph signings and picture taking. But his usual set-up was scrapped, as that Hooters location was torn down before this year’s tournament.
Enter Guerrero, who helped Daly’s team get connected with Topgolf, the high-tech driving range and lounge company, who wanted some more eyes and attention on their Augusta location.
“They re-homed him on Thursday and Friday out there. Keeping that tradition alive,” Guerrero said. “We can be a resource for these brands in so many different ways.”
Guerrero called “Creative and change” the optimal words to describe what is happening in the golf space today. Whether it’s data and technology companies like CapTech helping the governing bodies in golf with their statistics and analytics, or smaller, cult-favorite brands like Swag Golf find that corporate avenue, WME Sports uses events like the Masters to get the ball rolling, or keep it rolling, in the right direction to make impacts they might not have thought possible.
In fact, Swag Golf created a partnership with Bryson DeChambeau, the two-time U.S. Open champion who has also embraced the creator space in golf, which is something WME Sports has helped pioneer, especially with its work alongside Good Good Golf.
“We started working with Swag when they were doing a couple million bucks in revenue,” Lewites said. “We knew they were on pace to do $50 million in shared revenue, and we’d help build their entire licensing program, so all of their head covers that you see that are everything from WWE, MLB, NBA, NFL – they have partnerships with all of them. They have an amazing partnership with DICK’S. They’re in every DICK’s and Golf Galaxy location with their hometown collection, and their collegiate licensing program we put together for them. Again, here’s a small golf company now that showed how brands can activate and how that’s changed.”

A general view of the 11th hole green during the third round of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur at Augusta National Golf Club on April 4, 2026, in Augusta, Georgia. (Hector Vivas/Getty Images / Getty Images)
Guerrero added: “Golf is unlike any other sport. If you’re a fan of golf, you play it and you consume it’s products. I’m a big baseball guy, I’m a big football guy. I’m not playing baseball on the weekends. It’s such a unique lifestyle sport, where if you’re a fan of it, you consume it’s products and you have a consumer for life. Yeah, you can start at three and play until 93.
“So, all of these brands on the outside of golf wanting to join the industry and see the value of it – I truly root for everybody across the space. Whether we work with them or not, we all grow together.”
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Golf truly is a lifestyle compared to other sports. Not only do golfers play the game throughout the year, they’re also consuming the products they see their favorite athletes using each day on the course.
The Masters also accentuates that point, which is why WME Sports and the rest of the industry is excited to get down to Augusta and continue its impact on this ever-evolving game at one of its signature events.
“Everybody’s thinking about golf, and after the Masters hits, everybody’s got the bug,” Guerrero said. “A lot of these companies place a premium on either showing up at or around the Masters, or launching products or new services or new whatever it is along that same timeline.”
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Elon Musk Amplifies Tesla FSD Safety Data as 7x Safer Than Humans in Viral X Post
Elon Musk spotlighted Tesla’s Full Self-Driving (Supervised) technology Monday, reposting data showing the system is roughly seven times safer than the average U.S. human driver and sparking fresh debate about the pace of autonomous vehicle adoption.
In a post on X that quickly drew hundreds of thousands of views, Musk simply asked, “Did you know Tesla FSD was this good?” The message quoted an earlier Grok response citing Tesla’s latest Vehicle Safety Report as of April 2026. According to the data, FSD (Supervised) records one crash every 5 million to 7 million miles driven, compared with roughly one crash every 660,000 miles for human drivers. The figures are based on more than 9 billion miles of real-world FSD data.

The post amplified a detailed assessment from Grok, xAI’s AI model, rating current FSD performance an 8.5 out of 10 on a scale where 10 represents perfect autonomy. The assessment noted the system’s “transformative edge” over manual driving while acknowledging it remains supervised, with human drivers expected to stay ready to intervene. It also referenced ongoing scrutiny from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration on edge cases.
Musk’s endorsement comes as Tesla pushes aggressively toward unsupervised autonomy and robotaxi deployment. The company has rolled out incremental FSD updates throughout 2026, with version 14.3 widely anticipated by owners and frequently mentioned in replies to Musk’s post. Enthusiasts in the thread described daily use of the system, with some reporting 80% or more of their driving now handled by FSD and expressing excitement for the next software release.
Tesla’s Vehicle Safety Reports, released quarterly, have consistently shown improving safety metrics for FSD as the company accumulates more data and refines its neural networks. The latest April 2026 figures represent a significant leap from earlier reports, where the safety multiple was closer to 5x or 6x in some periods. Tesla attributes the gains to continuous over-the-air improvements, better handling of complex urban scenarios and expanded training datasets.
Industry analysts reacted with measured optimism. While the safety data is compelling, critics note that FSD remains in supervised mode and has faced regulatory hurdles, including NHTSA investigations into crashes involving Autopilot and FSD features. Tesla maintains that the system’s performance exceeds human benchmarks on a per-mile basis, but regulators emphasize the need for robust validation across billions more miles before unsupervised operation on public roads.
The viral post also reignited broader conversations about public awareness. Several replies highlighted that many drivers still do not fully understand FSD’s capabilities or safety record, with one user calling it “a failure by you and the Tesla team” to communicate the technology more effectively. Others shared personal anecdotes of feeling safer with FSD engaged, while some expressed frustration over delays in wider releases of newer versions.
Tesla CEO Musk has long positioned FSD as a cornerstone of the company’s future, projecting that robotaxis could eventually generate trillions in value. The company has invited select owners to early unsupervised testing in Texas and California under strict conditions, though a full unsupervised rollout remains pending regulatory approval in key markets.
Monday’s post drew a mix of celebration and skepticism. Supporters praised the data as proof that Tesla leads the autonomous driving race, while others questioned whether the statistics fully account for variables such as driver disengagement rates or geographic differences in testing. Replies included calls for faster deployment of version 14.3 and humorous takes on using FSD to multitask during commutes.
The timing aligns with heightened investor and consumer interest in Tesla’s autonomy efforts. The company’s stock has shown volatility in 2026 amid broader market concerns over geopolitical tensions and energy prices, but FSD milestones often provide positive catalysts. Musk’s personal involvement in promoting the technology underscores his view that rapid iteration and real-world data will ultimately prove the system’s superiority.
Tesla has logged more than 9 billion miles of FSD data, giving it one of the largest real-world datasets in the industry. The company contrasts its vision-based approach with competitors relying more heavily on lidar and other sensors, arguing that its camera-and-AI system more closely mimics human perception while scaling efficiently through software updates.
Regulatory bodies continue to monitor progress closely. The NHTSA has requested detailed information on FSD incidents, and international regulators in Europe and China are evaluating similar data for potential approvals. Tesla maintains transparency through its quarterly reports while pushing for clearer regulatory frameworks that recognize the statistical safety advantages.
Public reaction on X reflected the polarized nature of autonomous vehicle discussions. Some users posted videos and photos of smooth FSD drives, while others shared edge-case frustrations such as roundabout navigation. The thread also featured lighthearted content, including AI-generated images and parody accounts weighing in on the technology’s potential.
For Tesla owners, the post served as a reminder of the technology already in their vehicles. Many reported using FSD daily and feeling confident in its abilities, though most still keep hands near the wheel as required. The company stresses that the system is “Supervised” for a reason and drivers must remain attentive.
Broader implications extend beyond individual safety. Widespread adoption of safer autonomous systems could reduce the roughly 40,000 annual traffic fatalities in the U.S., ease congestion and free up time for drivers. Economic analyses project significant productivity gains if robotaxis and autonomous trucking scale successfully.
Musk’s post, which garnered more than 466,000 views within hours, exemplifies his strategy of using X to communicate directly with millions of followers and potential customers. It also highlighted the growing synergy between Tesla and xAI, with Grok providing data-driven analysis that Musk then amplified.
As Tesla prepares for potential robotaxi events later in 2026, the latest safety figures add fuel to optimism among supporters. Skeptics, however, caution that statistical safety must be matched by consistent performance in every scenario before regulators grant full unsupervised approval.
The conversation sparked by Musk’s simple question underscores a key tension in the autonomous vehicle space: the gap between statistical trust in the data and emotional trust required for mass adoption. With billions more miles of data accumulating quarterly, Tesla and competitors continue racing toward the day when human drivers become the exception rather than the rule.
For now, FSD (Supervised) represents a major step forward, with Monday’s viral post serving as both celebration and call to action for greater public awareness of its capabilities.
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Is Bluesky Down Now? User Experiences Intermittent US East Outages Monday
Bluesky, the decentralized social media platform often positioned as an alternative to X, faced intermittent outages in the US East region Monday, with users reporting difficulties accessing the app, loading feeds and viewing timelines, according to the company’s official status page and crowd-sourced trackers.

Bluesky’s status page at status.bsky.app confirmed an ongoing incident as of mid-afternoon, stating that since this morning the platform had been experiencing intermittent outages in the US East region due to an issue with an upstream service provider. The company said it was actively working with the provider to restore full service as soon as possible. Overall system status remained listed as “All systems Operational,” with strong uptime figures of 99.993% over the past 24 hours and 99.955% over the past seven days.
Downdetector showed a noticeable spike in user reports throughout the day, with the majority of complaints centered on the mobile app (approximately 50%), followed by feed/timeline problems (23%) and website access (15%). Reports were concentrated in the United States but appeared geographically dispersed rather than indicating a complete nationwide shutdown. Similar patterns emerged on social platforms, where users posted screenshots of loading errors or blank feeds and used hashtags such as #BlueskyDown.
The platform’s decentralized architecture, which relies on multiple servers and personal data servers (PDS), has generally provided resilience, but Monday’s disruption highlighted vulnerabilities tied to third-party infrastructure. Bluesky has grown rapidly since its public launch, attracting millions of users seeking an ad-light, algorithm-optional experience with custom feeds and strong moderation tools. However, scaling challenges have occasionally led to similar intermittent issues, especially during peak usage hours or when upstream dependencies falter.
Users in affected regions reported a range of symptoms: inability to refresh timelines, delayed post loading, login glitches on the app and occasional complete connection failures. Some noted that switching to web access or using a VPN temporarily mitigated problems, while others waited for natural resolution. The timing coincided with typical workday peaks in the Eastern Time Zone, amplifying frustration for users relying on Bluesky for news, community discussions and real-time updates.
Bluesky’s official status updates emphasized transparency, with the US East incident marked and monitored throughout the day. No full platform-wide outage was declared, distinguishing Monday’s event from more severe past disruptions. Earlier in 2026, the platform experienced shorter outages on April 4 and April 5, including a roughly 37-minute incident on April 5 that affected feed aggregation for some users. Those were resolved relatively quickly without major announcements.
Industry observers noted that as Bluesky’s user base expands — fueled by dissatisfaction with other platforms and features like custom feeds and decentralized identity — even brief interruptions draw significant attention. The platform’s growth has been steady, with strong engagement in creative, tech and political communities. However, reliability remains a key factor for retaining users who have migrated from more established networks.
For those encountering problems, Bluesky recommends standard troubleshooting: force-quitting and restarting the app, checking internet connections, clearing cache, or trying the web version at bsky.app. Users can also monitor the official status page for real-time updates. The company has not yet provided an estimated resolution time for the US East issue but indicated active collaboration with the upstream provider.
The incident underscores the challenges facing growing social platforms in maintaining consistent performance amid reliance on cloud infrastructure and third-party services. Bluesky’s decentralized model aims to reduce single points of failure compared with traditional centralized networks, yet dependencies on regional hosting and service providers can still create localized pain points.
Public reaction on X and other platforms mixed irritation with understanding. Some users joked about the irony of outages on a platform marketed for better user experience, while others praised the relative rarity of major disruptions compared with competitors. A number of affected users temporarily shifted activity back to X or other networks, highlighting the fragmented nature of today’s social media landscape.
Bluesky continues to iterate on features, including improved moderation tools, custom feed algorithms and enhanced search capabilities. The platform has positioned itself as a more open and user-controlled alternative, with users able to run their own servers in the decentralized ecosystem. Despite Monday’s hiccup, overall uptime metrics remain excellent, reflecting solid engineering efforts behind the scenes.
As the afternoon progressed in the US East, reports on Downdetector appeared to stabilize somewhat, though the upstream issue persisted according to Bluesky’s latest update. Users in unaffected regions reported normal service, suggesting the problem remained geographically limited.
For international users, impact appeared minimal, with European and Asian access largely unaffected. This regional focus is common in cloud-dependent services where data routing and hosting zones play a critical role.
Bluesky’s team has a track record of responsive communication during incidents, often updating via the status page and official accounts. Past resolutions have involved provider-side fixes, server optimizations or temporary traffic rerouting. The company is expected to provide a post-incident summary once service fully stabilizes.
In the broader context, Monday’s event serves as a reminder that even fast-growing platforms face scaling pains. As Bluesky competes for users in a crowded social space, consistent reliability will be crucial for long-term retention. The platform’s decentralized ethos offers potential advantages for resilience, but real-world dependencies can still introduce friction.
Affected users are encouraged to check status.bsky.app regularly and report persistent issues through official channels. In the meantime, basic troubleshooting steps often resolve temporary glitches while engineers address upstream problems.
As evening approached in many time zones, Bluesky urged patience and thanked users for their understanding. The company continues investing in infrastructure to minimize future disruptions as its community grows.
Bluesky, launched as a decentralized microblogging platform, has carved out a niche with its emphasis on user choice, reduced algorithmic manipulation and community-driven moderation. While not immune to technical hiccups, its overall performance has supported steady expansion in 2026.
For now, the majority of services remain accessible, with the US East intermittent outage representing a localized rather than platform-wide event. Users experiencing ongoing difficulties should monitor official updates for the latest resolution timeline.
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Xiao-I Corp Stock Explodes 157% as China Court Victory Over Apple Patent Bolsters AI Patent Portfolio
Shares of Xiao-I Corp (NASDAQ: AIXI) skyrocketed more than 156% Monday, surging to around $0.34 in afternoon trading as retail investors piled into the micro-cap artificial intelligence company following a major legal victory in its long-running patent dispute with Apple in China.

The dramatic intraday move saw the stock open sharply higher and maintain strong momentum, with trading volume spiking to extraordinary levels for the small company. The rally built on earlier gains triggered by news that China’s Supreme People’s Court rejected Apple’s appeal to invalidate key AI patents held by Xiao-I’s variable interest entity (VIE) in Shanghai.
Xiao-I Corporation, a Shanghai-based provider of cognitive intelligence solutions founded in 2001, specializes in natural language processing, conversational AI, knowledge graphs, hyperautomation and multimodal technologies. The company serves sectors including finance, contact centers, government services, manufacturing and healthcare through platforms that integrate deep learning and affective computing.
The patent ruling, finalized on March 27, 2026, affirmed the validity of Xiao-I’s core AI intellectual property that forms the basis of its infringement lawsuit against Apple. The Supreme Court’s decision, which is final and non-appealable on the validity issue, removed a significant legal hurdle and validated the company’s technological claims. While the infringement proceedings continue and no financial compensation is guaranteed, the outcome strengthened Xiao-I’s position in China’s competitive AI landscape.
The stock had already shown volatility in early April. It surged more than 33% on April 2 following initial reports of the court decision, with massive volume reflecting retail enthusiasm. Monday’s continuation pushed the price well above recent levels, though it remained far below its 52-week high near $4 and reflected the stock’s history of sharp swings as a low-float micro-cap name.
Analysts and market observers described the move as driven primarily by sentiment and short-term momentum rather than fundamental shifts in operations. Xiao-I’s market capitalization stayed under $5 million even after the surge, underscoring its status as a highly speculative play. The company has faced challenges including dilution from convertible notes, governance issues and limited revenue scale compared with global AI leaders.
Despite the legal win, risks remain substantial. The broader infringement case against Apple entities in China is ongoing, and outcomes on damages or licensing are uncertain. Xiao-I operates primarily through a VIE structure, a common but complex arrangement for foreign-listed Chinese companies that carries inherent regulatory and ownership risks.
The company’s core offerings include a conversational AI platform, knowledge fusion tools, intelligent voice systems and hyperautomation solutions. It has positioned itself as a pioneer in cognitive intelligence since its early days, with applications in smart city services, financial institutions and industrial digitization. Revenue comes from software licenses, maintenance services and cloud-based AI products.
Recent company updates highlighted client renewals in the automotive sector and continued development of metaverse and vision analysis platforms. However, like many small AI firms, Xiao-I competes against much larger players with deeper resources, including domestic giants and international technology firms.
Monday’s trading frenzy echoed patterns seen in other low-priced, news-driven stocks where retail participation on platforms can amplify moves. Volume exceeded typical daily averages by multiples, with significant pre-market and intraday interest. Some traders noted the stock breaking technical levels, including attempts to reclaim the 50-day moving average for the first time in months.
Wall Street coverage of AIXI is limited due to its size. Price targets and ratings are sparse, and the stock carries high volatility warnings. Investors are cautioned about the potential for rapid reversals, as micro-cap names often experience profit-taking after sharp rallies.
For long-term holders, the patent victory could enhance licensing opportunities or strengthen negotiating power in China’s AI ecosystem. Yet execution risks, competition and the need for sustained revenue growth remain key concerns. The company has emphasized its 20-plus years of R&D in cognitive technologies and partnerships across industries.
As of Monday afternoon, AIXI traded with elevated volatility, reflecting the speculative nature of the move. Broader market sentiment, including interest in Chinese AI plays amid geopolitical and regulatory developments, may have contributed to the enthusiasm.
Xiao-I Corporation went public on Nasdaq in 2023 through an American Depositary Shares offering. Its business model focuses on industrializing AI technologies for practical enterprise applications rather than consumer-facing products. The firm maintains research centers and collaborates with universities and industry partners.
Retail investors on forums and social platforms celebrated the surge, with some calling it validation of the company’s IP strength. Skeptics warned of classic pump dynamics in low-float stocks and urged caution, noting the absence of immediate revenue impact from the court ruling.
Company officials have stated they will continue updating shareholders on material developments in the Apple litigation. No specific timeline for resolution of the remaining infringement claims has been provided.
In the wider AI sector, patent battles are increasingly common as companies seek to protect innovations in natural language processing, machine learning and related fields. Xiao-I’s win, while significant for the firm, highlights the strategic importance of intellectual property in China’s rapidly evolving technology market.
Monday’s price action pushed the stock well into positive territory for the session, though it continued to trade as a high-risk name with limited institutional following. Market participants will watch for any follow-through momentum or profit-taking in coming sessions.
Xiao-I Corp, with roughly 162 employees, operates from Shanghai and focuses on delivering AI solutions that drive industrial digitization and intelligent transformation. Its technologies power applications from intelligent customer service to smart city initiatives.
As trading continued Monday, the surge in AIXI served as a reminder of the speculative opportunities — and risks — in small-cap AI stocks reacting to legal or technological developments. Investors are advised to conduct thorough due diligence, considering the company’s financial position, competitive landscape and the uncertain path from patent validation to commercial success.
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