LOS ANGELES — Charlize Theron is taking movie promotion to new heights — literally — as she scales a massive Times Square billboard and delivers a string of high-energy interviews to promote her new Netflix survival thriller “Apex,” which premiered on the streaming service April 24, 2026, and is already generating buzz for its intense action and raw performances.
The Oscar-winning actress, 50, was spotted April 24 scaling the side of a building in New York City to hype the film, showcasing the same physical commitment she brought to the role of Sasha, a grieving rock climber who becomes the target of a ruthless predator in the Australian wilderness. Co-starring Taron Egerton as the unhinged hunter Ben, the R-rated thriller directed by Baltasar Kormákur has drawn strong early audience reactions for its taut pacing and breathtaking outdoor sequences.
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Charlize Theron
In a series of promotional appearances, Theron opened up about the physical toll of filming, revealing she suffered multiple injuries, including one that required surgery on her arm. “I think I tapped out once or twice,” she told “Extra” with a laugh, while praising Egerton’s intensity and the crew’s support during demanding shoots in remote Australian locations.
Apex Delivers Thrills and Emotional Depth
“Apex” follows Sasha as she embarks on a solo kayaking and hiking trip to scatter her late partner’s ashes, only to cross paths with a charming but psychotic local who turns the wilderness into a deadly hunting ground. The film blends high-stakes survival action with psychological tension, earning praise for Theron’s fearless stunt work and Egerton’s unhinged villain performance.
Critics have called it a slick, empty-calorie thriller that excels in spectacle but leans on familiar genre tropes. Variety described it as a “rip-roaring outdoor duel,” while The Guardian noted its “soulless” but entertaining cat-and-mouse game. Audiences, however, appear to be responding positively on Netflix, with strong early viewership numbers reported.
Theron, who performed most of her own stunts, trained extensively with professional climbers. In interviews, she emphasized the film’s themes of grief, resilience and female strength. “Sasha is pushing her limits both physically and emotionally,” she told The New York Times. “Life is so beautiful, but it can also be brutal.”
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Busy 2026 for Theron
“Apex” marks a busy year for the South African-born star. She is also set to appear in Christopher Nolan’s highly anticipated epic “The Odyssey,” scheduled for a July 2026 release. Theron has described working with Nolan as “amazing” and a dream collaboration.
Her fashion choices during the “Apex” press tour have also drawn attention, with standout looks on “The View” and “Today” showcasing Bottega Veneta and other designers. Theron continues her long-standing partnership with Dior as the face of J’adore, marking over two decades with the brand.
Personal Reflections and Career Evolution
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In recent interviews, Theron has spoken candidly about aging in Hollywood, motherhood and finding balance. A single mother to adopted children, she has emphasized the importance of representation and strong female roles. “I want my daughters to see women who are complex, strong and real,” she told one outlet.
Her willingness to embrace physically demanding roles — from “Mad Max: Fury Road” to “Atomic Blonde” and now “Apex” — has cemented her status as one of Hollywood’s most committed action stars. At 50, she continues redefining what leading roles look like for women in their prime.
Fan and Industry Reaction
The “Apex” promotional campaign, including Theron’s daring Times Square climb, has gone viral, with fans praising her dedication and sense of humor. Social media is filled with clips of her interviews alongside Egerton, where the pair share playful banter and behind-the-scenes stories.
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Industry insiders see “Apex” as part of Theron’s strategy to balance big studio projects with more personal, high-concept thrillers. With Nolan’s “The Odyssey” on the horizon, 2026 could be one of her most impactful years yet.
As “Apex” streams globally on Netflix, Theron continues her press tour with appearances and stunts that keep her firmly in the spotlight. Whether scaling billboards or confronting personal and professional challenges on screen, the actress remains a force in Hollywood — proving that at 50, she is only getting started on new heights.
The 50-strong flooring chain backed by Sir Richard Harpin’s Growth Partner has appointed restructuring advisers, raising the prospect of store closures and redundancies as the cost-of-living squeeze continues to drag on consumer spending.
Flooring Superstore, which employs around 300 people from its Bishop Auckland headquarters in County Durham, has drafted in Begbies Traynor and the restructuring arm of Santander to weigh its options. People familiar with the matter said a company voluntary arrangement (CVA) or a full administration are both on the table, controversial routes that typically squeeze landlords and suppliers while preserving the equity of incumbent owners and senior creditors.
The retailer was co-founded in 2012 by Dan Foskett and sells vinyl, laminate and wood flooring alongside artificial grass through its branded showrooms and online channels. Growth Partner, the investment vehicle established by Harpin, the entrepreneur behind home emergency repair group HomeServe, backed the business in 2020 with a £5 million injection that allowed Foskett to crystallise a portion of his shareholding. He retains a 22 per cent stake, while Growth Partner holds 25 per cent. The remainder is split between three individual investors.
Harpin, who last year published “How to Make a Billion in Nine Steps”, focuses on British and European retail names primed for scale. His portfolio includes pizza oven specialist Gozney and bathroom retailer Easy Bathrooms. However, several Growth Partner-backed businesses have collapsed in recent years, among them Crafters’ Companion, co-founded by Dragons’ Den investor Sara Davies, and Yorkshire-based Keelham Farm Shop.
Flooring Superstore was a pandemic winner, riding the wave of home-improvement spending while consumers were confined to their properties. That tailwind reversed sharply once lockdowns eased, as the chain was forced to absorb spiralling energy and raw material costs and unwind the additional capacity it had built. The cost-of-living crisis has since hammered demand for big-ticket household refurbishments.
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Connection Retail, the parent company that also owns Direct Wood Flooring, Grass Direct and Snug Carpets, posted turnover of £49.3 million in the year to the end of July 2024, down from £51.8 million a year earlier. Pre-tax profit nonetheless swung from a £3.3 million loss to a £619,000 profit, while net debt stood at £3.5 million at the year-end.
Santander shored up the group’s balance sheet last June with a debenture, a secured loan agreement under which the lender acts as security trustee. Filings at Companies House show Connection Retail has two outstanding charges, having pledged its property and overall business assets as collateral to both Growth Partner and the high-street bank.
The disclosed restructuring talks mark a striking pivot from the expansion blueprint Foskett set out only twelve months ago, when he told The Times that he intended to grow the estate to as many as 150 stores, deepen the brand’s marketing reach and continue building its exclusive product range.
Growth Partner and Flooring Superstore had not responded to requests for comment at the time of publication. Santander and Begbies Traynor declined to comment.
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Amy Ingham
Amy is a newly qualified journalist specialising in business journalism at Business Matters with responsibility for news content for what is now the UK’s largest print and online source of current business news.
Grosvenor, the property company controlled by the Duke of Westminster, has broken ground on a £40m repositioning of The Hive in Manchester’s Northern Quarter, in a move that takes the group’s directly managed flexible workspace model outside London for the first time.
The Lever Street landmark, which extends to 78,000 sq ft, will be reimagined as a destination office building anchored by 25,500 sq ft of flex space and a hospitality-led amenity offer. Ground-floor units fronting Lever Street will house a deli and a restaurant, both run by what Grosvenor describes as “well-known Manchester names”, with a launch pencilled in for autumn 2026.
For Grosvenor’s UK property arm, the project is the most visible test yet of a regional strategy launched in 2020 that now stretches across roughly 500,000 sq ft in Manchester, Birmingham, Bristol and Leeds. The portfolio is currently 90 per cent let, a figure that compares favourably with a regional office market still wrestling with hybrid working and a flight to quality.
The group has appointed x+why, the B Corp-certified workspace operator, to run more than 22,000 sq ft of the flex floors under a management agreement. The deal extends a partnership that began in 2023 at Fivefields, Grosvenor’s social-impact workspace in Victoria, and signals a growing appetite among traditional landlords to plug operating expertise into their own buildings rather than cede space to third-party flex providers on conventional leases.
Interiors will be designed by x+why’s in-house team, whydesign, with a deliberate nod to local craftsmanship. Pieces by Manchester-based furniture designers and artists including Aiden Donovan, Jesse Cracknell, Matt Dennis and Mima Adams will be woven into the scheme, while elements from the fit-out installed by previous tenant The Arts Council are to be repurposed, a small but pointed gesture towards the building’s creative heritage.
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The bet on Manchester reflects a wider conviction inside Grosvenor that the city’s office market remains one of the most resilient outside the capital, underpinned by a deep talent pool, inward business migration and a structural shortage of grade-A space. The landlord’s nearby Ship Canal House is, it says, close to full occupancy following a run of new lettings and renewals.
Fergus Evans, office portfolio director at Grosvenor Property UK, said the Hive scheme typified the group’s regional playbook of taking “a prime asset in a great location and repositioning it to meet the evolving needs of today’s occupiers”. He added: “Manchester continues to perform strongly for us, and our investment in The Hive reflects sustained demand for well-located, high-quality offices, particularly from the city’s growing digital and creative economy. Combining x+why’s experience in creating design-led, community-focused workspaces with our approach to active asset management, we are well placed to deliver a distinctive, flexible offer that responds to local demand.”
Rupert Dean, chief executive and co-founder of x+why, said the operator was “delighted to be partnering with Grosvenor again to bring The Hive into its next chapter”. He added: “The Northern Quarter is one of the most exciting and entrepreneurial parts of the UK, and The Hive will reflect that energy, offering a workspace that is not only functional, but inspiring and socially driven.”
For SMEs and scale-ups in Manchester’s digital and creative cluster, the very occupiers Grosvenor and x+why are courting, the arrival of a higher-end, hospitality-led flex product on Lever Street is likely to sharpen competition with established players such as WeWork, Bruntwood and Department, and could nudge headline rents in the Northern Quarter higher when the doors open next autumn.
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Jamie Young
Jamie is Senior Reporter at Business Matters, bringing over a decade of experience in UK SME business reporting.
Jamie holds a degree in Business Administration and regularly participates in industry conferences and workshops.
When not reporting on the latest business developments, Jamie is passionate about mentoring up-and-coming journalists and entrepreneurs to inspire the next generation of business leaders.
Republican Sen. Thom Tillis on Tuesday reiterated that he opposes Kevin Warsh’s nomination over President Donald Trump’s Federal Reserve investigation.
Now that the Justice Department has dropped its Federal Reserve probe, Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., said he is willing to vote to confirm Kevin Warsh to serve as the next chair of the Federal Reserve System board of governors.
“I have been clear from the start: the U.S. Attorney’s Office criminal investigation into Chair Powell was a serious threat to the Fed’s independence, and it needed to end before I could support Kevin Warsh’s confirmation. I welcome the Inspector General’s investigation. This is a necessary and appropriate measure, and I have confidence it will be conducted thoroughly and professionally,” Tillis stated in a post on X.
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The senator noted that he is looking “forward to supporting Kevin Warsh’s confirmation,” describing Warsh as “an outstanding nominee.”
Sen. Thom Tillis listens as Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem testifies during a Senate hearing in Washington, D.C., on March 3, 2026. (Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images)
U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro announced last week that she had directed her office to close the probe.
“This morning the Inspector General for the Federal Reserve has been asked to scrutinize the building costs overruns – in the billions of dollars – that have been borne by taxpayers,” she wrote in a Friday post on X.
U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro during a news conference at the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 6, 2026. (Aaron Schwartz/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
“I have directed my office to close our investigation as the IG undertakes this inquiry,” Pirro noted, while warning that she “will not hesitate to restart a criminal investigation should the facts warrant doing so.”
A spokesperson with the Fed’s Office of Inspector General said in a statement obtained by Fox News Digital, “In July of last year, the OIG announced that it was conducting an evaluation of the Board’s building renovation project.
Kevin Warsh, nominee for chairman of the Federal Reserve, is sworn in to his Senate confirmation hearing on Tuesday, April 21, 2026. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)
“This assessment includes our independent analysis of the project’s substantial cost increases and overruns. We are actively working to complete our review, and look forward to making the results available to the public and Congress upon completion. We decline further comment,” the spokesperson noted in the statement.
Valmont Industries, Inc. (VMI) Shareholder/Analyst Call April 27, 2026 11:00 AM EDT
Company Participants
Mogens Bay John Schwietz – Executive VP, CFO & Corporate Secretary
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Presentation
Operator
Greetings, and welcome to Valmont Industries 2026 Annual Shareholders Meeting. [Operator Instructions]
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As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Valmont’s Chairman of the Board, Mogens Bay. Thank you. You may begin.
Mogens Bay
Good morning. My name is Mogens Bay, and as Chairman of Valmont, it’s my pleasure to welcome you to our Annual Meeting. Today’s meeting is being audio webcast to our shareholders and will be made available for replay at our website, valmont.com.
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We have four proposals that are outlined in Valmont’s proxy statement to be voted upon at this meeting. We will then announce the results. All Valmont directors are present at today’s meeting.
Greg Geyer of KPMG is participating in today’s meeting, and KPMG is available to respond to any questions you may have about our financials. At this point, I call upon John Schwietz, CFO and Corporate Secretary, to read the required legal notice.
John Schwietz Executive VP, CFO & Corporate Secretary
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Mr. Chairman, this meeting is convened in accordance with the proxy mailed on March 11, 2026, to all shareholders of record as of March 2, 2026. We have received the affidavit of mailing from Broadridge stating that this mailing was complete and accurate.
Anita Gillespie has been appointed inspector of the election, and a list of all shareholders is available for review. The inspector has advised us that there were 19,547,213 shares outstanding and entitled to vote at this meeting. Of that number, more than 91% are represented by proxy at this time.
Mogens Bay
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Thank you. There are four matters for shareholders to
A pedestrian walks by a Domino’s Pizza on Dec. 9, 2025 in San Francisco, California.
Justin Sullivan | Getty Images
Domino’s Pizza stock fell 10% in morning trading on Monday after it reported weaker-than-expected U.S. same-store sales growth.
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The chain’s domestic same-store sales rose just 0.9%, lower than the 2.3% bump expected by Wall Street analysts, based on StreetAccount estimates.
“We’re not happy with it,” CEO Russell Weiner told CNBC.
The pizza chain also lowered its full-year U.S. same-store sales forecast to low-single digit growth, down from its prior projection that U.S. same-store sales will increase 3%.
Weiner said he expects more fast-food chains to report similar headwinds from winter weather and weak consumer sentiment, which took a dive in March due to spiking fuel prices caused by the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran.
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“One of the bad things about reporting first is you don’t get to hear about anybody else,” Weiner said.
Domino’s kicked off the earnings season for restaurant chains. Starbucks is on deck after the bell on Tuesday, and Chipotle Mexican Grill and Pizza Hut owner Yum Brands are expected to share their results on Wednesday. Rival Papa John’s will report its earnings next Thursday.
During the quarter, Domino’s also faced stiffer competition from rival pizza chains. Papa John’s and Pizza Hut both matched Domino’s $9.99 “Best Deal Ever” with promotions at the same price point. And Little Caesars undercut Domino’s $6.99 Mix & Match deal with a $5.99 version.
“People are seeing what we’re doing, and they’re sick of losing share, and they’re coming at it,” Weiner said, adding that he still expects Papa John’s and Pizza Hut to report same-store sales declines for the quarter despite the new promotions.
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Looking ahead, Weiner expressed confidence that Domino’s will prove itself in the long run.
“Domino’s has got a bigger advertising budget than our second two competitors combined,” he said. “And those competitors are both going up for sale, so we know things aren’t good there right now.”
Yum announced in November that it was exploring strategic options for Pizza Hut, which could include a sale. And Papa John’s is reportedly in talks with Qatari-backed Irth Capital to go private. Both chains have also announced plans to close hundreds of restaurants this year, which could further boost Domino’s dominant position in the pizza category.
And if either Pizza Hut or Papa John’s goes private, Weiner said he expects that a new owner would shutter even more locations — a win for Domino’s.
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Shares of Domino’s have lost nearly a third of their value over the last year. The company’s market cap has fallen to roughly $11.2 billion.
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