Bills players ask for prayers as Damar Hamlin is hospitalized in critical condition after collapsing on field

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Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen asked for prayers for Damar Hamlin after the safety was considered to be in critical condition after he collapsed on the field at Paycor Stadium in Cincinnati.

“Please pray for our brother,” Allen tweeted.

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Stefon Diggs reportedly went to the University of Cincinnati Medical Center to be with his teammate as well.

Dawson Knox added: “Prayer is real, and it’s powerful. Constantly praying for Damar and his family.”

The superstar quarterback, his coaches and teammates were all very emotional on the field when Hamlin went down following a tackle on Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Tee Higgins.

Hamlin got up from the ground and took a few steps backward before he collapsed to the Paycor Stadium turf. Medical personnel came over to Hamlin to attend to him as the ESPN broadcast went to commercial. A stretcher and backboard came out and later the ambulance.

BILLS’ DAMAR HAMLIN IN CRITICAL CONDITION AFTER COLLAPSING ON FIELD, GAME SUSPENDED FOR REST OF NIGHT

Hamlin was on the ground for a while and multiple reporters indicated he was receiving CPR from the medical staff on the ground before he was put into the ambulance. According to FOX19, Hamlin was being rushed to the University of Cincinnati Medical Center.

The NFL said Hamlin was in critical condition and needed CPR and an AED on the field.

“Our thoughts are with Damar and the Buffalo Bills. We will provide more information as it becomes available.

“The NFL has been in constant communication with the NFL Players Association which is in agreement with postponing the game.”

The NFL Players Association also released a statement on the matter.

“The NFLPA and everyone in our community is praying for Damar Hamlin. We have been in touch with Bills and Bengals players, and with the NFL,” the NFLPA said in a tweet. “The only thing that matters at this moment is Damar’s health and well being.”

 

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2023 looks good for the market — especially for one 'extremely attractive' asset class: Fund manager

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Prayers pour in for Bills safety Damar Hamlin after collapsing on the field: ‘The game is not important’

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Monday night’s game between the Buffalo Bills and Cincinnati Bengals was suspended more than an hour after Bills safety Damar Hamlin collapsed on the field in the first quarter but around the NFL, thoughts and prayers focused on the young player’s health. 

Hamlin, 24, was taken off the field by an ambulance and transported to the University of Cincinnati Medical Center at around 9:25 p.m. after he collapsed on the field following a tackle on Bengals wideout Tee Higgins. 

The NFL announced more than an hour after the incident that Monday’s game was suspended. 

BILLS GATHER FOR TEAM PRAYER ON FIELD FOLLOWING DAMAR HAMLIN INJURY 

“Hamlin received immediate medical attention on the field by team and independent medical staff and local paramedics. He was then transported to a local hospital where he is in critical condition,” the statement from the team read. 

But around social media, players were focused on Hamlin’s health. 

“The game is not important,” Arizona Cardinals defensive end J.J. Watt wrote on Twitter. “Damar Hamlin’s life is important. Please be ok. Please.”

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“No one cares about this game at all anymore,” former NFL quarterback Robert Griffin III said in a tweet. “Praying for Damar Hamlin the man, the son, the brother and the friend. What just happened was traumatic to so many but all that matters right now is that he STAYS WITH US.”

Teams and players from around the league echoed those sentiments. 

Drafted by the Bills in the sixth round of the 2021 NFL Draft, Hamlin has appeared in 29 games.

 

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South Korea fines Tesla $2.2 million for allegedly exaggerating driving range of EVs

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In this article

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A Tesla electric vehicle is parked at a Tesla Supercharger station in Suwon, South Korea on Aug. 7, 2022.
SeongJoon Cho | Bloomberg | Getty Images

South Korea’s antitrust regulator said it would impose a 2.85 billion won ($2.2 million) fine on Tesla for failing to tell its customers about the shorter driving range of its electric vehicles in low temperatures.

The Korea Fair Trade Commission said that Tesla had exaggerated the “driving ranges of its cars on a single charge, their fuel cost-effectiveness compared to gasoline vehicles as well as the performance of its Superchargers” on its official local website since August 2019 until recently.

The driving range of the U.S. EV manufacturer’s cars plunge in cold weather by up to 50.5% versus how they are advertised online, the KFTC said in a statement on Tuesday.

Tesla could not be immediately reached for comment.

On its website, Tesla provides winter driving tips, such as pre-conditioning vehicles with external power sources, and using its updated Energy app to monitor energy consumption, but does not mention the loss of driving range in sub-zero temperatures.

In 2021, Citizens United for Consumer Sovereignty, a South Korean consumer group, said the driving range of most EVs drop by up to 40% in cold temperatures when batteries need to be heated, with Tesla suffering the most, citing data from the country’s environment ministry.

Last year, the KFTC fined German carmaker Mercedes-Benz and its Korean unit 20.2 billion won for false advertising tied to gas emissions of its diesel passenger vehicles.

VIDEO3:3503:35
Musk to Tesla staff: Don’t be too bothered by stock market craziness

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Nasdaq closes out its first four-quarter slump since dot-com crash

The once high flying tech sector has endured a heavy selloff this year amid concerns that the sector’s growth could be curtailed by rising interest rates. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite is down more than 14%.

Chris Hondros | Newsmakers | Getty Images

A lot has changed in technology since the dot-com boom and bust.

The internet went mobile. The data center went to the cloud. Cars are now driving themselves. Chatbots have gotten pretty smart.

But one thing has remained. When the economy turns, investors rush for the exits. Despite a furious rally on Thursday, the tech-laden Nasdaq finished in the red for a fourth straight quarter, marking the longest such streak since the dot-bomb period of 2000 to 2001. The only other negative four-quarter stretch in the Nasdaq’s five-decade history was in 1983-84, when the video game market crashed.

This year marks the first time the Nasdaq has ever fallen all four quarters. It dropped 9.1% in the first three months of the year, followed by a second-quarter plunge of 22% and a third-quarter decline of 4.1%. It fell 1% in the fourth quarter because of an 8.7% drop in December.

For the full year, the Nasdaq slid 33%, its steepest decline since 2008 and the third-worst year on record. The drop 14 years ago came during the financial meltdown caused by the housing crisis.

“It’s really hard to be positive on tech right now,” Gene Munster, managing partner of Loup Ventures, told CNBC’s Brian Sullivan on Wednesday. “You feel like you’re missing something. You feel like you’re not getting the joke.”

Tech has been like a horror show this year, says Wedbush's Dan Ives

Other than 2008, the only other year worse for the Nasdaq was 2000, when the dot-com bubble burst and the index sank 39%. Early dreams of the internet taking over the world were vaporized. Pets.com, infamous for the sock puppet, went public in February of that year and shut down nine months later. EToys, which held its IPO in 1999 and saw its market cap grow to almost $8 billion, sank in 2000, losing almost all its value before going bankrupt early the next year. Delivery company Kozmo.com never got its IPO off the ground, filing in March 2000 and withdrawing its offering in August.

Amazon had its worst year ever in 2000, dropping 80%. Cisco fell 29% and then another 53% the next year. Microsoft plummeted by more than 60% and Apple by over 70%.

The parallels to today are quite stark.

In 2022, the company formerly known as Facebook lost roughly two-thirds of its value as investors balked at a future in the metaverse. Tesla fell by a similar amount, as the carmaker long valued like a tech company crashed into reality. Amazon dropped by half.

The IPO market this year was non-existent, but many of the companies that went public last year at astronomical valuations lost 80% or more of their value.

Perhaps the closest analogy to 2000 was the crypto market this year. Digital currencies Bitcoin and ether plunged by more than 60%. Over $2 trillion in value was wiped out as speculators fled crypto. Numerous companies went bankrupt, most notably crypto exchange FTX, which collapsed after reaching a $32 billion valuation earlier in the year. Founder Sam Bankman-Fried now faces criminal fraud charges.

The only major crypto company traded on the Nasdaq is Coinbase, which went public last year. In 2022, its shares fell 86%, eliminating more than $45 billion in market cap. In total, Nasdaq companies have shed close to $9 trillion in value this year, according to FactSet.

At its peak in 2000, Nasdaq companies were worth about $6.6 trillion in total, and proceeded to lose about $5 trillion of that by the time the market bottomed in October 2002.

Don’t fight the fed

Despite the similarities, things are different today.

For the most part, the collapse of 2022 was less about businesses vanishing overnight and had more to do with investors and executives waking up to reality.

Companies are downsizing and getting revalued after a decade of growth fueled by cheap money. With the Fed raising rates to try and get inflation under control, investors have stopped putting a premium on rapid unprofitable growth and started demanding cash generation.

“If you’re looking solely at future cash flows without profitability, those are the companies that did really well in 2020, and those are not as defensible today,” Shannon Saccocia, chief investment officer of SVB Private, told CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime” on Tuesday. “The tech is dead narrative is probably in place for the next couple of quarters,” Saccocia said, adding that some parts of the sector “will have light at the end of this tunnel.”

The 'tech is dead' narrative will only last short term into 2023, says SVB's Shannon Saccocia

The tunnel she’s describing is the continuing rate increases by the Fed, which may only end if the economy enters a recession. Either scenario is troubling for much of technology, which tends to thrive when the economy is in growth mode.

In mid-December, the Fed raised its benchmark interest rate to the highest in 15 years, lifting it to a target range of 4.25% to 4.5%. The rate was anchored near zero through the pandemic as well as in the years that followed the financial crisis.

Tech investor Chamath Palihapitiya told CNBC in late October that more than a decade of zero interest rates “perverted the market” and “allowed manias and asset bubbles to build in every single part of the economy.”

Palihapitiya took as much advantage as anyone of the cheap money available, pioneering investments in special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs), blank-check entities that hunt for companies to take public through a reverse merger.

With no yield available in fixed income and with tech attracting stratospheric valuations, SPACs took off, raising more than $160 billion on U.S. exchanges in 2021, nearly double the prior year, according to data from SPAC Research. That number sank to $13.4 billion this year. CNBC’s Post-SPAC index, comprised of the largest companies that have debuted via SPACs in the last two years, lost two-thirds of its value in 2022.

SPACs slumped in 2022

CNBC

‘Bargain basement’ shopping

The IPO market is as bad as it was in 2001, and quick improvement is unlikely, says Bullpen's Davidson

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Five Chinese startups that survived a tough year of Covid lockdowns

US Top News and Analysis 

A Kennon Robotics robot delivers food at a Haidilao hotpot restaurant in Shanghai on April 7, 2021.
Qilai Shen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

BEIJING — In a year of Covid lockdowns and travel restrictions, some Chinese startups that survived found growth online and overseas.

China’s economy likely grew by just 3% in 2022, economists estimate. Lockdowns stifled business and kept investors from vetting deals. The path to an IPO in the United States — an important route to reaping investment returns — essentially froze.

The next year or two will remain soft in terms of venture capital backing for startups in China and elsewhere, according to an assessment from Preqin, a VC data service. U.S. dollars raised by China-focused VCs plunged by more than 80% from 2021 to just under $9 billion in 2022, according to Preqin data as of Dec. 28.

But many deals still went on in China’s information technology industry, factory-related sectors and business connectivity apps, among others, said Angela Lai, a senior research analyst at Preqin.

She said that venture capitalists have near-record levels of capital on hand — what’s known as “dry powder.” China-focused VCs had $104.7 billion as of March 2022, Preqin data showed.

“Asset managers stand ready to react when the market picks up,” Lai said. “Everyone’s waiting to see when is a really good entry point, when is the macro going to be picking up.”

As China gears up for a reopening from zero-Covid, here’s a selection of how five startups said they did in 2022, in alphabetical order:

Anxinsec Technology

Year founded: 2019

Notable backers: Hillhouse Capital, BlueRun Ventures

Headquarters: Beijing

Cybersecurity company Anxinsec saw revenue quadruple in 2022 to tens of millions of yuan, said founder Alex Jiang. That’s thanks to big corporate customers which he said now include Siemens, JD.com and Baidu.

The three companies did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The startup avoided significant impact from China’s Covid lockdowns since it could deliver its products virtually, Jiang said. He added that the greater use of digital tools — from ride-hailing apps to videoconferencing — means more companies’ core assets are digital, creating more demand for cybersecurity protection.

Anxinsec focuses on data, or memory, protection services — free for personal use, Jiang said. He pointed out that Microsoft has said that 70% of vulnerabilities are related to memory.

The startup already has subsidiaries in Hong Kong and United Arab Emirates, but the company still has a long way to go before going public, Jiang said.

Ciarra

Year founded: 2016

Notable backers: Skyline Ventures

Headquarters: Foshan

In a year of inflation and war, Europe-focused kitchen appliances brand Ciarra saw sales grow by about 25%, founder Kang Zuotian said.

He claimed if the war in Ukraine hadn’t broken out, sales could have grown by about 60%, but European consumers’ willingness to spend declined as energy prices soared more than incomes rose.

The company sells cooker hoods and induction hobs for use at home, with list prices of a few hundred euros each — or a few hundred U.S. dollars, for the U.S. market.

Although Ciarra products might be 30% to 40% more expensive than similar ones on the market, they use half the electricity, Kang said in Mandarin translated by CNBC. “We don’t want Chinese companies going overseas to only be cheap.”

Most products reach Europe by ship and are sold mostly through physical stores, he said. Kang said he plans to use 2022’s financial performance to prepare for a mainland China IPO in the near future.

Keenon Robotics

Year founded: 2010

Notable backers: SoftBank, Prosperity7 Ventures, Yunqi Partners

Headquarters: Shanghai

With no growth to speak of in China for 2022, Keenon Robotics saw revenue climb by more than 40% thanks to its overseas business, COO Wan Bin said.

The company aggressively pushed overseas in 2022 – launching subsidiaries in Tokyo, Seoul, Germany, Dubai, Los Angeles and Hong Kong, Wan said. In 2023, he said the plan is to expand regional business from those places, while capitalizing on China’s rebound.

Previously, Wan said that Keenon had seen revenue at least double or more every year from a lower base, when the China market was growing.

Keenon has reached unicorn status, with a valuation of more than $1 billion. In Sept. 2021, SoftBank’s Vision Fund 2 led a $200 million Series D investment round, and SoftBank Robotics announced a partnership with Keenon.

It took about five years for Keenon to find its focus in service sector robots, especially catering, Wan said. Their robots now serve food at restaurants such as Haidilao hot pot, or bring deliveries to hotel rooms.

In China, customers pay about 2,000 yuan a month per robot, Wan said, noting prices are higher overseas.

Wan didn’t have specifics to share about IPO plans.

Povison

Year founded: 2020

Notable backers: eWTP Capital, Skyline Ventures

Headquarters: Guangzhou

Home furniture brand Povison saw sales more than double in the last year, to over $50 million in 2022, founder Ayden Lin said. He hopes for an IPO in three years.

The company primarily sells to U.S. consumers via its website — which lists $2,000 marble dining tables, $1,500 wooden makeup vanity table sets and $500 for a pair of velvet adjustable bar stools. The company has a staff of 100 people in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong and Los Angeles, Lin said.

Lin said he began working in China’s domestic furniture e-commerce market in 2017. He found there was overproduction in the industry, but suppliers didn’t know how they could adjust their business.

Lin claims part of his success is the company’s development of digital systems that allow Povison to discover areas of consumer demand and respond quickly via its 40 to 50 suppliers.

One system manages warehouses and divides the manufacturing process into parts, so that steps such as painting and gluing can be done at the same time, Lin said. The other connects shipments with trucks that can deliver products in the U.S., he said.

Volant Aerotech

Year founded: 2021

Notable backers: Future Capital, Shunwei Capital, Ventech China

Headquarters: Shanghai

2022 was the year China’s first passenger plane, Comac C919, finally got local certification. Just over a year earlier, engineers who worked on the airplane launched their own startup, Volant Aerotech, to build what’s essentially an electric-powered helicopter.

That technical experience gives Volant an edge in efficiently developing aircraft that can meet regulators’ requirements — such as considering flight over water — from the very start, founder and CEO Dong Ming said.

Volant has already built a prototype that China’s aviation regulators have greenlit for a test flight, set to take place in early 2023.

The vehicle, expected to begin deliveries in the second half of 2026, can be used in shuttle services, for charter flights, tourism and package delivery, Dong said. By the end of 2027, he expects Volant will have delivered about 100 of the vehicles.

Delta Air Lines and other passenger flight operators have backed startups developing similar vehicles, known formally as electric vertical take-off and landing (eVTOL) aircraft.

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Texas Waffle House former employee gives her side of brawl that went viral

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A former Austin, Texas Waffle House employee who shot to fame on the internet after grabbing a chair in mid-flight that was chucked at her, turned to social media this week to give her side, saying she has been blacklisted by the chain.

Last week, “Waffle House” was trending on Twitter after a video of the employee catching and slapping down a chair during a brawl at one of the chain’s restaurants.

The over two-minute-long video shows the lead-up and fight between multiple Waffle House customers and employees.

TWITTER ERUPTS OVER VIRAL VIDEO OF WAFFLE HOUSE EMPLOYEE DEFLECTING A THRWN CHAIR: ‘A NEW SUPERHERO’

The video shows customers climbing over the bar and entering the kitchen area, fists flying, sugar shakers smashing, and one Waffle House employee with what may be the quickest reflexes ever witnessed by a waffle pressing, pancake-tossing, egg-flipping “Rock Star.”

The employee, identified as Halie “B” in a self-made YouTube video, gave her side of what went on that night at the bright yellow building.

In the video, which is over 20 minutes long, Halie said six people walked in on a busy night and sat in a section of the restaurant that was closed off. After being told that the section was closed off, the customers continued to sit there and started demanding service, she explained.

WARNING: VIDEOS BELOW CONTAIN PROFANITY

Halie claimed to have work at Waffle House for four years, off and on, and earned a “Rock Star” shirt, which goes to the highest cook level achieved. But also, as a Rock Star, the cooks serve tables and can run the store.

TWITTER ERUPTS IN DEBATE OVER WHETHER WESTERN FILM ‘BLAZING SADDLES’ WOULD SURVIVE ‘WOKE’ CULTURE

Halie said the girls started “hollering” and demanded employees take their orders, and after a while, she told the customers they could leave.

But they chose not to leave, she explained, and instead demanded that she, “the White girl,” cook their food.

As the demands continued, the tensions grew with one girl wearing leopard patterned clothing throwing silverware, kicking plates, and kicking food, Halie said.

“That’s money,” she said.

TWITTER USERS PUSH TO BOYCOTT TESLA AFTER ELON MUSK TWEETS HIS PRONOUNS ARE ‘PROSECUTE/FAUCI’

Halie then said she grabbed a sugar shaker and chucked it at the woman.

“That’s how night shift works, and it’s sad,” she said. “It’s not safe at night, so we have to do what we can.”

After throwing the sugar shaker, the customer climbed onto the counter and fell onto the other side. She was then removed from the cooking area, at which point she grabbed a chair and threw it at Halie.

“I had caught it…and it bounced off my wrist,” she said.

Once the restaurant was cleared, the staff locked the doors and began the cleanup process.

The next day, Halie said, the boss came in to watch the security footage and wrote her up for throwing a sugar shaker, but that was it.

ALABAMA ‘FRIENDSGIVING’ DINERS TIP WAFFLE HOUSE WAITRESS $1,125: ‘NORMALIZE BEING KIND’

Two months after the incident, Halie said, she decided to leave Waffle House and when she tried to get a job at another store, she was told she had been blacklisted.

“I was blacklisted,” she said. “I can’t ever work for Waffle House again. I tried working for another sometime earlier this year, and they found out I was blacklisted.”

And that was despite the original store telling her she could come back any time, according to Halie.

After the video made the rounds, Halie started a new Twitter page called, “The Real WWendy,” or Waffle House Wendy, under the user @WitchDragon5.

A GoFundMe page was also setup just two days ago, with a goal of raising $5,000 for Halie. As of Monday, the page had raised nearly $5,500 for her to use “however she wants.”

At the end of her video, Halie said she has not eaten Waffle House in about eight months, and that was about to change. But she recapped how the events unfolded that night at the restaurant, in a quite straightforward way.

“It’s not a lot,” she said. “They were being rude, belligerent. I finished what I started. That’s really it.”

 

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California car crash: Tesla plunges 250 feet off cliff at ‘Devil’s Slide’

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A Tesla carrying four people flipped several times as it plunged about 250 feet off a cliff along Highway 1 at “Devil’s Slide” in California on Monday, according to officials. 

Four people, two adults and two minors, were safely rescued. The two adults suffered non-life-threatening injuries while the two children were unharmed, according to the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office

Several helicopters were called to help evacuate the victims from the vehicle, which landed on its wheels at the bottom of the rocky cliff. 

6 RESCUED AFTER FISHING BOAT RUNS AGROUND IN CA

“We immediately put a plan in place to lower rescuers to the vehicle to get eyes and assess what we had,” a Cal Fire official said at the scene. 

“As we were doing that we were able to notice movement in the front seat through the windshield with binoculars. So we knew that we had at least one person that was alive.”

Officials did not immediately release the cause of the crash. The two minors were 4 and 9 years old, according to KTVU. 

 

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This 26-year-old quit her job to ask strangers how much money they make—now she's scoring 6-figure brand deals

In May, Hannah Williams made a leap a lot of people only dream about: She quit her day job as a data analyst to become a content creator full time.

At the time, she’d had a few months of success through her personal TikTok, where she shared experiences about job-hopping and negotiating her salary, which inspired her to launch Salary Transparent Street, a TikTok series asking strangers a question you’re not supposed to: How much money do you make?

The series went viral, and Williams saw a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.

“I knew that you don’t just have an account that is that successful that quickly, without it being monetizable in some way,” she says. “I was ready to figure it out.”

Within months, Williams and her fiance, James Daniels, both quit their jobs to focus on turning Salary Transparent Street from a few TikTok videos to a full-fledged business. They’ve crisscrossed 10 states, interviewed hundreds of people and landed six-figure brand deals. So far, Salary Transparent Street has brought in nearly $600,000, and the couple live off a $200,000 per year salary.

CNBC Make It caught up with Williams, 26, on how she prepared for the big quit, the highs and lows of being your own boss and advice to workers who want to chase their own dreams in 2023.

How she quit her job: ‘Failure wasn’t the worst thing’

While Williams finally put in her notice around May, she says she was mentally ready to quit long before. The biggest thing holding her back? In order to build out Salary Transparent Street the way she wanted to, Williams would need Daniels (the series’ cameraman) to also quit his office job in government contracting.

It was a big risk to lose steady income and bet on something new. But Williams, a data analyst by training, crunched the numbers and saw that the leap could be profitable.

“I knew that there were brand deals there that were very niche and perfect fits for us that might take a couple of months to figure out, but they were possibilities,” Williams says. Plus, since the couple didn’t have kids or a mortgage, the timing couldn’t be better to be a little risky.

As Williams sees it, “failure wasn’t the worst thing.” She could always go back to her old job or find a similar one if the series didn’t take off. The worst thing, really, would be to not try it at all.

So, with $10,000 in savings, Williams and Daniels put in their notice.

Within two weeks, Williams connected with two agents who provided $24,000 in seed money for Salary Transparent Street’s first two months. Williams and Daniels used the money to pay their bills, pay for basic living costs and travel to film.

Salary Transparent Street continued to gain momentum, reaching millions of viewers. Williams landed partnerships with brands like Fiverr, The Knot and Cleo, a budgeting app. Then, in September, a big account came through: Williams signed a six-month deal with Indeed, the job-search platform, for nearly half a million dollars.

The downsides of being your own boss

Building your own social media brand doesn’t come without challenges. Just like with any job, Williams says, being your own boss also has some downsides, the biggest one being that the internet never stops.

“So you can throw holidays out the window, you can throw a weekend out the window. It’s incredibly difficult when your work is kind of your life, and that work-life balance you had before completely disappears,” she says.

With that said, she’d much rather put in that effort on something she built, rather than working a weekend for a company she’s not as invested in.

Another side effect: burnout. “It’s been a really interesting lesson to learn that working all the time is definitely not the answer to getting stuff done,” she says. “Eventually, your brain just can’t handle anymore.”

To deal with burnout, Williams says it’s been crucial for her to understand when she’s most productive, and when she can give herself a breather. For example, she likes to steal away time to work on administrative tasks in the morning before other people are awake and asking things of her.

Then, to keep from getting overwhelmed, she schedules out her work by the hour, including when she should take a break to go for a walk or read. “If it’s on my calendar, I’m going to follow it,” she says. Scheduling breaks builds in accountability. “It’s been difficult to realize that I need to take a break and just chill for a little bit, and then get back to it. And that’s going to help me be more productive rather than going at full-speed all the time.”

Finally, another big downside to being an internet entrepreneur is moderating comments on her video and social media posts. Not only can it be a time suck, but sometimes comments can be hateful, which Williams says weighs on her mental health. Now that she’s scaled the work, she’s also hired an executive assistant who helps with content moderation, who’ll earn $80,000 per year with health benefits and PTO when she becomes a full-time employee in January.

Advice to job-seekers in 2023

As much as Williams wants to tell others to take risks and make big career moves, she also knows people are worried about the economy in 2023. “If we do fall into a recession, it just means that there’s maybe a little bit less advantage for you in the labor market,” she says. “So just be informed of that and make calculated decisions.”

That doesn’t mean you have to stay in a bad situation, though. You can still leverage information out there to figure out if you’re being underpaid and ask for a raise, or move to a more resilient job, employer or industry.

“When I quit my job, I knew that my backup plan if I failed was going back to my old job or going back into an industry where I had a strong career,” Williams says. “There are so many resources out there that can empower you to make a change if you want to.”

She adds: “Don’t be afraid to take risks. Just make sure they’re informed decisions.”

Making an impact

How this 26-year-old earns and spends $25,000 a year just outside NYC

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Mexican prison attack death toll up to 17, gang leader one of 25 escapees officials say

Mexican authorities on Monday raised the death toll in a prison attack intended to free a local gang leader across the southern border from El Paso, Texas to 17.

Security Secretary Rosa Icela Rodríguez said 10 of the dead were prison guards who were attacked by gunmen who arrived early Sunday in armored vehicles and fired on the entrance and inside dormitories.

In total, 25 inmates escaped during the violence. They were members of the Mexicles gang, which Rodríguez associated with the Caborca Cartel. The leader of the Mexicles gang was among those who escaped, she said. 

TITLE 42’S END COULD MEAN BIG PAYDAY FOR MEXICAN CARTELS, ACCORDING TO EXPERTS

Mexican National Guard stand guard outside a state prison in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico on Sunday. Mexican soldiers and state police regained control of a state prison in Ciudad Juarez across the border from El Paso, Texas after violence broke out, according to state officials. 

Mexican National Guard stand guard outside a state prison in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico on Sunday. Mexican soldiers and state police regained control of a state prison in Ciudad Juarez across the border from El Paso, Texas after violence broke out, according to state officials. 
(AP Photo/Christian Chavez)

The Caborca Cartel had been led by drug lord Rafael Caro Quintero, who was recaptured by authorities in July.

When authorities went inside the prison, they found 10 “VIP” cells outfitted with televisions and other comforts. One even had a safe filled with cash. Also found in the prison was cocaine methamphetamine, heroin, fentanyl, and marijuana.

Two other gunmen killed after attacking local police a short time before the attack on the prison were likely a diversion, Defense Secretary Luis Cresencio Sandoval said. They were not included in the 17 dead, which were made up of 10 guards and seven inmates.

The state prison was the scene of a riot in August that spread to the streets of Juarez, resulting in nearly a dozen people dead. 

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In that case, two inmates were killed inside the prison and then alleged gang members started shooting up the town, including killing four employees of a radio station who were doing a promotion at a restaurant.

Fox News’ Bradford Betz as well as The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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