Good morning. There may not have been a drink of the summer this year, but there definitely is a drink of the autumn: a Negroni sbagliato. The cocktail has gone viral on TikTok after actor Emma D'Arcy said it was their beverage of choice in a promo for House of the Dragon. What is it? A negroni, but sub the gin for sparkling wine (sbagliato means "mistake" in Italian). Here's a quick recipe so you can make it after Sober October: Add ice, stir 1.5 ounces of sweet vermouth with 1.5 ounces of Campari, then top it off with prosecco. Garnish with a slice of orange. —Neal Freyman, Abby Rubenstein, Matty Merritt | | | | Nasdaq | 10,417.10 | | | | S&P | 3,577.03 | | | | Dow | 29,210.85 | | | | 10-Year | 3.900% | | | | Bitcoin | $19,175.65 | | | | Moderna | $130.72 | | | *Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 2:00am ET. Here's what these numbers mean. | - Markets: The S&P 500 extended its losing streak to six days yesterday, notching its worst day since November 2020. Moderna did not contribute to the decline after news broke it will develop a cancer vaccine with Merck.
- Economy: Yesterday brought more sinister inflation news when the September producer price index, which measures wholesale prices, came in higher than expected. But the headliner is today when the consumer price index appears. Economists predict core inflation will hit a 40-year high, according to Bloomberg, so none of this is likely to get the Fed to chill on rate hikes.
| | | Joe Buglewicz/Getty Images Alex Jones, the conspiracy theorist and Infowars host, was ordered by a Connecticut jury to pay $965 million in damages to people harmed by his lies about the Sandy Hook school shooting. Those people include 14 family members of victims and an FBI agent who was a first-responder at the shooting. One of those family members, Robbie Parker, whose six-year-old daughter was killed in the attack, was given $120 million—the largest single award. What did Jones do? For years, he used his massive reach on the internet to push a conspiracy theory that the 2012 school shooting was a hoax and that the victims' families were actors. Those lies led to death threats and harassment directed at them, the families said. Jones was sued for defamation in three separate lawsuits, this one and two in Texas. Jones lost all three suits by default because he didn't share necessary info during court proceedings, leaving only the question of damages open for juries. The finances of Alex Jones Nearly $1 billion is a lot to fork over…does Jones have it? Probably not all of it, but he did rake in tons of cash spreading lies about the Sandy Hook shooting. An employee of Jones testified that he brought in somewhere between $100 million and $1 billion selling merch (dietary supplements, books, and survival gear) since the massacre. In a single day in 2020, he did $810,000 in sales. And that mega-sales day was after his company, Infowars, had been booted from all the big social media platforms. YouTube, Apple, Facebook, Spotify, and Twitter banned Infowars in 2018 after Jones threatened then-special counsel Robert Mueller. But that did not appear to dent his business in any way. In the first defamation case against Jones, a forensic economist calculated that Jones and his companies have a net worth of up to $270 million. Jones has said he doesn't have much money. Looking ahead…the trial for the final defamation suit against Jones will take place in Texas near the end of the year.—NF | | Pool/Getty Images Fed officials fear doing too little on inflation. The minutes from the Fed's September meeting, released yesterday, show central bankers remain very worried about inflation's staying power. Many officials at the meeting stressed that the cost of taking too little action probably outweighed the cost of taking too much action—a message Jerome Powell has hammered home this summer. Ex-LA City Council president finally resigns from office. Three days after audio leaked of her making racist remarks about a fellow councilmember's Black child, Nury Martinez stepped down from the council entirely. The decision to leave office after initially only giving up her leadership post came after fellow Democrat President Biden said she and the other councilmembers on the recording should do so. It also followed the announcement that California's attorney general will investigate the redistricting that was being discussed when the inappropriate remarks were made. Pinky and the Brain reboot is coming along nicely. Stanford neuroscientists successfully transplanted human brain cells into rat brains. The human cells were able to grow and connect with rat brain cells, creating hybrid neural circuits (i.e., they worked). This research opens up possibilities to better understand conditions that are currently difficult to study, like autism and schizophrenia. It also creates an ethical gray area: Scientists worry that rats with human brain cells could potentially possess bits of human traits—like suffering and worrying about their follower count. | | TOGETHER WITH MASTERWORKS | The stock market is down a soul-crushing 20% year to date, leaving your investment portfolio looking scarier than a man eating chicken. (Sorry, a man-eating chicken!) But our 500,000+ members have found a better way. With Masterworks, they can access investments in multimillion-dollar, world-famous, museum-quality art for a fraction-of-the-entire-work price (a hyphenated word quadfecta!). It makes no-brainer financial sense. Contemporary art has outpaced the S&P 500 by 131% over the last quarter-century. Even top-of-the-line banks like Goldman Sachs recognize its inflation-fighting power. So many of our investors keep coming back for more because we deliver real results. Masterworks has averaged a king-sized net return of 29% from the 6 exits we've completed. That's through COVID-19, a bear market, and sky-high inflation. (Read enough hyphens yet?) Due to record demand, there's a huge waitlist to join. But Morning Brew readers can skip it with this exclusive referral link. See important Regulation A disclosures. | | Court documents Justice Clarence Thomas was a Prince fan in the '80s. We know this because it came up yesterday when the Supreme Court heard arguments over whether Andy Warhol's silkscreen prints of the rock star violate the copyright of the photographer who took the image he used to make them. The photographer, Lynn Goldsmith, claimed infringement after the pop artist's foundation licensed one of the prints to Condé Nast for Vanity Fair. Now it's up to the justices to decide whether Warhol's picture falls under the "fair use" exception to copyright law. So…what's fair use? Fair use lets you use copyrighted material without permission for things like criticism, news reporting, and scholarship. One thing courts consider to determine fair use is whether the use is "transformative," which means giving the work a new meaning or message, and that's what this case hinges on. The decision being reviewed by the high court found that Warhol, despite his reputation as a major artist, didn't transform the original enough to qualify. Zoom out: While this case is a fight between art world heavies, anything the court decides about the limits of fair use will impact all artists and professionals in creative industries.—AR | | Parks and Recreation/NBC via Giphy No one has been this excited for paperwork since we got our bellybutton pierced at 18. The Biden administration gave a sneak peak yesterday of the application that will wipe away a chunk of your college debt, and provided a few more details about how the process will work. Here's what you'll need to fill out the form: your name, SSN, birthday, phone number, and email. About the same info as a Red Robin rewards account. You'll be able to access the application via a .gov site in English and Spanish, and you won't even need to submit any income verification documents (unless officials notice some discrepancies in your info). Even though the form is simple, the Education Department estimated it will cost around $100 million per year to process the applications. But the process should be quick: One official said loans would be forgiven in "a matter of weeks" after paperwork is submitted. But don't ask us for a date. Administration officials said the app will go live sometime later this month and will be available through December 2023. Unless critics get their way…six GOP-led states argued in front of a federal judge in Missouri yesterday to block the program, and there are other legal challenges brewing.—MM | | Paddington/StudioCanal Stat: Marmalade sales in Britain spiked 18% last month as the UK mourned the death of Queen Elizabeth II, according to data company Kantar. Following the monarch's passing on Sept. 8, many rewatched a video in which the queen and an animated Paddington Bear bonded over their shared love of marmalade sandwiches. The clip's popularity prompted mourners to leave sandwiches and pots of the citrus jam in London's parks in tribute—so many, in fact, that parks officials begged the public to stop leaving anything besides flowers. Quote: "Even if China got a hold of the golden hen, it won't be able to lay golden eggs." Strict new US export restrictions aimed at kneecapping China's tech sector are taking their toll on the global semiconductor industry, but yesterday Taiwan's head of national security was focused on the fate of just one major chipmaker: TSMC. Chen Ming-tong explained that the US would not need to carry out reported possible plans to take over the company's operations if China invades the island because its manufacturing process is so integrated with global supply chains. Read: The science of sound that went into a famous concert hall's renovations. (The New Yorker) | | - Pepsi kicked off what's expected to be a bleak earnings season with good news: 20% profit growth last quarter and a raised forecast for the year.
- Starbucks and Delta linked their loyalty programs, so you can earn miles by buying coffee or free coffee by flying—tell the disaffected Dunkin' fan in your life.
- Tom Brady and Kim Clijsters are the latest sports stars to snap up ownership of a professional pickleball team.
- Twitter influencer Elon Musk launched a perfume called Burnt Hair and sold $1 million worth in just a few hours.
| | TOGETHER WITH KIMPTON HOTELS | Treat yourself to travel. Today's the LAST DAY to take advantage of Kimpton Hotels' biggest sale of the year and get up to 40% off their best flexible rates (available for stays from October 17, 2022–April 30, 2023). Find award-winning dining, inviting lobbies, and ridiculously personalized (and pet-friendly!) amenities + details at Kimpton's 75+ boutique hotels worldwide. Book your getaway today. | | Not just apple-picking szn: Parks that allow anyone to pick fruits and vegetables for free are gaining popularity in the US and abroad. For your nightstand: The best 39 books of the year (so far). A ball of bees, a hungry snake...and other award-winning wildlife photos. Live the life you want. In The Mel Robbins Podcast, Mel shares the science-backed tools she's built her career around to empower you to create a better life. Listen now. | | Brew Mini: "March Madness round, but in ancient Rome" is your particularly mysterious sample clue of the day. See what that's all about here. Three headlines and a lie Three of these headlines are real and one is faker than anything that promises to "detoxify" you. Can you spot the odd one out? - Man sues Texas Pete after learning hot sauce is not actually made in Texas
- Little Debbie mascot "comes out" as gay on National Coming Out Day this week
- Leader of Belarus gifts Putin a tractor for 70th birthday
- I made $200,000 last year ghostwriting tweets for superstar VCs
If you love Three Headlines and a Lie, play along on The Refresh from Insider and dive deeper into these weird headlines. | | We're often told to pull ourselves up by our bootstraps if we want to be successful, but is it really useful advice to follow? Watch or listen here. On Imposters: How comedian and Bros actor Guy Branum built a career in Hollywood despite stereotypes. Listen now. "How did they get so many followers?" We'll tell you in Strategy for Creators, a one-week sprint built to teach you strategies from the best in the biz. What employees want from their workplace changes as quickly as your TikTok feed. Join us on Oct. 27 at 12pm ET for a free virtual event. Register here. | | We made up the Little Debbie one. | | Written by Abigail Rubenstein, Matty Merritt, and Neal Freyman Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up here. WANT MORE BREW? Tips for smarter living → - Incrypto: Finally, crypto news you can understand
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