What every freelancer needs to know about taxes
Entrepreneur, brand strategist, and cultural powerhouse Karen Civil talks money moves, marketing, and mastering your value. Karen opens up about her early financial mistakes, as well as her money journey - from running fan sites to working with iconic names like Lil Wayne, Nipsey Hussle, and Beats by Dre. Whether you're an aspiring entrepreneur or just trying to get your own finances in order, on this episode of Financial Freestyle, Karen Civil proves that success is about mindset, strategy, and knowing your worth.
Listen and subscribe to Financial Freestyle on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you find your favorite podcasts.
Financial Freestyle with Ross Mac on Yahoo Finance is dedicated to promoting economic prosperity for all. Through expert insights, practical advice, and inspiring success stories, we empower you to build and grow wealth. Join us on this transformative journey toward financial freedom and inclusive economic growth.
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Yahoo
43 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Jim Cramer Recommends Spotify Over Peloton Interactive
Peloton Interactive, Inc. (NASDAQ:PTON) is one of the 15 stocks that Jim Cramer recently talked about. During the lightning round, a caller asked what Cramer thinks of Peloton Interactive, Inc. (NASDAQ:PTON), and he replied: 'Well, you know, it is a subscription business, and I like subscription businesses. I think that they work, but I don't think they have the growth. So, therefore, I'm going to say if you want a subscription business, I want you to be in Spotify.' A group of people in a fitness class with connected fitness products in a studio or gym. Peloton Interactive, Inc. (NASDAQ:PTON) provides connected fitness equipment and a digital platform that combines hardware, software, and content as it provides interactive workout experiences through various sales channels. During an episode of Squawk on the Street aired in March, Cramer mentioned the stock while appreciating subscription businesses. 'The fitness trend is good. Remember the fatness trend is battling with the fitness trend. But I would say that Peloton, Spotify, Netflix, Costco, subscription businesses. Subscription businesses are king. And Peloton's a subscription business. Well done… Peloton seems like it's got churn down. And I like that. That was a very good call. I thought the call was very good. Remember, I'm totally in this camp which just says, younger people want to workout.' While we acknowledge the potential of PTON as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: The Best and Worst Dow Stocks for the Next 12 Months and 10 Unstoppable Stocks That Could Double Your Money. Disclosure: None. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Newsweek
3 hours ago
- Newsweek
Meghan Markle Podcast Loses in Charts to Her Biggest Critics
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Meghan Markle's podcast was outperformed during its nine-week run by rival shows from staunch critics. The Duchess of Sussex launched Confessions of a Female Founder on April 8 and the final episode dropped on June 3. At its height, Meghan's show hit second place among Apple podcasts but quickly slipped down the charts after the first two episodes while on Spotify it hovered around 21st place. That put it behind some big-name political and debate podcasts from commentators with whom she does not see eye to eye. Meghan Markle listens to the radio through headphones during a visit tot Reprezent 107.3FM at Pop Brixton, in London, England, on January 9, 2018. Meghan Markle listens to the radio through headphones during a visit tot Reprezent 107.3FM at Pop Brixton, in London, England, on January 9, 2018. Dominic Lipinski -Meghan Markle's Position in the Spotify Charts Newsweek reported Confessions came into the Spotify charts at number 24 on April 10 and archived versions of the site show that by April 12 it had dropped out of the top 100 again. By April 14, it was back in at number 21, polling in the same position on several other dates leading to June 7, according versions of the chart list that were archived across April, May and June. The show has since dropped out of the top 100. Meghan's Position in the Apple Podcast Charts Historical Apple chart data is more difficult to recover due to the way the website is set up, with archived versions limited to the top six podcasts only. Confessions did particularly well on Apple after its first episode, which featured Bumble's Whitney Wolfe Herd, dropped on April 8, landing it in second place by April 12 and 13. And its second episode, featuring Reshma Saujani, founder of nonprofit Girls Who Code, also landed Confessions in fifth place on April 15. However, Newsweek has not been able to find record of the podcast returning to the top six beyond that point and news reports recorded it dropping out of the top 200 by April 26. All of which puts it someway behind high-profile rivals and critics of the couple. Tucker Carlson Former Fox News host Carlson consistently came in the top 10 on Spotify throughout this period, usually fifth or seventh, with The Tucker Carlson Show. He has previously said that Piers Morgan losing his job for doubting Meghan's account of suicidal thoughts "was the most insane thing I've ever seen." He added in the January interview with Morgan: "Meghan Markle does not represent Black people in the United States." Candace Owens Candace came in ninth or tenth place in the week's when Meghan's show was at 21st. In January, Owens denounced Meghan and Harry for visiting the L.A. wildfire disaster zone, telling Newsweek in a statement: "I agree with the general public sentiment that Meghan and Harry are inauthentic ambulance chasers." Joe Rogan The Joe Rogan Experience was at the top of the Spotify charts on Monday, and was consistently among the top few shows on both Spotify and Apple throughout the period. Its host has been far less personally critical of the Sussexes than Carlson, Owens and others but Harry and Meghan took aim at him in January 2022, during the COVID-19 era. The couple released a statement via their spokesperson confirming they had been "expressing concerns to our partners at Spotify about the all-too-real consequences of Covid-19 misinformation on its platform." The comment was widely interpreted as a veiled swipe at Rogan, who also appeared to read it that way and hit back during a light-hearted skit on his Netflix comedy special Burn the Boats in August 2024. Rogan joked he wanted to do magic mushrooms with Harry and wait until they kick in before saying: "I'm going to hover over him and say, 'Are you sure vaccines are safe? B****, you're not a scientist!'" Other High-Profile Critics During the weeks in which Confessions was number 21 on Spotify, Meghan outperformed Ben Shapiro and Megyn Kelly, who are both consistent features of the Spotify and Apple top 100 lists but at times lower down. The fact Meghan's show quickly dropped down the lists, however, will leave hosts like Shapiro and Kelly able to claim a greater degree of consistency. Shapiro gave an interview to Piers Morgan in 2023 in which he said: "They're just the worst. I actually read Prince Harry's awful memoir and the number of things that are obviously not true, and the absolute self-delusion, and arrogant self-delusion..." Kelly regularly criticizes Meghan. For example in 2023, she addressed Prince Harry: "Your wife's a bully. Her former press communications person who worked for both you and your brother, Jason Knauf, is on the record about the bullying she committed against people who were younger than or were less powerful than she was within the palace, who she made cry all the time." Meghan has denied bullying palace staff. Link Lauren, a former Robert F. Kennedy Jr. aide, also hit a peak on Apple when his show Spot On first launched on May 12, entering the charts in fifth on May 13. It too subsequently dropped down the list and was positioned at 159th on Monday. Lauren earlier this year said: "Meghan Markle the Duchess of Scamalot just dropped the trailer for her new Netflix show and let me just say it was one of the most out of touch things I've seen in a while. "Most Americans right now, most people in the world, are struggling to put food on the table, they're struggling to pay their rent, to pay their mortgage. Who wants to watch an ex-duchess traipse around her mansion picking flowers?" Both Meghan's two podcast series, Confessions and the 2022 show Archetypes, have opted for limited runs which means they have come and gone in the space of only a few months, never cementing a long-term position in the charts. That may well work for Meghan in terms of the range of commitments she has, including her Netflix contract and online shop, though a longer-term consequence may be that her shows become less embedded in the public imagination as a result. Jack Royston is chief royal correspondent for Newsweek, based in London. You can find him on X, formerly Twitter, at @jack_royston and read his stories on Newsweek's The Royals Facebook page. Do you have a question about Charles and Queen Camilla, Prince William and Princess Kate, Meghan Markle and Prince Harry, or their family that you would like our experienced royal correspondents to answer? Email royals@ We'd love to hear from you.
Yahoo
14 hours ago
- Yahoo
Aussie mum's $1,200 electricity bill shock sparks warning for millions: ‘Outrageous'
A Queensland mum has shared her shock over an 'insane' $1,200 electricity bill her family are facing. Millions of Aussies are being warned to brace for higher electricity bills to hit their accounts, with household power bills set to rise by up to $228 in the coming weeks. Rachel Green usually spends around $600 and $700 per quarter on power bills for her young family of four. While their winter bills have been known to creep up to $800 if they are using heaters in winter, the 32-year-old Gold Coast mum was stunned after seeing that her next bill was predicted to be $1,236.98. 'We have never had a bill this high, even through summer if we use the air conditioner,' Green told Yahoo Finance. RELATED 1.3 million Aussies face up to $228 electricity bill hike in weeks Centrelink cash boost coming from July 1 for millions of Aussies NAB worker saves grandmother from $50,000 heartbreak after noticing tiny detail Green has a newborn and a toddler, and said the extra heater the family was using could be contributing to the higher cost. 'We're heating one extra bedroom at the moment as we have a new baby, but we try to keep the heaters at around 18C and only use them at night,' Green said. 'We did receive an email from our provider saying they are putting up our power prices, so that could definitely be a factor.'Household power bills are set to rise from July 1, after energy regulators confirmed the final default market prices for the year. In South East Queensland, where Green is based, prices are set to rise by $77 annually to $2,143. This is based on a residential property without a controlled load. Wholesale costs (the price retailers pay to buy electricity from the energy market) and network costs (the price of transporting electricity) are two of the biggest contributors to the price increases. While only a minority of customers are on default offers, energy retailers often adjust the rates of their popular plans in line with default prices. That means many households will see higher prices next month. Households will get another round of the federal government's energy rebates from July 1, with two $75 rebates given each quarter until the end of the year. Green found that her family normally used around 22.4 kWh of power in April or $8.90 a day. In June, that jumped to 44.2 kWh or $16.22 a day. Green said bills were one of her household's biggest expenses, after their mortgage. 'Interest rate cuts haven't improved the situation that much,' she said. "We're paying about $10 less each week, which is great, but when everything else keeps going up, it really doesn't make that much of a difference if any. What we're saving in rates we're spending on other bills that keep going up.' New research from Finder found nearly a third of Australian households experienced 'bill shock' when they received their most recent summer power bill. On average, households spent $328 for their quarterly electricity bill in April. However, costs are expected to go up as things cool down. Finder's latest analysis found it would cost $249 to run a heater on average this winter, with an electric heater costing $241 on average and a gas heater $301. Finder energy expert Mariam Gabaji said electricity usage was up and it was hitting people in their hip pockets. 'Energy bills are increasingly becoming a source of financial stress for Australian households,' she told Yahoo Finance. 'Bill shock can take a huge financial toll and can quickly spiral out of control if they start to pile up.' Gabaji said simple steps like adjusting the thermostat and reducing reliance on high-energy devices during peak periods could curb costs. 'Compare your electricity plan twice a year, so you're not unnecessarily giving providers your hard-earned cash,' she said. Green said she was in the process of switching providers and had used the government's Energy Made Easy website to compare prices. Victorians can use Victorian Energy Compare. She said this process helped her realise she was being "ripped off" and paying too much for her electricity. 'We're also now really rugging up so we don't have to run heaters as often,' she said. 'There are three blankets on each bed and the husband is sleeping in a beanie. But with overnights of 3 degrees in our area, we're still heating the kids' bedrooms at night. 'I feel a bit sad that in modern Australia, families are going without heat in their homes over winter because of the outrageous costs of power.'