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‘It's like I killed someone': Broos on excluding Kaizer Chiefs players from Bafana squad

‘It's like I killed someone': Broos on excluding Kaizer Chiefs players from Bafana squad

News242 days ago

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Jalen Williams' adidas Harden Vol. 9 PE To Release Amidst NBA Finals
Jalen Williams' adidas Harden Vol. 9 PE To Release Amidst NBA Finals

Forbes

time16 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Jalen Williams' adidas Harden Vol. 9 PE To Release Amidst NBA Finals

adidas Harden Vol. 9 | Jalen Williams PE adidas PR As the Oklahoma City Thunder attempt to win a championship, rising star Jalen Williams will play a key role. The 24-year-old is Oklahoma City's second scoring option alongside Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and has already earned All-NBA status in just his third NBA season. But Williams' success goes beyond his play on the court. A fashion icon off the court and an adidas athlete, he has been wearing his own Harden Vol. 9 PE since February. The shoe itself features Williams' signature logo on the heel and his jersey number on the tongue. A vibrant colorway inspired by the 90's TV show Pinky and the Brain — Williams' favorite childhood cartoon — it's been a shoe that hasn't been available to the public, until now. adidas Harden Vol. 9 | Jalen Williams PE adidas PR The adidas Harden Vol. 9 'JDUB' is officially releasing on Friday, June 6 for $160, exclusively on adidas' website, select adidas stores, and select retailers. This release will come right after Game 1 of the NBA Finals. Williams first debuted his unique shoe on-court while playing against his brother, Utah Jazz rookie Cody Williams, as both wore a pair while going head-to-head. It was a special moment that was encapsulated by the brothers matching up for the very first time. From there, other players including OKC teammate Lu Dort and even James Harden himself have worn Williams' PE in recent months, which speaks to how significant this milestone is. Williams has been a featured adidas athlete since being drafted into the league. From day one, he's been put in a position to build his personal brand and status which has led to this moment. 'Charisma, personality, fashion sense — that alone drew us to him. But then his measurements were insane,' Cam Mason, Director of Sports Marketing for adidas Basketball recalled when thinking back to initially signing Williams. 'His charisma gives him the confidence, so that's why he's in a place he's at. He has so much influence and so much persona. He can connect with anybody.' Building his brand has been carefully mapped out since Williams joined adidas. There's no skipping steps when it comes to ascending alongside a shoe brand, but the Thunder star has able to do great things off the court. 'It's like, how do you continue to build your brand? First step is getting you into campaigns. We got him in a lot of lifestyle campaigns,' Mason said of Williams' journey. 'What's next? Let's get you a PE. What are you into? What's your persona?' adidas Harden Vol. 9 | Jalen Williams PE adidas PR While this PE isn't a signature shoe, it is a signal of just how quickly Williams is rising among the NBA ranks. Having a PE for any shoe is a significant accomplishment as he works his way toward a potential signature shoe with adidas in the future. Only the best players in the world earn that honor, but with the trajectory the Thunder swingman is on, it's not out of the question. He earned his first NBA All-Star nod and was also on an All-NBA and All-Defensive Team for his accomplishments in the 2024-25 campaign. Furthermore, his status off the court when it comes to fashion and pop culture only enhances his case for being next in line for a signature sneaker in the future.

LGBTQ+ Marketing Playbook: How Pride Drives Growth Amid DEI Backlash
LGBTQ+ Marketing Playbook: How Pride Drives Growth Amid DEI Backlash

Forbes

time17 minutes ago

  • Forbes

LGBTQ+ Marketing Playbook: How Pride Drives Growth Amid DEI Backlash

Pride Month, LGBTQA Ally branded packaging for Oreo Cookies, Walgreens, Queens, New York. (Photo by: ... More Lindsey Nicholson/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images) June 1 came and went without the usual cascade of rainbow logos. Meta, Pepsi, and Ubisoft — brands that embraced LGBTQ+ marketing with Pride colors just two years ago — stayed monochrome, betting that neutrality equals safety. For a decade, we criticized these brands for 'rainbow washing,' accusing them of performative LGBTQ+ marketing that appeared in June only to vanish in July. Now they've vanished in June too. In today's polarized climate, there is no neutral ground - it's Pride or Prejudice. Silence is a stance, and LGBTQ+ consumers are taking notes. They'll remember who stood with them when it got tough and who looked out for themselves. When these brands inevitably return waving rainbow flags, that $1.4 trillion market won't be as forgiving. The stakes are clear: 9.3% of U.S. adults identify as LGBTQ+, wielding buying power that grows three times faster than the general market. Among Gen Z, that number soars to nearly 25% - your future customer base is fundamentally more diverse than ever before. Yet 39% of Fortune 1000 executives plan to reduce Pride visibility this year, colliding with research showing 80% of LGBTQ+ adults ready to boycott brands that retreat. This isn't just American - multinational brands face the same reckoning globally, where LGBTQ+ consumers demand year-round authenticity over seasonal gestures. For CMOs who recognize that authentic engagement beats fearful silence, here are five strategic directives to navigate Pride when the stakes have never been higher. Your biggest risk isn't backlash - it's misalignment between what you say and what you do. The credibility gap kills brands faster than controversy. Use the Tightrope Table below to assess your alignment across five executive pressure points:c The LGBTQ+ Tightrope Framework: Five Balance Points Every CMO Must Align Before Pride Goes Live This is the Growth × Good equation, where authentic inclusion drives both revenue and reputation. The LGBTQ+ market demonstrates 2.3x higher brand loyalty when authentically engaged but punishes retreat equally, as Bud Light discovered when it shed 6.5% market share and over $1 billion in equity value. Here's what your competitors miss: Employee engagement and talent retention also hinge on authentic LGBTQ+ support. Companies with inclusive policies see 20% lower turnover rates and attract top-tier talent who increasingly evaluate employers on DEI commitments. When you factor in both consumer loyalty and workforce stability, the ROI calculation becomes undeniable. When 39% of brands retreat, those who stay capture disproportionate returns. It's portfolio theory: as the field narrows, authentic players gain an outsized share in a community starved for genuine support. For the sixth year running, SKITTLES®, the Mars Wrigley candy, stripped its own rainbow, partnered with GLAAD, and doubled its donation cap to $200,000 - all without a measurable sales dip. OREO adds a family‑friendly blueprint. Through its ongoing #ProudParent partnership with PFLAG National (launched 2020), the country's best‑selling cookie releases limited‑edition rainbow packs, produces ally‑focused shorts like 'Proud Parent,' and contributes at least $ 50,000 a year to PFLAG's allyship programs - all while maintaining category‑leading sales. The brand frames inclusion around family support, sidestepping partisan turf yet still generating high social engagement. Both brands prove sustained commitments outperform seasonal splash, contrasting with Target's slimmed-down 2025 Pride capsule that drew boycott calls on TikTok before reaching shelves. Two lessons follow: LGBTQ+ adults spend 48% more daily time with podcasts than the general market. On social platforms, micro-influencers under 10,000 followers drive 2.1% engagement rates - double that of macro creators. Pre-emptive retreat doesn't buy peace. Des Moines' Capital City Pride lost $75,000 when sponsors paused DEI budgets. Major events nationwide face similar exits, citing "political sensitivity." Meanwhile, activist groups like People's Union USA now publish boycott schedules year-round, proving that organized consumer pressure operates year-round with scheduling precision CMOs can literally mark on their calendars. Your crisis response requires three elements: These metrics separate authentic allies from seasonal performers. With audits complete, crisis plans locked, and proof points funded, you've turned Pride from minefield to growth driver. The rainbow calendar spans 30 days, but consumer memory lasts all year. ROI Reality — A $1.4 trillion market growing three times faster than the general population: 24 million U.S. consumers with the highest loyalty scores when authentically engaged. Risk Reality — 80% boycott‑ready consumers + 39% of brands retreating = a perfect storm. Pull back under pressure and join the companies taking an immediate revenue hit. Monday‑Morning Reality — Audit today or apologize on tomorrow's earnings call. Approve the fixes, lock the crisis tree, and shift 20 % of Pride spend from paint to proof. The LGBTQ+ market is larger, louder, and more digitally concentrated than ever, but its patience for performative allyship is gone. Treat Pride as a 12‑month strategy, deliver CARES outcomes, and capture the upside—while sleeping at night. Ignore the audit and the social‑threat spiral will hit faster than your next quarterly call. Ask yourself: When June's budget zeroes out, what's left of your LGBTQ+ marketing commitment - and will that investment still be visible come December?

Coal Power Costs Climb Just as Trump Wants to Prop Up the Fuel
Coal Power Costs Climb Just as Trump Wants to Prop Up the Fuel

Bloomberg

time17 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Coal Power Costs Climb Just as Trump Wants to Prop Up the Fuel

While President Donald Trump is pushing to prop up the US coal industry, generating power from the dirtiest fossil fuel is becoming increasingly expensive and uncompetitive, according to a new report. Generating electricity from coal cost $46 per megawatt-hour in 2024, up from $36 in 2021, according to a study Thursday from Energy Innovation Policy & Technology LLC, a San Francisco-based energy and climate think tank. The shift is driven by rising fuel and maintenance costs, and has been compounded as utilities retire more plants.

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