logo
While Jeff Bezos wraps up wedding bash, his Blue Origin venture sends six on a space trip

While Jeff Bezos wraps up wedding bash, his Blue Origin venture sends six on a space trip

Geek Wirea day ago

Blue Origin's New Shepard rocket ship lifts off from its Texas launch pad. (Blue Origin via YouTube)
Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin space venture launched six more travelers to the edge of the final frontier today, even as the billionaire and his new wife finished up a weekend of wedding festivities in Venice.
The New Shepard rocket lifted off from the Kent, Wash.-based company's Launch Site One in West Texas at 9:40 a.m. CT (7:40 a.m. PT) today for a 10-minute mission.
An earlier launch attempt had to be scrubbed on June 21 due to concerns about persistent winds at the launch site.
Bezos himself was otherwise engaged during the buildup to today's launch: He and former journalist and helicopter pilot Lauren Sanchez Bezos left Venice today for their honeymoon after a highly publicized, star-studded weekend of activities surrounding their wedding.
This was Blue Origin's 33nd New Shepard suborbital launch and its 13th crewed mission. New Shepard's booster sent the crew capsule to a height of about 105 kilometers (65 miles, or 344,640 feet), just beyond the 100-kilometer (62-mile) altitude that marks the internationally accepted boundary of space.
After stage separation, the reusable booster descended to a landing pad under autonomous control. Meanwhile, the spacefliers experienced a few minutes of weightlessness and got an astronaut's-eye view of Earth beneath a black sky. At the end of the ride, the capsule made a parachute-aided descent to the rangeland surrounding the launch site.
Since 2021, Blue Origin has flown 70 suborbital space travelers, including 'Star Trek' captain William Shatner and pop superstar Katy Perry, as well as Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez Bezos (on separate missions).
The lineup for the NS-33 mission included:
Allie Kuehner , an environmentalist and conservationist who serves on the board of a nonprofit group called Nature is Nonpartisan.
, an environmentalist and conservationist who serves on the board of a nonprofit group called Nature is Nonpartisan. Carl Kuehner , the chairman of Building and Land Technology, a real estate firm focusing on long-term growth and sustainability. Allie and Carl are the second married couple to travel together on New Shepard.
, the chairman of Building and Land Technology, a real estate firm focusing on long-term growth and sustainability. Allie and Carl are the second married couple to travel together on New Shepard. Leland Larson , former CEO of School Bus Services and Larson Transportation Services. In 1997, Leland co-founded the Larson Legacy, an Oregon-based philanthropic organization.
, former CEO of School Bus Services and Larson Transportation Services. In 1997, Leland co-founded the Larson Legacy, an Oregon-based philanthropic organization. Freddie Rescigno Jr. , an Italian-American entrepreneur, business owner and competitive golfer. He's the president and CEO of Commodity Cables, which provides wires and cables for electrical distribution and networking.
, an Italian-American entrepreneur, business owner and competitive golfer. He's the president and CEO of Commodity Cables, which provides wires and cables for electrical distribution and networking. Owolabi Salis , an attorney and financial consultant. He is the author of 'Equitocracy,' which presents a vision for democracy that prioritizes equity among diverse groups, and is also a key member of The Soulmaker Ministry.
, an attorney and financial consultant. He is the author of 'Equitocracy,' which presents a vision for democracy that prioritizes equity among diverse groups, and is also a key member of The Soulmaker Ministry. Jim Sitkin, a retired Calfornia lawyer who has focused on employment class actions on behalf of non-unionized employees. He's currently a volunteer for a non-governmental organization, facilitating meetings with government and community leaders in Central Europe and sub-Saharan Africa.
In addition to the travelers, Blue Origin's crew capsule carried more than 1,000 digital and physical postcards that were sent in as part of an educational campaign organized by the Club for the Future, the company's nonprofit foundation. Today's batch included postcards from Seattle's Museum of Flight and from Parkcrest Elementary School in Burnaby, B.C.
The suborbital New Shepard operation is just one of Blue Origin's space programs. Here are recent updates on the company's other initiatives:

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

8 Non-Obvious Reasons Startups Struggle To Fundraise
8 Non-Obvious Reasons Startups Struggle To Fundraise

Forbes

time24 minutes ago

  • Forbes

8 Non-Obvious Reasons Startups Struggle To Fundraise

This article outlines eight less obvious but highly influential reasons startups fail to raise ... More capital — reasons investors notice even when founders don't. Most founders are familiar with the typical reasons why fundraising is challenging: a poor pitch, a small market, a weak team, or a lack of traction. But many funding struggles come from less visible issues - structural, strategic, or psychological problems that don't always show up in a pitch deck. In this article, we outline eight less obvious but highly influential reasons startups fail to raise capital. 1. The Vision Is Too Small Startups often describe what they're building today, not what it could become. A narrow, tactical story may be logical, but investors look for ambition. They want to know: if this works, how big could it be? The reason is simple - startup investors take a large number of high-risk bets. For their investment strategy to work, the successful investments need to be able to pay for multiple unsuccessful ones. In other words, for traditional startup investors, 1.5 ROI simply doesn't make economic sense. A product that solves a clear problem but doesn't hint at a broader market, ecosystem, or category-defining potential is easy to pass on. Founders need to cast a vision that stretches beyond their MVP without sounding delusional. For example, Zoom wasn't just 'video calls with better UI'. It pitched itself as the next platform for enterprise communication, and currently it's pitching itself as 'The AI-first work platform for human connection'. As noted in our startup fundraising checklist, articulating a compelling long-term vision is one of the most important elements of a successful early-stage fundraising strategy. Founders need to help investors imagine what happens if everything goes right — and what the business could become at scale. 2. No Clear 'Why Now' Timing matters. Investors often ask: Why hasn't this worked before, and why will it work now? If your pitch doesn't answer that, it feels like a stale idea. Sometimes, a startup idea is too early - or worse, not early enough. Founders who explain the shift (tech, regulation, behavior, distribution) that now makes their idea viable tend to stand out. For example, Uber only became viable when smartphones and GPS were widely adopted. That was their 'why now.' 3. Lack Of A Founder-Problem Fit Even if the idea is good, investors want to see why you are the person to build it. Founders often fail to show authentic founder-problem fit - a personal connection to the problem, or an unfair advantage in solving it. Generic motivations or vague enthusiasm can undermine otherwise strong pitches. Investors fund people more than ideas. For example, Brex's founders had previously built a fintech company in Brazil ( That experience gave them credibility and insight into building financial products. 4. No Clear Wedge Into the Market A huge market is good. But a startup that tries to tackle the entire market at once often fails to show how it gets its first 1,000 users. A 'wedge' is a focused, practical entry point into a larger opportunity. Without it, founders sound like they're boiling the ocean. For example, Slack started as an internal chat tool for the team that built it, which at the same time was working on a video game. After focusing on Slack, they provided the service to teams with similar profiles to theirs. That was their wedge. 5. Too Many Assumptions Without Evidence Many early-stage startups pitch ideas based on logic, but without proof. If you haven't talked to enough customers, tested demand, or shown willingness to kill assumptions, it shows. Investors don't need traction to write early checks, but they do need evidence of rigor: signals that you're testing, learning, and adapting. 6. The Team Doesn't Look Fundable Investors will rarely say this out loud, but team dynamics matter, especially in early rounds. Red flags include unclear roles between co-founders, a lack of technical depth for a technical product, or no one with go-to-market experience. Teams that look too homogeneous (e.g., all engineers or all generalists) raise concerns. The best early teams balance strong execution with learning speed and a sense of complementary skills. Consider adding a technical advisor, domain expert, or experienced operator if your team has a visible gap. 7. The Deck Doesn't Show А Business Many decks describe a product, but not a company. There's a big difference. Investors want to see how the product becomes a business: acquisition channels, pricing strategy, retention drivers, and competitive advantage. Especially in founder-led seed rounds, it's easy to underplay these topics. But smart investors will dig, and if your unit economics or GTM strategy is vague, you'll lose momentum. A basic revenue model, even if it's mostly assumptions, shows you're thinking like a builder and an operator. 8. Fundraising Looks Like a Backup Plan If it feels like you're fundraising only because other options failed - e.g., you couldn't bootstrap or get acquired - it signals a lack of confidence. Investors want to back people who are raising because they believe funding accelerates their vision, not because they ran out of cash.

Newsmax Is Skyrocketing Today -- Is the Stock a Buy Right Now?
Newsmax Is Skyrocketing Today -- Is the Stock a Buy Right Now?

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Newsmax Is Skyrocketing Today -- Is the Stock a Buy Right Now?

Newsmax is rising quickly today in conjunction with the stock being added to the Russell 2000 index. Funds that track the Russell 2000 are buying the stock in order to reflect its inclusion in the index, but Newsmax's fundamentals haven't changed. Newsmax's valuation is far below previous highs despite today's pop, but the stock isn't in low-risk territory yet. 10 stocks we like better than Newsmax › Newsmax (NYSE: NMAX) stock is posting big gains in Monday's trading. The media company's share price was up 13.5% as of 12:40 p.m. ET. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) was up 0.2% at the same point in the daily session. Newsmax is rocketing higher today following the company's inclusion in the Russell 2000 index. As a result of the stock's inclusion, exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and other financial instruments that track the index are now buying shares in order to reflect the new composition. The buying action is helping to push Newsmax's valuation higher. Even with today's rally, the stock is down roughly 32% over the last month and 93.5% from its lifetime high. Newsmax had its initial public offering (IPO) at the end of March and saw its share price soar out of the gate thanks to meme-stock momentum. Despite today's surge, Newsmax's valuation has come down dramatically from where it was earlier in the year -- and the stock looks far more reasonable at current prices. On the other hand, there are still good reasons to think that investing in the company looks risky. While inclusion in the Russell 2000 could create some valuation tailwinds that extend beyond today's pop, investors should keep in mind that the fundamentals of the business haven't changed. At today's roughly $1.9 billion valuation, Newsmax is valued at approximately 11 times last year's $171 million sales. While sales grew roughly 11.6% year over year in the company's first quarter this year, the rate of expansion marked a substantial deceleration from the 26.4% annual revenue growth posted in 2024. The company's net loss did decline substantially in Q1, but the business has still yet to post a profit, and lingering risks related to judgments from outstanding civil suits involving the company could result in substantial adverse cash hits. Newsmax stock is no longer outrageously overvalued and could deliver substantial upside if the business demonstrates progress along key lines, but shares still look risky. Before you buy stock in Newsmax, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and Newsmax wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $713,547!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $966,931!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 1,062% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 177% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join . See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of June 30, 2025 Keith Noonan has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Newsmax Is Skyrocketing Today -- Is the Stock a Buy Right Now? was originally published by The Motley Fool

James Gunn Reveals SMALLVILLE Easter Egg in His SUPERMAN Movie — GeekTyrant
James Gunn Reveals SMALLVILLE Easter Egg in His SUPERMAN Movie — GeekTyrant

Geek Tyrant

time25 minutes ago

  • Geek Tyrant

James Gunn Reveals SMALLVILLE Easter Egg in His SUPERMAN Movie — GeekTyrant

Director James Gunn has proven himself in the superhero genre in films like the Guardians of the Galaxy trilogy at Marvel, and The Suicide Squad at DC. Now as the head of DC, he is playing in several new properties, but he is kicking off his new chapter with a fresh take on the classic fan-favorite hero, Superman . I believe one major reason why Gunn has had success in the superhero genre is because he is a fan. He knows what other fans want to see, and it feels deeply personal to him to do well in telling these stories. One way he pays homage to the history that's within the worlds he builds is by including Easter eggs which include other characters in the same universe, as well as little choices that point to the other iterations of the same superhero's story. Gunn revealed that he did the latter in Superman , which some eagle-eyed fans pay have noticed in the first teaser for the film. In a recent interview with ComicBook, Gunn said that he chose to put Lex Luthor in charge of LuthorCorp, which is a Smallville Easter egg. He explained: 'When I was making this movie, I really was taking stuff from all sorts of different comic books and TV shows and movies. And I'm a Smallville fan. It was LutherCorp in Smallville and so it is that. But also, first of all, most people don't name their corporations after their first names, right? 'So, I believed it more in terms of that. And also, you know, it leaves the door open for, you know, was his father, in any way, ever a part of this, or his mother.' Outside of the Smallville connection, Gunn's reasoning for going with LuthorCorp is practical. It's common for characters/people to use their surnames when naming a company. Marvel has multiple instances of this, including OsCorp (founded by Norman Osborn) and Stark Industries (founded by Tony Stark). So it's just logical for Gunn and the DCU to run with LuthorCorp. It'll be interesting to see if Superman dives into Lex's family history and details whether or not his family have any role with the company. Superman hits theatres on July 11th.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store