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Ozzy Osbourne spent his last days ‘re-energized' by final concert
Ozzy Osbourne spent his last days ‘re-energized' by final concert

Yahoo

time01-08-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Ozzy Osbourne spent his last days ‘re-energized' by final concert

Appropriately enough for a man who was once famed for his drug use, Ozzy Osbourne went out on a high. Sources close to the Osbourne family tell Page Six that Prince of Darkness had the best possible exit, thanks to his final concert just days before his death. The rock god had been battling chronic conditions for decades, but, we're told, had been noticably flagging in recent months. But insiders say Black Sabbath's Back To The Beginning show on July 5 made him a much younger man for his last days of his life. 'It energized him — it filled him with life,' a longtime pal of the metal monarch said of the show, 'He'd really been slowing down, and then after the show he was really back to be being himself. It's a beautiful ending.' The show at Aston Park Stadium — which was the first time the original Sabbath lineup had played together since 2005 — was just a couple of miles from where the band formed in 1969. Osbourne, who had been battling Parkinson's among other illnesses since the early 2000s, sat in a special black-and-purple throne for the performance, but sang hits including 'War Pigs,' 'N.I.B.,' 'Iron Man,' and 'Paranoid' from his chair. 'God bless each and every one of you,' he said to the heaving crowd before leaving the stage for the last time. Metal gods including Metallica, Anthrax, Slayer, Pantera and Alice In Chains also played the benefit, which raised nearly $200 million for causes including the search for a cure for Parkinson's. Insiders say that the post-show high lasted through the remaining 17 days of his life. 'They couldn't have asked for a better ending,' said the insider. Osbourne died in his native United Kingdom surrounded by his family — including Jack, Kelly and Sharon Osbourne — on July 22. Solve the daily Crossword

Dave Parker, ex-Reds/Pirates great, dies 1 month before Hall of Fame induction: reactions
Dave Parker, ex-Reds/Pirates great, dies 1 month before Hall of Fame induction: reactions

Yahoo

time29-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Dave Parker, ex-Reds/Pirates great, dies 1 month before Hall of Fame induction: reactions

Former Reds great, Reds Hall of Famer and National Baseball Hall of Fame electee Dave Parker, who grew up in Cincinnati, has died. He was 74 years old. Nicknamed "the Cobra," Parker was elected in December 2024 to Cooperstown's National Baseball Hall of Fame as part of its Class of 2025. Parker was among seven players and one manager who were candidates on the Classic Baseball Era Committee's ballot for the upcoming class. Advertisement Parker and Dick Allen will be enshrined posthumously in Cooperstown on July 27 of this year. "It was a long time waiting, so I was excited," Parker said on MLB Network. "Wish I could play in today's market with the salaries anyway. I think that would be ideal. … My wife was super excited. She's saying that she can't believe it's been taking this long. And I agree with it." Reds Hall of Famer Dave Parker Parker graduated from Courter Tech High School in 1970. A longtime Cincinnati resident, he worked often with young players at the Reds Urban Youth Academy in Roselawn. Parker was inducted into the Reds Hall of Fame in 2014. He revealed in 2013 that he was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, and his Cobra Classic Golf Outing raised funds for Parkinson's research. Advertisement Parker hit .281 with 107 home runs and 432 RBIs in four seasons for the Reds from 1984 to 1987. A two-time All-Star for Cincinnati, he finished second in National League MVP voting in 1985 and fifth in 1986. Parker hit .290 with 339 home runs and 526 doubles in 19 big-league seasons. He won the National League MVP award for the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1978. Social media reactions, including from MLB, the Reds and the National Baseball Hall of Fame: This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Dave Parker, former Reds great, dies before Hall of Fame induction

Forbes Daily: A Major CDC Shift On Covid-19 Vaccines Draws Criticism
Forbes Daily: A Major CDC Shift On Covid-19 Vaccines Draws Criticism

Forbes

time28-05-2025

  • Business
  • Forbes

Forbes Daily: A Major CDC Shift On Covid-19 Vaccines Draws Criticism

No one has donated more to Parkinson's disease research than Google cofounder Sergey Brin, and now he's giving away another $700 million. Brin's recent gift of Alphabet shares was split between three nonprofits, most of which went to his 4-year-old nonprofit Catalyst4. Brin, who is worth an estimated $137 billion and is currently the world's eighth richest person, sees the work as deeply 'personal.' His mother had Parkinson's and he carries a genetic mutation that gives him a much higher chance of getting the disease. His hope is to address both scientific research and eventual treatments for central nervous system diseases, which also include autism and bipolar disorder. The CDC is no longer recommending routine Covid-19 vaccines or boosters for pregnant women and healthy children, a decision that drew criticism as Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is a longtime vaccine skeptic. FDA Commissioner Martin Makary, who appeared in the video announcement with Kennedy, had written that pregnancy was a high-risk condition for Covid infections earlier this month. The Giving Pledge announced 11 new signatories in 2025 who have pledged to donate the majority of their wealth to charitable causes during their lifetime or in their wills—the largest cohort since 2021. Six of the new pledgers are members of Forbes' Billionaires' List, and the richest among them is Canva cofounder and chief product officer Cameron Adams, who is worth an estimated $2.9 billion. Satya Patel Homebrew In Forbes' fourth annual Midas Seed list, a global ranking of the top 25 seed stage investors, Silicon Valley veteran Pejman Nozad stayed in the top spot. And a lack of IPOs and acquisitions means a handful of massive private startups are driving changes in the rankings for even those investors focused on the very earliest stage of a startup's lifecycle. MORE: Satya Patel, a partner at the venture firm Homebrew who ranked No. 13 on this year's Midas Seed list, refers to his broad philosophy as a VC as 'bottom up' investing—betting on companies from 'boring' industries like HR or banking, and gussying them up with high-tech software. He's made early bets on companies like IPO-bound digital bank Chime, payroll unicorn Gusto, and Plaid, which was acquired by Visa in 2020 for $5.3 billion. Following in the footsteps of President Donald Trump's crypto strategy, Trump Media and Technology Group, the parent company of Truth Social, is raising $2.5 billion to build a corporate bitcoin reserve. According to an SEC filing, the company will sell $1.5 billion in shares and $1 billion in convertible bonds to institutional investors, the proceeds of which will be used for the reserve—making cryptocurrency a core part of its balance sheet. Elon Musk said he is 'disappointed' with President Donald Trump's 'big, beautiful' bill passed by the House last week, his most direct criticism of a signature White House policy after recently stepping back from his work as the head of DOGE. Musk said the expansive budget bill 'undermines the work that the DOGE team is doing,' as it is expected to add around $3.3 trillion to the federal debt over the next 10 years, according to an estimate published by the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. A body of the United Nations released a new report that projects global temperatures will remain near record levels over the next five years, with a strong chance the 2024 annual temperature record will be broken during this period, likely worsening the impact of climate change and increasing the chances of extreme weather events. There is also a 70% chance that the 5-year average temperature for 2025-2029 will be more than 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial numbers—a key benchmark laid out in the Paris Climate Agreement. As President Donald Trump escalates his attacks on Russian President Vladimir Putin, Trump on Tuesday took credit for preventing 'lots of really bad things' from happening to Russia and said the Russian leader is 'playing with fire.' Trump's criticism comes after Russia launched one of its largest aerial attacks on Ukraine since the start of the war, killing at least 12 people, according to the Associated Press. TRAVEL + LIFESTYLE A string of recent high-profile aviation safety incidents has travelers nervous as summer approaches. A few key ways to reduce risk when flying, experts told Forbes, include avoiding airports with air traffic issues and booking direct flights. Consider your seat and the type of plane you'll be flying in, too—larger airplanes typically have more sophisticated safety systems. General Catalyst CEO Hemant Taneja, No. 8 on Forbes' 2025 Midas List, believes his venture capital firm is going to transform how Americans access health care. Last year, the firm announced its $485 million purchase of Summa Health, an 8,000-employee hospital system based in Akron, Ohio, with the aim of plugging it into Silicon Valley's innovation engine. That means injecting tech and artificial intelligence into almost every step of the health care process, from checkups to insurance. Buying a hospital is jaw-dropping for a VC. Tech investors preach disruption, but they are deeply conservative when it comes to running their own funds. General Catalyst wants to break that mold. Since 2018, it has morphed from a typical VC partnership to a multi-hyphenate investment house: There's the firm's 'creation' fund, which spins up new AI companies aimed at remaking dusty industries like accounting or customer service. Then there's the General Catalyst Institute, a think tank looking to shape technology policy around the world, and GC Wealth, a white-glove broker meant to woo well-heeled founders away from private banks. That makes Taneja, 50, one of the champions of a new class of venture capitalist. 'Mega funds' are the sometimes-sniffy label for General Catalyst and peers like Andreessen Horowitz, Lightspeed and Thrive Capital, Josh Kushner's outfit. Managing tens of billions of dollars, they are still minnows compared to Blackstone ($1 trillion in assets) and KKR ($660 billion), but Taneja's ambition isn't to be the biggest investor. Instead, he wants General Catalyst to be a 'strategic conglomerate.' But perhaps the biggest risk is that General Catalyst is doing too much. 'I get that question a lot,' Taneja says. He says it's a matter of having 'leadership bandwidth' and a good operating model, comparing the company to Amazon, which expanded from books to data centers to grocery stores to moviemaking. WHY IT MATTERS Taneja has his critics, too. General Catalyst's industrial-scale investing barely resembles venture capital, some say. Others snipe, discreetly, about General Catalyst's focus shifting from generating returns from financing startups to 'farming fees' from ever-multiplying funds. But Taneja's supporters are willing to back his bold vision thanks to a near-15-year winning streak. Since moving to Silicon Valley from Boston in 2011, Taneja has backed payment giant Stripe (last valued at $91 billion), defense startup Anduril (in funding talks at a $28 billion valuation) and a string of health care unicorns like Commure (valued at $6 billion). MORE Ranking The World's Top Venture Capitalists In 2025 The Trump Administration paused interviews for new student visa applicants as it weighs expanded social media screening, a potential indication of a wider crackdown on international students: More than 1.1 million: The number of international students enrolled at U.S. colleges and universities in the 2023-24 school year, according to the Institute of International Education $43.8 billion: The amount per year international students contribute to the U.S. economy $100 million: The value of the remaining government contracts with Harvard that the Trump Administration canceled Tuesday Remote work gives employees greater flexibility, but it can also be isolating. To help feel less lonely when working from home, try organizing occasional meetups if your colleagues are nearby, and if not, organize virtual lunches where the discussion isn't about work. It can be easy to blur the lines between personal and professional if your home is also your office, so be sure to dedicate a designated workspace, even if it's just a small corner. Users reported outages for a popular streaming service Tuesday, the latest server disruption for the company. Which streaming platform is it? A. Netflix B. Spotify C. Apple Music D. Hulu Check your answer. Thanks for reading! This edition of Forbes Daily was edited by Sarah Whitmire and Chris Dobstaff.

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