CTE research is getting scarier, parents are pulling kids from tackle football, and the NFL is quietly panicking.
Author News & Analysis Editor
Shaw Beckett reads the signal in the noise. With dual degrees in Computer Science and Computer Engineering, a law degree, and years of entrepreneurial ventures, Shaw brings a pattern-recognition lens to business, technology, politics, and culture. While others report headlines, Shaw connects dots: how emerging tech reshapes labor markets, why consumer behavior predicts political shifts, what today's entertainment reveals about tomorrow's economy. An avid reader across disciplines, Shaw believes the best analysis comes from unexpected connections. Skeptical but fair. Analytical but accessible.
CTE research is getting scarier, parents are pulling kids from tackle football, and the NFL is quietly panicking.
From BTS to Blackpink to NewJeans, Korean pop music is now the world's pop music, and the Korean government's strategy is just getting started.
Between digital nomad visas, affordable living, and perfect weather, Portugal has become the remote worker's paradise, but locals are pushing back.
After years of threats and deadlines, TikTok is still here, and the failed ban reveals how tech policy actually works in Washington.
Vinyl, 4K Blu-rays, even DVDs are selling again, and Gen Z is driving the retro revival.
The fastest-growing sport in America is attracting Tom Brady, LeBron James, and hundreds of millions in investment, but can it last?
Web3 might be over, but Web4, built on quantum networks and AI infrastructure, is already being developed in labs worldwide.
AI coding assistants are getting so good that software engineers are asking: will my job exist in 10 years?
The newest C-suite position is popping up everywhere, commanding seven-figure salaries, but what do these executives actually do?
GitLab, Zapier, and others pioneered remote work, so why are they now mandating office returns?
Microsoft, Google, and OpenAI are investing billions in nuclear reactors because AI needs way more power than anyone expected.
After years of Chrome dominance, Arc, Brave, and new AI-powered browsers are making the internet feel fresh again.