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In a cultural moment that values vulnerability and rawness, my role is to facilitate creative connections.

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MBW’s Inspiring Women series profiles female executives who have risen through the ranks of the business, highlighting their career journey – from their professional breakthrough to the senior responsibilities they now fulfill. Inspiring Women is supported by Virgin Music Group.


Jennifer Fierman’s career in the music industry has been driven by a deep love for live music. It has also been shaped by a fascination with the connection between artists and their audiences.

Since joining Disruptor Records in 2015 as Head of A&R and Publishing, Fierman has helped shape the company’s evolution from its EDM beginnings into a powerhouse of creative collaboration, management, and publishing.

“I was always drawn to the experience of live music,” Fierman says. “In college and high school, I loved going to shows and watching the connection between musicians and fans. I didn’t know exactly where I fit into that world yet, but I knew I wanted to be part of it.”

Her first job was at Jive Records, working in publicity. From there, she took on a few different roles before realizing that A&R was where she truly belonged.

Before joining Disruptor, Fierman worked across major labels including Universal, Warner, and Sony Music, gaining a deep understanding of what it takes to develop global artists and build creative partnerships.

She’s been instrumental in guiding artists and songwriters like Evan Blair — who wrote and produced Benson Boone’s latest single Mystical Magical (which peaked at No.4 on Top 40 Radio in the US) and worked on Boone’s global hit Beautiful Things, which reached No.2 on the Billboard Hot 100 and topped the charts in 19 countries.

Fierman also manages songwriter Sarah “Solly” Solovay, known for her work on Teddy Swims’ hit single Bad Dreams (which peaked at No.7 on the UK Singles chart and No.8 on the US Pop Airplay chart), and Are You Even Real? featuring Giveon, which reached No.1 on the Adult R&B Airplay Chart and was co-written with Sean Kennedy.

She has helped develop producer-songwriter Pink Slip (Kyle Buckley), who co-wrote the Katseye viral hit Gnarly, and worked closely with Dove Cameron during her breakout year, including the release of her Top 40 single Boyfriend.

Fierman says that she aims to bridge the gap between artistic authenticity and commercial success — a balance she describes as “connecting human experience with global appeal.”

“It took me a long time to find the right home that allowed me to grow,” she says. “It’s not always just about your talent or instinct; sometimes it’s about the environment you’re in.”

Here, Fierman tells MBW about artist development, the importance of creative trust, the evolving role of women in music, and why finding the right partners has been key to her success.


What led you to join Disruptor Records?

I’d known Adam Alpert (Founder and CEO of Disruptor) for a long time. When The Chainsmokers started taking off, we reconnected. At the time, I was working in publishing, and Adam told me about what he was building at Disruptor, a company that would unite a label, publishing, and management arm under one roof.

What drew me in was that blend of major-label power and independent attention to detail. After years at major companies, I was craving a place that allowed for more personal care and creative freedom, and Disruptor offered exactly that.


What was your biggest challenge in developing the Disruptor Writer/Producer & Selector Songs roster?

Our biggest challenge for the Disruptor Records side was breaking out of our high-profile roots in EDM music. We really wanted to diversify by signing artists who felt cohesive and complementary to one another that could help us build beyond the genre of EDM.

Because we operate across label, publishing, and management, we needed creatives who understood that ecosystem; who saw the value of working as part of a connected creative network.

“We really wanted to diversify by signing artists who felt cohesive and complementary to one another that could help us build beyond the genre of EDM.”

On The Selector Publishing side I focused on identifying A&Rs and writers with like-minded tastes who could understand each other’s creative choices. We identified a  few key partnerships early on and built from there.


What makes you think: ‘This person has something special?’ What’s your approach to helping them, and how do you know it’s an artist you should dedicate your time to?

It’s not just about finding people who have a really clear sense of who they are, but also a sense that I can add value to it. We never want to create a person’s entire persona. It really starts with them understanding their ideals, goals, and musical style. When I feel like we can add value, that’s when I know it’s the right fit.


You’ve worked closely with Dove Cameron and Evan Blair. What was that process like?

When we signed Dove Cameron, she was transitioning out of her Disney era and finding her new sound. It took time to align her with the right creatives that really helped build out a sonic landscape. Once she began working with Evan Blair (whom we publish), everything started to click.

Evan had always been a phenomenal writer. I was always his fan, and he had done this EP, Pretty Poison, with a Warner-signed artist named Nessa Barrett, which blew me away.



The world he built for her, so distinct and emotionally rich, was exactly what I’d been searching for with Dove. That collaboration led to Boyfriend, which became her biggest song to date. I love how special that song is, you could tell how unique it is in its perspective and the writing, and even just the way it sounds. It’s Jazz Pop production, in a very cool, unique way.

Sean Kennedy is one of my newest clients, and I can’t remember a time when I wasn’t his biggest fan. His music always spoke to me from afar, and more recently, we found ourselves in a place to work together. He recently collaborated with Solly on Are You Even Real, which came out with Teddy Swims and Giveon [at the] top of the year, and I am really proud of it.

“I love how it feels like a return to my ‘fan self’ when I find creatives whose music speaks to me so passionately.”

I love how it feels like a return to my “fan self” when I find creatives whose music speaks to me so passionately. Having the opportunity to help them figure out how to get that music heard and build the right strategies to take it to the next level has been such a joy of mine.


Speaking about Evan Blair… Benson Boone’s hit ‘Beautiful Things’ is exploding everywhere. How do you balance creative freedom with commercial appeal?

As much as I’d love to take credit for the perfect synergy of those worlds, it really comes down to the artists, the writers, and their teams.

I’ve always been drawn to music that combines authentic emotion with commercial potential, and throughout my career, I’ve worked to facilitate connections with those shared values.



Culturally, we’re in a moment that values vulnerability and rawness. That’s what allows songs like Beautiful Things and Bad Dreams written by Sarah “Solly” Solovay to connect with audiences everywhere. My role is to help make those creative connections possible.


How would you describe the role of A&R in 2025, at a time when music discovery is driven by data, TikTok, and AI?

I think it all depends on how we use it. Every time new technology enters the music industry, we’ve learned that fighting it isn’t always the best answer, especially if it’s going to keep pushing forward, as AI clearly will.

It’s about learning how to integrate it responsibly. AI can be helpful in small ways, like testing vocals or pitching demos, but at a larger scale, it’s still unclear. What’s crucial is that we don’t lose the human element of creation, because that’s what listeners connect with.


Being in a leadership role, what changes have you noticed for women in this field, and what still needs to evolve?

There have definitely been positive strides. More women are running departments and shaping executive teams, which is incredible, and I work with so many that I admire and that I call friends on a daily basis.

If I had to highlight one area where I’ve seen real change, it’s female artist managers — there are so many powerful women managing huge pop artists today, and I can’t remember ever noting this before.

That said, the fact we’re still asking the question means there’s work to do. One area I’d love to see more growth in is female producers. There’s still a real gender gap there.


What’s been the biggest challenge in your career so far?

Aligning the right partners. Adam [Alpert] has always given me the space to trust my instincts and fully realize my ideas, and that’s when I’ve done my best work.

So I encourage people to keep that in mind when faced with adversity. It took me a long time to find the right home that allowed me to grow. It’s not always just about your talent or instinct; sometimes it’s about the environment you’re in.


Who have been your mentors along the way?

I’ve learned from everyone — even the difficult people. Every experience taught me something valuable. I can’t point to one single mentor, but I’ve worked with incredible leaders and creatives who shaped how I think and lead. I’d like to believe I’ve absorbed a little of each of them.


What advice would you give to young executives starting out in music or A&R?

My advice is to trust your instincts and remember that achieving success doesn’t always mean hitting a huge home run out of the park. Wins show up in many ways along the way, whether it’s building a relationship that you carry throughout your career or a peer that you took an early meeting with.

“My advice is to trust your instincts and remember that achieving success doesn’t always mean hitting a huge home run out of the park.”

Early on, it’s easy to get discouraged and jaded when you’re not achieving the “end-all-be-all” version of success we often imagine. But it’s important to remember that everything has purpose. It just might take some time to see it come full circle.

I wouldn’t be here if I hadn’t made strides along the way. I didn’t have any relationships in the music industry prior to joining it. I built every single contact I have. It’s really important to remember how valuable that is when you’re striving toward your goals.


Are there any global movements or sounds you’re most excited about right now?

I love the K-Pop movement. I work with Kyle Buckley (Pink Slip), who was traveling to Korea and collaborating with K-Pop artists long before the crossover exploded. I work with him on Katseye, on the song Gnarly, which is just so out of the box and wild. It was just such a fun experience.

“I’m fascinated by how K-Pop is reintroducing the energy of the millennial pop I grew up with, where it’s all about choreography, big production, and personality.”

I’m fascinated by how K-Pop is reintroducing the energy of the millennial pop I grew up with, where it’s all about choreography, big production, and personality. That’s probably one of the movements I really look out for and enjoy being part of it.


If you could change one thing about the music industry, what would it be?

I think the obvious answer is songwriter compensation. It’s the biggest issue we face. So many brilliant people can’t afford to pursue songwriting full-time, and we’re losing voices we don’t even know about yet. I hope we find a solution soon because the future of great music depends on it.


Virgin Music Group is the global independent music division of Universal Music Group, which brings together UMG’s label and artist service businesses including Virgin and Ingrooves.Music Business Worldwide

Timeline of Violence as US-backed GHF Aid Mission in Gaza Comes to an End | News on the Israel-Palestine Conflict

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The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), backed by the US and Israel to oversee the distribution of aid in Gaza, has announced it is ending its controversial “mission” and is closing aid distribution sites following a US-brokered ceasefire agreement.

Under increasing international pressure to allow aid into the besieged Gaza Strip earlier this year, Israel and the US backed the GHF as an independent agency to administer aid. Israel completely blocked aid to the Strip from March this year, claiming that Hamas was stealing aid provided by the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA. Israel did not provide any evidence for this and also blocked UNRWA workers from entering the Strip from February.

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While the UNRWA network operated about 400 sites across the Strip before that, the GHF, guarded by armed US private security contractors, set up only four “mega-sites” – three in southern Gaza and one near Gaza City – to distribute food and other aid to Gaza’s population of about two million Palestinians.

Furthermore, since the organisation began operations in Gaza in May, Israeli forces and some US contractors have routinely opened fire on Palestinians arriving to receive aid. Disorganisation around the sites has caused large crowds to gather, and some people have suffocated or died in stampedes.

While GHF Executive Director John Acree said in a statement on Monday that the organisation delivered the “only aid operation that reliably and safely provided free meals directly to Palestinian people in Gaza”, more than 2,000 aid seekers have been crushed to death or killed by gunfire, according to UN figures.

Here is how the GHF “mission” to Gaza unfolded this year:

May 26 – GHF issues a statement announcing it will begin direct aid delivery inside the battered enclave, hours after its executive director, Jake Wood, resigned, citing concerns about the agency’s independence. The UN and other aid agencies refuse to work with GHF, warning that requiring Palestinians to gather at a few centralised aid points would put people at risk and undermine other aid efforts.

May 27 – GHF begins operating in Gaza. Israeli forces open fire on thousands of Palestinians attempting to receive food in southern Gaza’s Rafah area, killing at least 10 people and injuring dozens. Aid seekers are forced to clamber over fences and push through packed crowds to reach life-saving supplies. UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric says seeing thousands of Palestinians storming the aid site is “heartbreaking” as the chaos underscores the staggering level of hunger gripping Gaza. Gaza’s Government Media Office calls the incident a “deliberate massacre and a full-fledged war crime.”

May 29 – Israeli forces open fire at an aid point in southern Gaza, killing 10 people and injuring dozens. Shortly after, multiple explosions are reported near another aid centre on the Netzarim Corridor, which divides northern Gaza from the rest of the Strip. It is not clear what caused the blasts, and there are no reports of casualties.

May 30 – Israeli forces open fire on civilians waiting to collect food at a GHF distribution point on Salah al-Din Street in central Gaza, wounding at least 20 people.

June 1 – Israeli tanks kill at least 32 Palestinians waiting to get food at two aid distribution sites in Gaza, leaving more than 200 others injured.

June 3 – UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres says the killing and injuring of Palestinian aid seekers is “unacceptable” and calls for an independent investigation after Israeli forces open fire close to an aid distribution site in Rafah. Gaza’s Health Ministry says at least 27 Palestinians have been killed in the incident and 90 injured.

June 8 – At least 13 Palestinians are killed, and more than 150 are injured when Israeli troops and US security contractors open fire on crowds waiting for food near two aid distribution sites in Gaza, one east of Rafah and another near the Wadi Gaza Bridge. Gaza’s Government Media Office accuses Israel of turning distribution sites into “human slaughterhouses”.

July 16 – At least 21 Palestinians are killed at a GHF aid distribution centre in southern Gaza. Witness accounts say Israeli forces opened fire on the crowd, causing a stampede. At least 15 people died of suffocation, while others were shot. Twenty-four-year-old Mohammed Abedin, who survived the incident, told Al Jazeera that they were “shot at like animals”.

July 22 – The United Nations says the number of Palestinians killed while trying to access food in Gaza from GHF distribution points has topped 1,000.

[Al Jazeera]

August 1 – A former contractor for GHF, Anthony Aguilar, tells Al Jazeera about what he describes as the deadly and unprofessional practices he witnessed firsthand at aid distribution sites in Gaza. This includes firing what the organisation described as “warning shots” on an unarmed population using heavy artillery. “They call that warning shots, I call it a war crime,” he said.

August 2 – At least 38 Palestinians seeking aid at distribution sites operated by GHF are killed, despite Israel announcing on July 27 it would begin implementing “tactical pauses” in fighting in some areas to allow Palestinians greater access to humanitarian aid.

August 5 – Twenty-eight UN experts call for GHF’s dismantlement, describing it as an “utterly disturbing example” of aid exploitation for military purposes.

August 9 – Israel allows some aid to be airdropped into Gaza by several countries, including Germany, Belgium and Jordan, amid global outrage, but a 15-year-old Palestinian boy is crushed to death by a falling pallet during an airdrop near the so-called Netzarim Corridor in central Gaza.

September 4 – The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) says it has recorded more than 2,146 deaths in the vicinity of sites run by GHF and along aid convoy routes.

October 12 – GHF confirms it has suspended operations following the announcement of a US-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, which came into effect on October 10.

November 10 – A documentary, Breaking Ranks: Inside Israel’s War, is aired on UK network ITV. It features testimony from Israeli soldiers deployed to Gaza, with some describing how GHF guards would “open fire, even if they don’t see a concrete threat”.

November 24 – GHF announces it is ending its “mission” in Gaza following the ceasefire. It claims to have distributed more than 3 million food boxes, equivalent to 187 million meals.

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Top 20 Rankings for the New England Region in 2025

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Graphic showing MAX Field Hockey national and regional high school team rankings

2025 NEW ENGLAND REGION HIGH SCHOOL
FINAL TOP 20 RANKINGS

Rank School Name City, State Record Previous Finish/Accomplishments
1 Phillips Academy Andover Andover, Massachusetts 19-0-0 1 NEPSAC A Champions
2 Uxbridge High School Uxbridge, Massachusetts 23-0-0 2 Division 3 State Champions
3 Walpole High School Walpole, Massachusetts 21-1-1 4 Division 1 State Champions
4 Rice Memorial High School South Burlington, Vermont 17-0-0 3 Division 1 State Champions
5 Somerset Berkley Regional High School Somerset, Massachusetts 26-1-0 5 Division 2 State Champions
6 Sandwich High School East Sandwich, Massachusetts 19-2-2 6 Division 3 State Finalist
7 Noble & Greenough School Dedham, Massachusetts 15-4-0 9 NEPSAC A Semifinalist
8 Middlesex School Concord, Massachusetts 15-3-0 15 NEPSAC B Champions
9 Cheverus High School Portland, Maine 17-0-1 11 Class A State Champions
10 Nashoba Regional High School Bolton, Massachusetts 20-1-1 10 Division 3 State Semifinalist
11 Williston Northampton School Easthampton, Massachusetts 13-2-2 18 NEPSAC B Semifinalist
12 Belfast Area High School Belfast, Maine 18-0-0 13 Class B State Champions
13 Deerfield Academy Deerfield, Massachusetts 13-4-0 7 NEPSAC A Quarterfinalist
14 Cushing Academy Ashburnham, Massachusetts 15-4-0 NR NEPSAC B Finalist
15 The Rivers School Weston, Massachusetts 17-2-0 17 NEPSAC B Semifinalist
16 Franklin High School Franklin, Massachusetts 17-3-3 NR Division 1 State Finalist
17 Winchester High School Winchester, Massachusetts 19-4-0 14 Division 1 State Semifinalist
18 Bedford High School Bedford, New Hampshire 17-1-1 OC NH Division 1 State Champions
19 Hingham High School Hingham, Massachusetts 19-1-1 NR Division 2 State Finalist
20 Wellesley High School Wellesley, Massachusetts 20-2-0 19 Division 1 State Semifinalist
OC Andover High School Andover, Massachusetts 18-2-1 8 Division 1 Quarterfinalist
OC Biddeford High School Biddeford, Maine 13-2-2 OC Class A State Semifinalist
OC Canton High School Canton, Massachusetts 16-3-2 OC Division 2 State Semifinalist
OC Keene High School Keene, New Hampshire 16-2-1 OC NH Division 1 State Finalist
OC Lincoln-Sudbury High School Sudbury, Massachusetts 13-3-3 OC Division 1 State Quarterfinalist
OC Skowhegan Area High School Skowhegan, Maine 15-1-2 OC Class A State Finalist
OC Watertown High School Watertown, Massachusetts 18-3-0 16 Division 3 State Semifinalist

The post 2025 Final New England Region Top 20 Rankings appeared first on MAX Field Hockey.

Ukraine Urges Trump-Zelensky Meeting in US Within the Week

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Watch: Explosions rock Kyiv after overnight Russian strikes

Ukraine’s security chief says he is hoping to arrange for President Volodymyr Zelensky to visit the US “at the earliest suitable date” this month, as diplomatic attempts to end the war continue.

Rustem Umerov, the head of Ukraine’s security council, said on Tuesday the US and Ukraine had reached “a common understanding on the key terms of the agreement discussed” at previous talks in Geneva.

The White House has not commented on the prospect of Trump-Zelensky talks.

Meanwhile, the US has confirmed its officials are set to meet Russian representatives in Abu Dhabi.

Fighting continued overnight, with Russia and Ukraine trading air attacks.

Officials in Kyiv said at least six people had been killed in Russian strikes on the city, while Russian officials said at least three had been killed in a Ukrainian strike in the Rostov region.

Ukraine’s national security chief Rustem Umerov said his team “look forward” to organising Zelensky’s US visit “at the earliest suitable date in November to complete final steps and make a deal” with US President Donald Trump.

In a social media post on Tuesday, he wrote that US and Ukrainian delegations have reached “a common understanding on the core terms” of the peace plan, referring to their meeting in Geneva on Sunday.

A US official told the BBC that Ukraine had “agreed to a peace deal”, adding there were still “some minor details to be sorted out”, without giving specific details.

However, the gap between the terms that Ukraine and Russia will accept is still very wide and the Kremlin is unlikely to agree to the kind of deal that Kyiv may approve.

Leaders in Kyiv and Europe had criticised the initial draft of a peace plan, which they said was too favourable to Russia.

Counter-proposals – reportedly drafted by the UK, France and Germany – excluded any recognition of Russian-held regions, raised Ukraine’s permitted army size, and left the door open to Ukraine joining Nato.

Zelensky welcomed the proposed changes to the controversial 28-point US peace plan.

“Now the list of necessary steps to end the war can become doable,” Zelensky said. “Many correct elements have been incorporated into this framework.”

A Kremlin official rejected the amendments as “completely unconstructive”. However, a US official on Tuesday told the BBC that its team would be meeting Russian representatives in Abu Dhabi to further discuss the plan.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov – who is not attending the meeting – said the Kremlin has yet to receive the “interim” version of the revised plan, adding that Moscow’s view was that it should reflect the “spirit and letter” of the Alaska talks between Trump and President Vladimir Putin in August.

Separately, a virtual “coalition of the willing” meeting of Ukraine’s European allies will also be taking place on Tuesday to discuss developments, UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said.

Earlier in the day, Zelensky said he had a “good and very productive” conversation with Starmer, in which they discussed the agenda for the meeting.

EPA Two men with their backs to the camera, looking at a residential building which stands in front of them. the top centre of it is blackened and damaged following a strikeEPA

Residents of apartment buildings were forced to evacuate in Kyiv after being hit by strikes

The latest round of talks come as Russia and Ukraine exchanged overnight strikes.

Kyiv’s military administration chief, Tymur Tkachenko, said a fire had broken out at a high-rise residential apartment building in the Dniprovskyi district, forcing the evacuation of its residents.

Emergency services on the scene said 18 people had been rescued, including three children, and the search for victims was ongoing after the fire had been contained.

Residents of a high-rise apartment in the city’s central Pechersk district were also evacuated after it was set ablaze during the strikes according to Kyiv’s mayor Vitali Klitschko.

He added that the building suffered damage to the upper floors, but the fire had been extinguished.

Ukraine’s air defence units responded to the attack as explosions were heard across Kyiv and residents were urged to take shelter in underground car parks and bunkers.

Ukraine’s Ministry of Energy also confirmed a “massive, combined enemy attack” on the country’s energy infrastructure facilities.

According to Zelensky, 22 missiles and more than 460 drones were launched at Ukraine overnight.

Nato scrambled four planes over Romania – the third time in four days its planes have been sent to intercept drones in Ukraine’s border region. Six Russian drones were also detected in Moldova.

Meanwhile, the Russian defence ministry said it had intercepted 249 Ukrainian drones overnight, including over the Black Sea and Kursk.

In Russia’s Rostov region, the death toll from a Ukrainian strike had risen to three, after initial reports of one death, officials said.

According to Russia’s acting governor of the Rostov region Yuri Sliusar, two died in hospital.

One of the deaths was reported in the city of Taganrog, where mayor Svetlana Kambulova vowed “necessary response measures”.

Another 10 people were injured in the strikes.

In the southern Krasnodar region, Governor Veniamin Kondratyev described Ukraine’s overnight bombardment “one of the Kyiv regime’s most sustained and massive attacks”.

Map showing the front lines in Ukraine

The proposed peace plan – drafted by US and Russian officials last month – had caused much consternation in Ukraine and among its European allies, who said it was too favourable to the Kremlin.

But White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt rejected the idea that the Trump administration was “not engaging with both sides equally in this war”.

After talks in Geneva between the US and Ukraine concluded, Trump suggested that “something good just may be happening” but added: “Don’t believe it until you see it.”

As he welcomed the proposed changes, Zelensky said the “main problem” was Putin’s demand for legal recognition of the territory Russia had taken.

Russia has consistently demanded full Ukrainian withdrawal from the whole of the eastern Donbas, made up of Donetsk and Luhansk regions. Moscow’ forces also control Crimea and large parts of two other regions, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia.

The European Union’s foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said the final peace plan should make it impossible for Moscow to invade again, and that Russia should “definitely not” rejoin the G8.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Tuesday, she said: “We can’t go back to business as usual… how could you imagine that?”

Tens of thousands of soldiers and thousands of civilians have been killed or injured, and millions of people have fled their homes, since Russia’s full-scale invasion began in February 2022.

Toronto’s Pinnacle SkyTower Becomes Canada’s Tallest Building at 1,154 ft

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A new residential skyscraper has set a North American record, becoming the tallest building in Canada – and it’s not even finished yet. Named the Pinnacle SkyTower, it will rise to an impressive supertall height of 351.85 m (1,154 ft) in Toronto once complete.

Designed by Hariri Pontarini Architects, the skyscraper currently sits at 100 floors and will eventually reach 106. The height milestone surpasses the recent One Bloor West tower, by Foster and Partners, which held the “Canada’s tallest building” bragging rights for just a few short months.

Of course, the CN Tower looms even larger nearby, though that’s classified as a structure, not a building, so it doesn’t count. To put the new skyscraper’s height into perspective, it’s significantly taller than any building in Western Europe, whereas if it were located in the USA it would sit at a not-too-shabby 12th tallest in the official height rankings.

The Pinnacle SkyTower offers views of Lake Ontario and the Toronto skyline, including Canada’s famous CN Tower, pictured nearby

Pinnacle International

The building has a slender and elegant profile, with an aerodynamic 12-sided, tapered design that allows it to take severe winds in its stride. It draws inspiration from Toronto’s waterfront architecture and incorporates angular, diamond-shaped geometry to better complement other buildings in the city’s downtown area.

The interior’s 106 floors will host 958 residential units, as well as the new Le Meridien Toronto Pinnacle Hotel. Scant information is available yet on the apartment interiors, but as you’d expect, Pinnacle International promises that they will be suitably luxurious, with high-quality materials and 80,000 sq ft (7,432 sq m) of amenities, including a restaurant on the top floor, which will actually sit level with the CN Tower’s observation point nearby.

Balconies will be installed up to the 88th floor and impressive floor-to-ceiling windows will wow visitors with choice views of Lake Ontario and the city skyline.

The Pinnacle SkyTower has an elegant and aerodynamic 12-sided, tapered design
The Pinnacle SkyTower has an elegant and aerodynamic 12-sided, tapered design

Pinnacle International

According to the developer, the project is expected to be completed and begin welcoming guests sometime in 2026. We’ve no word on apartment costs yet, but we’ll go out on a limb and say these won’t be affordable starter homes, which are desperately needed to ease Toronto’s housing crisis.

Source: Pinnacle International

Nanox and Althea France ink distribution agreement for imaging technology

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Nanox signs distribution deal with Althea France for imaging system

The Toxic Consequences of Recycling Lead for U.S. Car Batteries

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new video loaded: Recycling Lead for U.S. Car Batteries Is Poisoning People

Recycling lead for U.S. car batteries is poisoning children — and we know because we tested them. Will Fitzgibbon, a reporter at The Examination, describes how children in Nigeria developed lead levels associated with lifelong brain damage, and how factory workers told us they were coughing up black dust.

By Will Fitzgibbon, Peter S. Goodman, Melanie Bencosme, Jon Miller, Laura Salaberry, Rebecca Suner and Finbarr O’Reilly

November 25, 2025

Tech Predictions for 2026 by Amazon’s Chief Technology Officer, Werner Vogels

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Good morning. Several years ago, Amazon CTO Werner Vogels began sharing predictions on how technology would likely impact our lives the following year. In the past, he has foreseen the impact of digital technology in sports, AI assistants in developer productivity, machine learning embedded in production lines, and ‘fem tech’ in women’s health. As CTO since 2005, he occupies a unique perch to see—and even shape—what’s next. He also has a vested interest, of course, in embracing the technologies that his company creates. But these predictions are worth taking note of as these trends—if they materialize—will affect wide swaths of the economy.

So what’s he forecasting for 2026? 

  • Companionship is redefined for those who need it most: Companion robots will address the loneliness epidemic, especially for seniors and those with cognitive or other health issues. 
  • The dawn of the renaissance developer: Like the Renaissance greats who understood science, art and engineering, polymath developers will thrive.
  • Quantum-safe becomes the only safe: With bad actors now harvesting data in anticipation of quantum’s arrival, the window for proactive defense is closing.
  • Defense technology changes the world: Defense contractors are flush with capital and acting more like startups, compressing the timeline from battlefield to civilian applications of the technology. 
  • Personalized learning meets infinite curiosity: For most of human history, only the wealthy could afford a personal tutor or coach. That’s about to change.

I spoke with Vogels about the thinking behind this year’s predictions. Among other things, he admits that technology tools from AI to military drones can obviously harm or help, depending on the intention of the user. But he’s an optimist, especially about the potential for personalized learning and software developers.

And how does he see the mission of the CTO—a role that can cover everything from being the person who manages data centers to the founder focused on product? “I actually think CTOs are horrible managers. You should never put a CTO in charge of people,” he argues. “VPs of engineering wake up in the morning, thinking ‘Do I have the best team in the best situation? Can I shield them from politics and stuff like that? The CTO thinks about, ‘What’s the next technology that we should be building?’ Actually, that was my role for many years within Amazon. Then you become a technology provider, and then your role changes again. You have to understand how your customers are actually using your technology.”

As for what excites him most: “Especially in Africa, I’ve met so many motivated engineers that don’t want to come to the U.S. They don’t want to go work for a large company. They want to solve the problem in their country. I love that. That’s where the real progress lies.” Click here for our full interview.

Contact CEO Daily via Diane Brady at diane.brady@fortune.com

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U.S. Army Secretary Dan Driscoll met with Russian officials in Abu Dhabi on Monday and Tuesday in another hopeful sign that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine may soon end. 

VWs, made in China

Volkswagen said Tuesday that it can for the first time make new electric vehicles entirely in China and do so for half the cost of making them in its native Germany. VW has invested billions in localized R&D in China and plans to introduce about 30 EVs there in the next five years.

Tim Cook’s possible successors

Since Apple CEO Tim Cook turned 65 recently , speculation has intensified about his possible successors. John Ternus, Craig Federighi, Eddy Cue and Greg ‘Joz’ Joswiak are all reportedly in the running and oversee different parts of the company. 

The Big Short investor compares Nvidia with Cisco

The Big Short investor Michael Burry wrote in his first Substack post that Nvidia is the equivalent of Cisco during the dot com bubble: significantly overvalued and a harbinger for when the AI bubble will pop.

Novo Nordisk’s slump continues

U.S.-listed shares of Novo Nordisk fell more than 5% on Monday, largely due to the drug developer’s announcement that semaglutide, the  core ingredient in its Ozempic and Wegovy drugs, did not slow cognitive deterioration in Alzheimer’s patients. The company has lost almost half of its value since the year started.

Is robot-driven unemployment already here?

Amazon cut 14,000 jobs in October, and multiple sources now predict another round of layoffs in early 2026 as the company doubles down on AI and robotics. Both blue-collar and white-collar employees are growing anxious about who might be next—and what the future looks like if there aren’t enough jobs left for humans.

The markets

S&P 500 futures were down 0.16% this morning. The last session closed up 1.55%. STOXX Europe 600 was flat in early trading. The U.K.’s FTSE 100 was flat in early trading. Japan’s Nikkei 225 was up o.07%. China’s CSI 300 was up 0.95%. The South Korea KOSPI was up 0.3%. India’s NIFTY 50 is down 0.29%. Bitcoin was up at $87K.

Around the watercooler

She ran her parents’ dry-cleaning business at 18. Today, the ‘godmother of AI’ is advising world leaders and running a billion-dollar startup by Eva Roytburg

Trump’s gambit to save Republicans from a giant health insurance spike comes with a $50 billion price tag, CRFB estimates by Nick Lichtenberg

Billionaire MacKenzie Scott extends her philanthropy with a $17 million gift to Oklahoma’s oldest public community college, where most students rely on aid by Jessica Coacci

As boomers are forced back to work because they can’t afford to retire, Robinhood CEO says Gen Zers are opening retirement accounts at just 19 years old by Emma Burleigh

CEO Daily is compiled and edited by Joey Abrams and Claire Zillman.

Presidential election in Guinea-Bissau sees rivals Embalo and Dias both claim victory | Elections Update

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Conflicting claims come before the release of official results by the country’s electoral commission.

The two leading candidates in Guinea-Bissau’s presidential election – incumbent Umaro Sissoco Embalo and main challenger Fernando Dias – have both declared victory before the release of official results.

Both campaigns had claimed on Monday that their contender exceeded the 50 percent threshold needed to win outright, eliminating the need for a run-off.

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“We have won the presidential race. We will not have a second round,” Dias told supporters in the capital, Bissau, adding that people were “tired” and wanted change.

Hours later, Embalo’s campaign spokesperson Oscar Barbosa also claimed the president had won outright, insisting there would be no run-off and calling on rivals to avoid making claims that undermine the electoral process.

There was no immediate comment by the National Electoral Commission, which is expected to announce provisional results on Thursday, regarding the conflicting claims.

Twelve candidates competed in Sunday’s poll that saw a turnout of more than 65 percent.

The African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC), the movement that led the fight against Portuguese colonial rule, was barred from fielding a candidate for the first time.

The party endorsed Dias, boosting his campaign, especially after former Prime Minister Domingos Simoes Pereira, the PAIGC leader, backed him. The 47-year-old is standing with the Party for Social Renewal.

Embalo, 53, is a former army general who served as prime minister from 2016 to 2018. He is seeking to become Guinea-Bissau’s first president in 30 years to win a second term.

Opposition parties argue that Embalo’s mandate should have ended earlier this year. The Supreme Court ruled that his term should run until early September, but the election was pushed back to November.

Embalo dissolved parliament, which was controlled by the opposition after the 2019 and 2023 legislative elections, and has not allowed it to sit since December 2023.

Guinea-Bissau has experienced repeated coups and attempted coups since its independence more than 50 years ago, and remains one of the world’s poorest countries, with half the population living in poverty, according to the World Bank.

More than 200 international observers were in the country to monitor the electoral process, including from the West African regional bloc ECOWAS, the African Union and the community of Portuguese-speaking countries.