Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
This article is part of the FT Financial Literacy & Inclusion Campaign’s seasonal appeal. The appeal is supported by lead partner Experian, which is generously match-funding other donations.
It has become a rite of passage for every new generation of young adults to be labelled lazy and irresponsible by its elders, but Gen Z has probably had it worse than most. Accusations range from not making an effort at work to splurging on luxuries and a “Yolo” attitude to risky investments like cryptocurrencies and NFTs.
There are two important differences between Gen Z and those previous generations facing similar disdain. The first is that rather than pushing back on these characterisations, today’s 20-somethings have tended to embrace them, leaning into neologisms such as “quiet quitting”. The second is that new evidence suggests these behaviours are rational responses to worsening economic prospects: specifically, the increasing unattainability of home ownership.
In a pioneering study published last week, economists at the University of Chicago and Northwestern University used detailed data on the card transactions, wealth and attitudes of Americans to demonstrate that reduced work effort, increased leisure spending and investment in risky financial assets (including crypto) are all disproportionately common among young adults who face little to no realistic prospect of being able to afford a house. By contrast, Seung Hyeong Lee and Younggeun Yoo’s research finds that those for whom home ownership is a more realistic possibility in the medium term, or who have already attained it, take fewer risks and strive harder at work.
I have extended their analysis to the UK and find a similar picture. Young British renters who have little hope of cobbling together a deposit are much more likely to take financial risks — with online betting, for example — than their contemporaries who are on or within reach of the housing ladder.
Most importantly, Lee and Yoo use time series data and local house prices to show that the link between unaffordable housing and economic behaviour appears to be causal. Recent upticks in financial risk-taking, leisure spending and reduction in work effort respond to changing economic incentives. As housing affordability deteriorates, those who come to believe they are locked out of home ownership resort to a mixture of high-risk bets and what US economic commentator Kyla Scanlon calls “financial nihilism” — why strive and save when it won’t be enough to make it anyway? — while their better-placed counterparts tighten their belts.
The findings on effort at work are particularly notable. Gen Z is often characterised as lacking resilience in the workplace; many young employees have taken to social media to bemoan the pointlessness of the nine to five. The evidence suggests these changing beliefs and behaviours are grounded in economic reality as it evolves. It’s not that previous generations were more engaged in their work because jobs back then were thrilling, it’s that applying oneself at work used to be a means to an end. With the reward of owning your own home yanked out of reach, the whole thing feels futile.
The same conclusion follows from the increasing importance of parental help to climb the ladder. For most first-time buyers in the US, the UK and Australia, the biggest hurdle is not salary but down payment. Why stay late in the office to finish that project in the hope of a modest pay rise when you know you’ll end up needing a six-figure deposit that might take decades to build up regardless?
The results of these studies have important implications. First, they underscore the critical urgency of addressing the home ownership affordability crisis. The impact, as we can now see, is destabilising the wider economy and society, setting many young adults on a slippery financial path where mis-steps may prove unrecoverable.
Second, they highlight the importance of providing young people with the financial literacy they need to navigate a new world where for many the only hope of success is to take big monetary risks. Today’s 20-somethings are much more likely to end up as life-long renters than their parents were. This means they will need more guidance than past generations on other means of wealth accumulation, as well as the skills and support to know that it’s not yet game over.
It’s all very well bemoaning the growing economic nihilism of younger generations — and the evidence bears it out — but they’re just playing the cards they have been dealt.
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new video loaded: Hong Kong Residents Reel From Deadliest Fire in Decades
Dozens were killed in a fire that engulfed several apartment buildings in Hong Kong. Firefighters were still battling the blaze on Thursday, and dozens of people were still missing.
By Nader Ibrahim, Tiffany May and Lam Yik Fei for The New York Times
The Ohio Supreme Court ruled unanimously on Wednesday that NBA player Christian Wood must pay $25,000 per month in child support, ending a prolonged legal battle in Lorain County. The decision came after Wood missed the objection deadline by one day, leaving the prior ruling in place.
According to court records, Wood and an Elyria woman had a child in January 2021. They met on social media while Wood was playing for the Dallas Mavericks. He most recently played for the Los Angeles Lakers.
hTimeline of the Case
In July 2021, both parents appeared in Lorain County court to determine child support and visitation. The court issued an interim order requiring Wood to pay $5,000 monthly. The case moved to trial in 2023. After reviewing financial information and circumstances, the court set Wood’s permanent child support obligation at $25,000 per month and backdated the amount to January 2021.
The backdating meant the total owed accumulated significantly. Wood attempted to challenge the ruling by filing an objection. However, he submitted it 15 days after receiving the order.
Missed Deadline Determines the Outcome
The key issue before the Ohio Supreme Court was not the amount of support but whether Wood filed his objection on time. The justices found he missed the deadline by one day, which automatically upheld the trial court’s ruling.
The court’s announcement stated that the timing issue controlled the case. Because the filing was late, the justices did not revisit the earlier decision that set the $25,000 monthly payment.
What Comes Next
With the ruling now final, Wood is responsible for the full monthly payment and the backdated amount. The decision also means the Lorain County trial court’s earlier findings on support and visitation remain unchanged.
The case provides a reminder of how procedural deadlines can determine legal outcomes, even in high-profile disputes involving professional athletes. Wood’s next steps would need to follow lower-court procedures, as the state’s highest court has now closed the door on this appeal.
The ruling marks a significant financial obligation for the veteran forward as he continues his NBA career.
On the northern edge of Ukraine, inside the 30-km (19-mile) exclusion zone surrounding the abandoned Chornobyl (commonly known as Chernobyl) nuclear plant, thousands of animals now roam freely through forests, abandoned towns and decaying industrial estates. Among them are the stray dogs – around 900 descendants of the pets left behind, now living in a landscape shaped by the world’s worst nuclear disaster.
Recently, three of them were spotted with unusually blue fur, prompting speculation that either radiation had turned their coats that color, or they’d undergone some kind of mutation that had altered their phenotype. (Or the photos captured were actually AI.) The story of these blue dogs has now been unearthed thanks to the Clean Futures Fund’s Dogs of Chornobyl Program, an organization that’s been providing food and vet care, as well as deploying scientists to research the population, since 2017.
Turns out the blue hue was the result of behavior, not evolution
CFF/Dogs of Chornobyl
“The blue dye likely came from a tipped over port-a-potty where the dogs were rolling around in the poop as dogs are prone to do (think cat litter box!),” said Timothy A. Mousseau, Scientific Advisor for the Dogs of Chornobyl Program and biologist at the University of South Carolina, in a social media post this month. “The blue coloration was simply a sign of the dog’s unsanitary behavior. As any dog owner knows, most dogs will eat just about anything, including feces!”
Essentially, their fur acted like a sponge, picking up the blue-tinted contaminants it had come in contact with. Subsequent vet checks found no radiation-related illness, no structural abnormalities and no indication of genetic damage.
While these blue dogs have captured the public’s imagination, there’s an even more fascinating scientific story emerging from the semi-feral dog communities of the Exclusion Zone – which includes the abandoned city of Pripyat, around 16 km (10 miles) north of the sarcophagus that covers the radioactive reactor four.
A team of researchers led by Mousseau has found that the dog populations in the Exclusion Zone are genetically distinct from domestic populations elsewhere in Ukraine and Europe. In the study, the scientists examined the genetic structure of 302 dogs, which made up three free-roaming groups living on the power plant’s grounds, as well as animals 15 to 45 km ( (9 to 28 miles) from the site. They compared this data with purebred and free-breeding dogs from around the world and discovered that the isolation had gradually changed their genetic makeup.
“Analysis of shared ancestral genome segments highlights differences in the extent and timing of western breed introgression,” the researchers noted. “Kinship analysis reveals 15 families, with the largest spanning all collection sites within the radioactive exclusion zone, reflecting migration of dogs between the power plant and Chernobyl City. This study presents the first characterization of a domestic species in Chernobyl, establishing their importance for genetic studies into the effects of exposure to long-term, low-dose ionizing radiation.”
The researchers found that certain families of dogs were associated with different areas of the zone – some near the plant itself, others near checkpoints or abandoned villages –indicating that micro-habitats and human food sources have also played a part. The dogs living inside the power plant/industrial area were genetically distinct from those living outside, in the town/urban area, even though the distance between some groups is only around 16 km (10 miles). And dogs from the power-plant zone had increased genetic similarity within their group, reflecting their isolation.
The Dogs of Chernobyl – Abandoned In The Zone
In the study, the team identified 391 “outlier loci” (genome regions) where the two dog populations differed more than expected by chance. And more than 50 candidate genes lie in or near those regions. Some of those genes are involved in DNA repair, immune function, and stress response – changes that could potentially help an animal cope with environmental stressors, including radiation or chemical contamination. However, a following study by Mousseau and team found no evidence of increased overall mutation rates in the power-plant dogs compared with the outer-Exclusion Zone dogs, indicating there’s no real evidence of genetic mutation driven by the animals’ adapting to living in the most radioactive parts of the region.
So, despite speculation that the dogs – and wolves in the surrounding forests – have become genetically more resistant to radiation exposure, the research is preliminary and any differences are most likely due to isolation.
Interestingly, the study found that there were distinct breed differences separating the power-plant and city populations. Around the plant, 9% of their chromosomes could be traced back to shepherds. More than half of all the shepherd-type genetic markers here appeared at higher frequencies (5–10% of chromosomes), while those same markers were seen in just 1–5% of chromosomes in the city population.
The dogs also were found to have low levels of “pinscher-clade” DNA – genetic segments associated with breeds like dobermans and miniature pinschers. Unlike the shepherd ancestry, these pinscher markers appear at similar low frequencies in both the power-plant and city populations, suggesting more recent mixing or shared ancestry, rather than the long-term isolation seen in the shepherd descendants.
And why shepherds? The researchers believe that it’s consistent with Soviet-era use of German Shepherds and East-European Shepherds as guard dogs, in military units and as security at industrial sites. These working dogs would have been prominent in the animals left behind when the area was evacuated.
Dogs of Chornobyl feed and treat the hundreds of strays who are descendants of pets and working animals left behind
CFF/Dogs of Chornobyl
The team identified 15 genetically distinct family groups among the 302 sampled dogs – from units of just two closely related animals (usually a parent and a pup) to larger clusters of more than 10. Some of the larger families were spread across multiple locations, suggesting that dogs move through the Exclusion Zone to find mates. That movement has helped maintain a degree of genetic diversity within what is otherwise an isolated population.
It’s also worth noting that scientists have found no evidence of new additions to the dog community since 1986, and the current population is most likely as large as it will get, as Dogs of Chornobyl have undertaken widespread sterilization (and vaccination) programs since 2022.
However, the ways in which the radiation exposure is impacting the dogs is still largely unknown and the focus of ongoing studies.
Of course, the dogs are only one piece of the Chornobyl animal community. In the absence of high numbers of humans, wolves, lynx, wild boar, moose, deer, foxes, European bison and even the endangered Przewalski’s horse can now be found in the area.
A 2004 study looked into how radiation might be impacting four small mammals common to the Exclusion Zone – bank voles (Myodes glareolus), striped field mice (Apodemus agrarius), yellow-necked mice (Apodemus flavicollis) and wood mice (Apodemus sylvaticus). Tracking population sizes across areas with different levels of radiation, the researchers found no evidence that higher contamination resulted in fewer rodents. And while radiation can be detrimental to individual animals, its impact on population sizes appeared to be offset by advantages – the absence of humans, predators and agricultural disturbances. Meanwhile, a 2021 study looking at gut bacteria and fungi changes in the same four species found that local environments shaped small-mammal gut microbiomes far more than radiation, and any radiation-related microbial changes were subtle and inconsistent across species.
Looking at the data that has been gathered – particularly in the last 20 years – the Chornobyl disaster has not created a habitat of mutants but a surprisingly abundant wildlife (and dog) sanctuary. While there is some evidence that radiation exposure is having a detrimental impact – Mousseau identified the rise of cataracts in birds in 2015 – there’s still a lot we don’t know about how it’s effecting life in the region.
“The majority of studies investigating populations of plants, animals and microbes in the Chornobyl Zone have not found any evidence of signs of adaptive evolution,” Mousseau noted. “There is only one study that shows what might be adaptation to radiation and it is for bacteria living on the wings of birds. This is not surprising given that bacteria can reproduce very quickly with thousands of generations since the disaster, allowing for adaptive evolution whereas dogs and most of the other plants and animals often have only a single chance to reproduce per year, which dramatically slows evolutionary response to change.”
Across many long-term studies, mammals in particular have shown surprising resilience, however, just as much research has found negative health outcomes across a broad range of species. While radiation can cause measurable biological damage to individuals, the removal of humans – including farming, hunting and habitat disturbance – has also had a huge impact.
“In general, the majority of published scientific studies show that many of the organisms surveyed show significant negative impacts of the radiation in the areas of the zone where radiation is high, but are largely unaffected in areas that are relatively ‘clean’ (i.e. not radioactive),” Mousseau said. “Most people do not realize that within the 2,600-km2 (1,000-miles2) Chornobyl Exclusion Zone (CEZ), perhaps only 30% of the land area would be considered hazardous (i.e. significantly radioactive), while the remainder is relatively ‘cold’ (i.e. not radioactive). The CEZ is actually a kind of quilt work or mosaic of radiation levels that reflects the patterns of wind direction and rainfall at the time of the accident. It is not uniformly radioactive.”
And the dogs remain the most visible and emotionally relatable inhabitants, helping to reshape how we think of the area surrounding the disaster zone – once considered to be uninhabitable for any life.
“Contrary to some reports in the media, the Chornobyl dogs show no signs of elevated tumor (i.e. cancer) rates, but also show no signs of reduced cancer rates,” Mousseau wrote. “The truth is that cancers are generally a disease of old age (in both dogs and humans) and most dogs in the harsh conditions of Chornobyl do not live long enough to express cancers, even if they were predisposed to do so.”
The majority of dogs near the power plant were found to have shepherd and working dog ancestry
CFF/Dogs of Chornobyl
As for the wolves being immune to cancer –news that was widely circulated in 2024 on the back of this conference abstract from Princeton University biologists – at best it’s not confirmed, with their rise in numbers also most likely due to the absence of humans.
“In truth, there is no report published in the scientific literature to support this claim,” Mousseau said. “A few scientists have behaved irresponsibly by promoting this idea in the absence of peer reviewed scientific data to support their claim. In addition, given the very small size of the Chornobyl wolf population (i.e. a few dozen individuals), an epidemiological study demonstrating an association between radiation, cancers, and immune system genetic changes would be impossible. Such studies usually require millions of observations (and certainly minimally tens of thousands) as even when cancer rates are high, they are still relatively rare, making statistical associations very challenging. And, as stated above, cancers are usually a disease of the old, further reducing the likelihood of seeing them in a natural population where life spans tend to be relatively short.
“More generally, the growth of the wolf population in Chornobyl has been often cited as an example of re-wilding and used as evidence that radiation may not be that dangerous, and that hunting is the main reason that wolves were absent from this region prior to the disaster,” he continued. “Although the former (i.e. hunting) is likely true, there is no evidence to suggest that wolves are not being negatively impacted by the radioactive contaminants. All we can say for sure is that hunting is likely a more important factor affecting wolf populations than radiation, which is not really that surprising.
“There is only one clear scientific study showing signs of adaptive evolution to radiation at Chornobyl, and this was for bacteria which have had thousands of generations of selection and thus time to evolve,” he concluded.
Aman says it will take ‘all available measures’ to stop Russian authorities from recruiting its citizens to fight in war.
Published On 28 Nov 202528 Nov 2025
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Jordan has demanded that Russian authorities stop illegally recruiting its citizens after two Jordanians were killed fighting in the Russian military.
Jordan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued the warning on Thursday against Moscow and external “entities” working online to recruit people on Moscow’s behalf.
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The ministry did not mention Russia’s almost four-year-long war on Ukraine, where thousands of paid foreign fighters have joined Moscow’s side.
In a statement shared on X, the Jordanian Foreign Ministry said it would “take all available measures” to end the further recruitment of Jordanians and called for Moscow to terminate the contracts of its currently enlisted citizens.
The recruitment is a violation of both Jordanian domestic and international law, the ministry said, and “endangers the lives of [its] citizens”.
The statement did not provide any further identifying information or say where or when the two citizens were killed, though Russia has a track record of recruiting foreigners to fight in Ukraine.
Ukraine says Moscow has recruited at least 18,000 foreign fighters from 128 countries, according to figures shared by Brigadier General Dmytro Usov. In a post on the Telegram messaging app, he said another 3,388 foreigners have died fighting for Russia.
Usov did not provide a breakdown of the foreign soldiers fighting in Ukraine for Russia, but the vast majority were likely from North Korea.
The New York-based Council on Foreign Relations said Pyongyang sent between 14,000 and 15,000 soldiers to fight for Russia in 2024, citing Western officials.
Moscow has also recruited at least 1,400 Africans from more than 30 countries, using methods ranging from deception to duress, according to Ukrainian Minister of Foreign Affairs Andrii Sybiha.
Sybiha said previously that signing a contract with the Russian military was “equivalent to signing a death sentence” for foreign recruits.
“Foreign citizens in the Russian army have a sad fate. Most of them are immediately sent to the so-called ‘meat assaults,’ where they are quickly killed,” Sybiha said in a November 9 post on X.
“The Russian command understands that there will be no accountability for the killed foreigner, so they are treated as second-rate, expendable human material,” he said.
TORONTO (AP) — Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and the premier of Canada’s oil rich province of Alberta agreed Thursday to work toward building a pipeline to the Pacific Coast to diversify the country’s oil exports beyond the United States.
The memorandum of understanding includes an adjustment of an oil tanker ban off parts of the British Columbia coast if a pipeline comes to fruition.
Carney has set a goal for Canada to double its non-U.S. exports in the next decade, saying American tariffs are causing a chill in investment.
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith said the agreement will lead to more than 1 million barrels per day for mainly Asian markets so “our province and our country are no longer dependent on just one customer to buy our most valuable resource.”
Carney reiterated that as the U.S. transforms all of its trading relationships, many of Canada’s strengths – based on those close ties to America – have become its vulnerabilities.
“Over 95% of all our energy exports went to the States. This tight interdependence – once a strength – is now a weakness,” Carney said.
Carney said a pipeline can reduce the price discount on current oil sales to U.S. markets.
He called the framework agreement the start of a process.
“We have created some of the necessary conditions for this to happen but there is a lot more work to do,” he said.
Carney said if there is not a private sector proponent there won’t be a pipeline.
The agreement calls on Ottawa and Alberta to engage with British Columbia, where there is fierce opposition to oil tankers off the coast, to advance that province’s economic interests.
Former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau approved one controversial pipeline from the Alberta oil sands to the British Columbia coast in 2016 but the federal government had to build and finish construction of it as it faced opposition from environmental and aboriginal groups.
Trudeau at the same time rejected the Northern Gateway project to northwest British Columbia which would have passed through the Great Bear Rainforest. Northern Gateway would have transported 525,000 barrels of oil a day from Alberta’s oil sands to the Pacific to deliver oil to Asia, mainly energy-hungry China.
The northern Alberta region has one of the largest oil reserves in the world, with about 164 billion barrels of proven reserves.
Carney’s announcement comes after British Columbia Premier David Eby said lifting the tanker ban would threaten projects already in development in the region and consensus among coastal First Nations.
“The pipeline proposal has no project proponent,” he said. “Not only does it have no permits, it doesn’t even have a route.”
Eby said the agreement is a “distraction” to real projects and does not have the support of coastal First Nations.
“We have zero interest in co-ownership or economic benefits of a project that has the potential to destroy our way of life and everything we have built on the coast,” Coastal First Nations President Marilyn Slett said.
The agreement pairs the pipeline project a proposed carbon capture project and government officials say the two projects must be built in tandem.
The agreement says Ottawa and Alberta will with work with companies to identify by April 1 new emissions-reduction projects to be rolled out starting in 2027.
President Vladimir Putin has doubled down on his core demands for ending the war in Ukraine, saying Russia will lay down arms only if Kyiv’s troops withdraw from territory claimed by Moscow.
Putin has long pushed for legal recognition of the Ukrainian territories Russia has seized by force. They include the southern Crimean peninsula, annexed in 2014, and the eastern Donbas region, which Moscow now occupies for the most part.
For Kyiv, which has ruled out relinquishing the parts of the Donbas it still holds, rewarding Russia for its aggression is a non-starter.
Speaking after Putin’s address, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said that Russia “scorned” efforts “to truly end the war”.
Speaking to reporters during a trip to Kyrgyzstan, Putin accused Kyiv of wanting to fight “to the last Ukrainian” – which he said Russia was “in principle” also ready to do.
He repeated his view that Russia has the initiative on the battlefield and the fighting would only end when Ukrainian troops withdrew from Donbas, which is made up of the Luhansk and Donetsk regions.
“If they don’t withdraw, we’ll achieve this by force of arms,” he said.
Yet Russia’s slow gains in eastern Ukraine have come at significant cost of manpower. According to the US-based Institute for the Study of War, at this rate it would take Moscow almost two more years to seize the rest of the Donetsk region.
Thursday’s remarks were the first time that Putin addressed the hectic diplomatic moves of the last week, which saw the US and Ukraine hold intense discussions over a peace plan reportedly drafted in October by American and Russian officials.
The plan, which was heavily slanted towards Moscow’s demands, was subsequently revised during talks between Ukrainian and US negotiators in Geneva. European representatives were also in the Swiss city.
But it is thought it does not address the issue of the occupied territories which – alongside security guarantees for Ukraine – is the biggest sticking point between Moscow and Kyiv.
Putin said that new draft plan has now been shown to Russia, and that it could become the “basis” for a future agreement to end the war.
However, he added it was “absolutely necessary” to discuss “certain specific points that need to be put in diplomatic language”.
Asked about the possibility of Crimea and the Donbas being recognised as under Russian de facto controlbut not legally, Putin said: “This is the point of our discussion with our American counterparts”.
A US delegation including special envoy Steve Witkoff was expected in Moscow in the first half of next week, he confirmed. US President Donald Trump told reporters that Witkoff may be joined in Moscow by the president’s son-in-law Jared Kushner.
Zelensky said in a video address late on Thursday that Ukrainian and US delegations would meet “to translate the points we secured in Geneva into a form that puts us on the path to peace and security guarantees.”
The Ukrainian president did not mention any names, but his chief of staff Andriy Yermak had said US Army Secretary Dan Driscoll was due to visit Kyiv later in the week.
On Wednesday Trump said there were “only a few remaining points of disagreement” between Russia and Ukraine – indicating that any meeting with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky to discuss these points was contingent on a peace deal being agreed upon.
During his comments to reporters Putin again expressed his contempt for the Ukrainian leadership, which he said he considered illegitimate. There was therefore “no use” signing any documents with them, he added.
Ukraine has been under martial law since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022 and has therefore been unable to hold scheduled elections. Earlier this year, the Ukrainian parliament voted unanimously to affirm the legitimacy of President Zelensky, whose term in office ended in the spring.
Putin also dismissed warnings by European leaders that Russia could attack the European continent within the next decades.
“That sounds laughable to us, really,” he said.
The White House and Donald Trump have sounded optimistic about the recent diplomatic push for peace talks, but Europeans have repeatedly expressed their scepticism over whether Putin truly intended to end the war.
The estate of Johnny Cash has sued Coca-Cola, accusing the beverage giant of using an impersonator who mimicked the late singer’s voice in a nationwide advertising campaign without permission.
The complaint, filed in US District Court in Nashville, alleges Coca-Cola hired a tribute singer to record vocals for a college football-themed commercial that started airing in August 2025.
The John R. Cash Revocable Trust, which controls the singer’s publicity rights, is seeking damages and an injunction to stop Coca-Cola from “exploiting the infringing ad.”
The trust alleges in the lawsuit (read here) that Coca-Cola commissioned the Go the Distance commercial as part of its Fan Work Is Thirsty Work campaign for the NCAA football season.
The ad features fans drinking Coca-Cola products at college games and includes imagery from partner schools, including the University of Michigan, the University of Notre Dame, the University of Southern California, Louisiana State University and The Ohio State University.
The trust claims Coca-Cola’s ad agency hired a Johnny Cash tribute performer to ensure the vocal track “sounded as close as possible to the artist’s voice.
The lawsuit said the singer advertises himself as “The No. 1 Johnny Cash Tribute Show” and “The Man in Black — A Tribute to Johnny Cash.”
“The singing voice in the Infringing Ad is readily identifiable and attributable to Johnny Cash.”
The John R. Cash Revocable Trust’s lawsuit
The trust’s lawyers wrote: “On information and belief, the Sound-Alike Singer’s only entertainment talent as a singer is to impersonate Johnny Cash.”
The lawsuit added: “The singing voice in the Infringing Ad is readily identifiable and attributable to Johnny Cash,” and that some consumers “have actually been confused by Infringing Ad.”
Cash, who died in 2003, sold more than 90 million records worldwide and was inducted into the Country Music, Rock and Roll, and Gospel Music halls of fame. His estate has licensed his voice for commercial use, including Super Bowl ads, and operates the Johnny Cash Museum in Nashville.
The lawsuit invokes Tennessee’s ELVISAct, enacted in March 2024, which protects likeness, voice and image rights. The law defines voice as “a sound in a medium that is readily identifiable and attributable to a particular individual, regardless of whether the sound contains the actual voice or a simulation.”
The statute allows estates of deceased individuals to pursue civil action against unauthorized commercial use.
Coca-Cola, which reported revenue exceeding $47 billion in 2024 and has a market capitalization above $300 billion, has a history of celebrity endorsements, according to the lawsuit.
“Coca-Cola knows that it needs a license to exploit, for commercial advertising purposes, the name, image, likeness, and voice of artists and musicians. Coca-Cola has entered into such licenses in the past.”
The John R. Cash Revocable Trust’s lawsuit
The lawsuit said: “Coca-Cola touts such endorsements on its website as part of its ‘DNA.’ Coca-Cola emphasizes that its first celebrity endorsements were with singers”
The trust’s complaint noted that Coca-Cola has previously entered endorsement deals with artists including TaylorSwift to use their voices in ads.
“Coca-Cola knows that it needs a license to exploit, for commercial advertising purposes, the name, image, likeness, and voice of artists and musicians. Coca-Cola has entered into such licenses in the past.”
The lawsuit added: “Despite capitalizing on the intrinsic value of Johnny Cash’s legendary Voice, CocaCola never even bothered to ask the Trust for a license.”
The lawsuit marks the latest case against a brand over its commercial. In August, Sony Music Entertainmentsued US shoe retailer Designer Shoe Warehouse (DSW) over what SME claims to be “rampant infringement” of its sound recordings in social media ads.
Warner Music Group also sued DSW in May, claiming that DSW Designer Shoe Warehouse and parent Designer Brands Inc “misappropriated over two hundred” of WMG’s recordings and compositions in TikTok and Instagram posts.
In October last year, Universal Music Groupsued the owner of US Tex-Mex restaurant chain Chili’s in October for allegedly infringing its copyrights in numerous social media posts.
That same month, Sony Musicsettled a lawsuit against Marriott Hotels over the alleged “rampant” infringement of copyrighted materials in social media posts.
In March, Sony Music sued the University of Southern California, alleging the school repeatedly and willfully used unauthorized copyrighted music in its social media posts.
Other complaints have been filed against companies including a lawsuit against Cookie giant Crumbl (sued by WMG), a lawsuit between the Associated Production Music — jointly owned bySony Music Publishing andUniversal Music Publishing Group — and the American Hockey League; the case between Sony Music and US cosmetics brand OFRA; and the lawsuit filed by Kobalt Music Publishing, Artist Publishing Group and others against 14 NBA teams.
new video loaded: Pope Leo Visits Mideast on First Foreign Trip as Pontiff
transcript
transcript
Pope Leo Visits Mideast on First Foreign Trip as Pontiff
Pope Leo XIV landed in Muslim-majority Turkey on Thursday, beginning the first international trip of his papacy. The voyage is aimed at promoting interfaith dialogue and cooperation between Christian groups.
To the Americans here, happy Thanksgiving. In both Turkey and in Lebanon, we hope to also announce, transmit and proclaim how important peace is throughout the world and to invite all people to come together to search for greater unity, greater harmony, and to look for the ways that all men and women can truly be brothers and sisters, in spite of differences, in spite of different religions.
Pope Leo XIV landed in Muslim-majority Turkey on Thursday, beginning the first international trip of his papacy. The voyage is aimed at promoting interfaith dialogue and cooperation between Christian groups.