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The youngest victim of the Bondi Beach shooting is laid to rest

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Youngest Victim of Bondi Beach Shooting Laid to Rest

A funeral was held on Thursday for Matilda, 10, the youngest victim of Sunday’s mass shooting at Bondi Beach.

“I think a lot of people come, not just community. A lot of people and support from people around it coming and help people. It’s beautiful. Hopefully there will be changes and people will stop with the hate and discrimination.” “We feel very sad that so many of our people passed away, especially this young girl, Matilda. And my heart breaks for them all. I don’t care whether they were Jewish or Christian or anybody, but this is not the way for people to die.”

A funeral was held on Thursday for Matilda, 10, the youngest victim of Sunday’s mass shooting at Bondi Beach.

By Monika Cvorak

December 18, 2025

Create Music Group purchases UK dance label Cr2

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Los Angeles-based Create Music Group (CMG), which was valued at $1 billion last year following a $165 million investment round, has acquired again.

The company revealed today ( December 18) that it has snapped up Cr2 Holdings Group, adding the UK dance music label and its subsidiaries to its portfolio.

The deal brings Cr2 Records, MBMB Publishing, and music education platform Sample Tools by Cr2 under CMG’s ownership.

CEO Mark Brown, who founded Cr2 in 2004, will stay on as President. CMG Co-founder Jonathan Strauss and Senior Vice President Eric Nguyen will join the company’s board.

Financial terms of the acquisition were not disclosed.

Create said in a press release that it “will back Cr2 and Mark with capital, technology and a global infrastructure to drive the label’s growth strategy with further investments into independent dance artists, catalogs, labels and publishers”. 

Los Angeles-headquartered CMG has been on an acquisitive streak in recent months. In February, it announced a strategic catalog acquisition and joint venture with Pack Records of New York and New Orleans.

In March, CMG acquired the catalog of electronic music producer and DJ Deadmau5, along with that of his label Mau5trap. Create said the deal is valued at “over $55 million” and includes the “master recordings and copyrights” of more than 4,000 songs. The deal also includes the formation of a joint venture, under which Deadmau5 and Mau5trap will release new music via CMG.

It also acquired Berlin-headquartered indie music company !K7 this year.

Elsewhere, it formed joint ventures with Ty Dolla $ign and Shawn Barron’s EZMNY Records and Star Trak Entertainment (launched in 2001 by Rob Walker and producer duo Pharrell Williams and Chad Hugo of The Neptunes).

Last month, CMG invested $500 million in a new fund by Circuit Group, which owns management firms Ayita and Seven20. The fund is focused on the acquisition of music assets and other cultural IP.

CMG, which distributes music generating over 150 billion streams monthly across digital platforms, will provide capital, technology infrastructure and global distribution capabilities to support Cr2’s expansion plans, it said.

The acquisition further expands CMG’s roster of electronic music. Cr2 has spent two decades releasing tracks from DJs and producers including David Guetta, Avicii, Eric Prydz, Camelphat, Fedde Le Grand and Steve Angello. The label has charted multiple dance hits in the UK, US, and Australia.

“We’re huge believers in Cr2 and Mark’s ability to identify, nurture and develop talent and entrepreneurs in the dance music space. We look forward to getting him the tools to fuel the company’s future growth.”

Jonathan Strauss, Create Music Group

Commenting on the deal, CMG Co-founder Jonathan Strauss said: “Mark has established one of the most exciting labels in the UK, consistently delivering hit after hit.”

“We’re huge believers in Cr2 and Mark’s ability to identify, nurture and develop talent and entrepreneurs in the dance music space. We look forward to getting him the tools to fuel the company’s future growth.”

Cr2 Founder and CEO Mark Brown added: “Jonathan, Eric Nguyen, Kyle Bartelman and the entire Create team are building an operating platform for label entrepreneurs that will help position Cr2 for significant investments into artists and labels and help us deliver global hits.

“Create’s ethos of backing the founder’s vision, along with their significant investments into data and technology, together with potent capital resources, make them the perfect partners for Cr2’s next phase of growth.”

“Create’s ethos of backing the founder’s vision, along with their significant investments into data and technology, together with potent capital resources, make them the perfect partners for Cr2’s next phase of growth.”

Mark Brown, Cr2 Holdings Group

Eric Nguyen, Create Music Group’s Senior Vice President of Corporate Development and M&A, said: “Cr2 represents the type of entrepreneurial and culturally influential label we seek to invest in.

“This deal with Mark is yet another important step in our effort to build a premier global platform for dance artists and label teams, and I look forward to working with Mark to expand our footprint.”

Music Business Worldwide

Farmers protest causes delay in EU trade deal with South America’s Mercosur bloc | International Trade News

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EU delays Mercosur trade deal until January amid farmer protests and opposition from France and Italy.

The European Union has delayed a massive free-trade deal with South American countries amid protests by EU farmers and as last-minute opposition by France and Italy threatened to derail the agreement.

European Commission chief spokesperson Paula Pinho confirmed on Thursday that the signing of the trade pact between the EU and South American bloc Mercosur will be postponed until January, further delaying a deal that had taken some 25 years to negotiate.

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Commission President Ursula von der Leyen was expected to travel to Brazil on Saturday to sign the deal, but needed the backing of a broad majority of EU members to do so.

The Associated Press news agency reported that an agreement to delay was reached between von der Leyen, European Council President Antonio Costa and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni – who spoke at an EU summit on Thursday – on the condition that Italy would vote in favour of the agreement in January.

French President Emmanuel Macron had also pushed back against the deal as he arrived for Thursday’s summit in Brussels, calling for further concessions and more discussions in January.

Macron said he has been in discussions with Italian, Polish, Belgian, Austrian and Irish colleagues, among others, about delaying the signing.

“Farmers already face an enormous amount of challenges,″ the French leader said.

The trade pact with Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay and Uruguay would be the EU’s largest in terms of tariff cuts.

But critics of the deal, notably France and Italy, fear an influx of cheap commodities that could hurt European farmers, while Germany, Spain and Nordic countries say it will boost exports hit by United States tariffs and reduce reliance on China by securing access to key minerals.

Brazil’s President Lula says Italy’s PM Meloni asked for ‘patience’

The EU-Mercosur agreement would create the world’s biggest free-trade area and help the 27-nation European bloc to export more vehicles, machinery, wines and spirits to Latin America at a time of global trade tensions.

Al Jazeera’s Dominic Kane, reporting from Berlin, said Germany, Spain and the Nordic countries were “all lobbying hard in favour of this deal”. But ranged against them were the French and Italian governments because of concerns in their powerful farming sectors.

“Their worry being that their products, such as poultry and beef, could be undercut by far cheaper imports from the Mercosur countries,” Kane said.

“So no signing in December. The suggestion being maybe there will be a signing in mid-January,” he added.

“But there must now be a question about what might happen between now and mid-January, given the powerful forces ranged against each other in this debate,” he added.

Farmers wear gas masks at the Place du Luxembourg near the European Parliament, during a farmers’ protest on December 18, 2025 [Nicolas Tucat/AFP]

Mercosur nations were notified of the move, a European Commission spokeswoman said, and while initially reacting with a now-or-never ultimatum to its EU partners, Brazil opened the door on Thursday to delaying the deal’s signature to allow time to win over the holdouts.

Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said Italy’s Meloni had asked him for “patience” and had indicated that Italy would eventually be ready for the agreement.

The decision to delay also came hours after farmers in tractors blocked roads and set off fireworks in Brussels to protest the deal, prompting police to respond with tear gas and water cannon.

Protesting farmers – some travelling to the Belgian capital from as far away as Spain and Poland – brought potatoes and eggs to throw and waged a furious back-and-forth with police while demonstrators burned tyres and a faux wooden coffin bearing the word “agriculture”.

The European Parliament evacuated some staff due to damage caused by protesters.

Challenging the Client

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Owner of TikTok agrees to sell US operations

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TikTok’s Chinese owner ByteDance has signed binding agreements with US and global investors to sell the majority of its business in America, TikTok’s boss told employees on Thursday.

Half of the joint venture will be owned by a group of investors, including Oracle, Silver Lake and the Emirati investment firm MGX, according to a memo sent by chief executive Shou Zi Chew.

The deal, which is set to close on 22 January, would end years of efforts by Washington to force ByteDance to sell its US operations over national security concerns.

The deal is ​line with one unveiled in September, when US President Donald Trump delayed the enforcement of a law that would ban the app unless it was sold.

In the memo, TikTok said the deal will enable “over 170 million Americans to continue discovering a world of endless possibilities as part of a vital global community”.

Under the agreement, ByteDance will retain 19.9% of the business, while Oracle, Silver Lake and Abu Dhabi-based MGX will hold 15% each.

Another 30.1% will be held by affiliates of existing ByteDance investors, according to the memo.

The White House previously said that Oracle, which was co-founded by Trump supporter Larry Ellison, will licence TikTok’s recommendation algorithm as part of the deal.

The deal comes after a long delay.

In April 2024, during President Joe Biden’s administration, the US Congress passed a law to ban the app over national security concerns, unless it was sold.

The law was set to go into effect on 20 January 2025 but was pushed back multiple times by Trump, while his administration worked out a deal to transfer ownership.

Trump said in September that he had spoken on the phone to China’s President Xi Jinping, who he said had given the deal the go ahead.

The White House referred the BBC to TikTok when contacted for comment.

Oracle declined to comment.

KB Home’s Q4 2025 Earnings Exceed Expectations Despite Margin Challenges

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KB Home Q4 2025 slides: Earnings beat expectations despite margin pressure

European Leaders Debate Using Frozen Russian Assets to Finance Ukraine

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European Leaders Discuss Financing Ukraine With Frozen Russian Assets

The European Council convened in Brussels to discuss leveraging frozen Kremlin assets to finance Kyiv’s government and war effort.

“Either money today or blood tomorrow. And I am not talking about Ukraine only, I’m talking about Europe. I think all European leaders have to finally rise to this occasion.” “We have to find a solution today. The president of the council said, and I support him with that, ‘We will not leave the European Council without a solution for the funding for Ukraine for the next two years.’” “The whole idea is a stupid one. To take away the money of somebody — there are two countries which are in war, yes? It’s not European Union. Russia and Ukraine. And somebody, European Union, would like to take away the money of one of the warring parties, and then to give it to another one. It’s a marching into the war. So the Belgian prime minister is right. We should not do that.”

The European Council convened in Brussels to discuss leveraging frozen Kremlin assets to finance Kyiv’s government and war effort.

By Nader Ibrahim

December 18, 2025

Walmart’s female truck drivers on the rise due to competitive salary of $115,000 and additional benefits attracting diverse applicants

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While the rest of the trucking industry faces a driver shortage, Walmart has managed to boost its driver numbers with six-figure starting pay and other perks that are catching the eye of even non-traditional applicants.

The mega retailer, which has claimed the top spot on the Fortune 500 for the past 13 years, has increased its number of in-house truck drivers by 33% over the past three years in part thanks to better wages and benefits.

In 2022, it boosted drivers’ starting pay to around $115,000 from an average salary of $87,000 previously. At the high end, drivers can make $135,000 per year, according to a Walmart spokesperson. The 2024 median pay for heavy and tractor-trailer truck drivers was $57,440 per year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics

Apart from a pay increase, Walmart also uses technology that allows for more reliable schedules compared to other companies. While some in the trucking industry are away for weeks at a time, Walmart gives its drivers consecutive days off of work and assigns them regional delivery territories to allow them to be home every week, a Walmart spokesperson told Fortune.

These perks, along with the better-than-average pay, have increasingly helped the company expand its pool of drivers and include more women. Just 9.5% of truck drivers in the U.S. are women as of 2024, according to the Women in Trucking Index—that’s compared to an estimated 18% of drivers at Walmart, according to a study by workforce intelligence company Revelio Labs that was viewed by Fortune. Bloomberg first reported on the study.

Through a 12-week training program that helps store associates transition to the trucking industry, Walmart has also increased its number of women drivers, a spokesperson said. Around 1,000 people have gone through the program, Bloomberg reported, representing about half of the company’s new drivers.

Possibly due to its efforts, Walmart has a five percentage point oversupply of truck drivers compared to its demand, according to the study by Revelio Labs. 

Walmart’s efforts to bring in more drivers, including those with less experience, is pivotal as the broader trucking industry faces a driver shortage that is expected to bring a shortfall of 160,000 drivers by 2028, according to the American Trucking Association. The broader category of U.S. retail, currently faces a shortfall of drivers, with demand for drivers exceeding supply by seven percentage points, according to Revelio Labs.

Older truck drivers are retiring and younger people aren’t keen to jump into trucking partly due to the long hours and time away from home. A 1,000-person survey from heavy-duty truck parts company FinditParts found that a quarter of Americans would not become truck drivers no matter what pay they were offered. 

For Walmart, any disadvantage in its supply chain, including a driver shortfall, could put it at a disadvantage with Amazon, with which it has been increasingly competing with in recent years, especially with its Walmart+ membership.

Without enough drivers, supply chains are delayed and prices go up. Finding and retaining drivers is thus of the utmost importance for companies like Walmart, Paul Bingham, a director of transportation consulting at S&P Global Market Intelligence, told Bloomberg.

“Trucking companies will need more drivers,” he said. “and they’ll have to attract them from the non-traditional population cohorts.”

Ime Udoka Criticizes Officials Following Overtime Defeat, Rockets Coach Expresses Frustration – Basketball Insiders

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After a dramatic 128–125 overtime defeat to the Denver Nuggets, Houston Rockets head coach Ime Udoka openly criticized the officiating crew. Udoka called the game one of the most poorly officiated he had seen in a long time and questioned the competency of the referees assigned to the matchup. His comments came in the locker room after the loss and highlighted his frustration with key calls that affected the final moments.

Udoka specifically named officials and questioned their decisions in crunch time. He felt the crew failed to maintain consistency on fouls and believed Houston should have received additional technical fouls called in its favor. Udoka also suggested the crew chief seemed “starstruck,” implying that officials were influenced by the league’s marquee stars on the court rather than enforcing rules evenly.

Controversial Call Sends Game to Overtime

The game remained tight throughout regulation, with several lead changes in the final minutes. With the Rockets ahead and time winding down, a controversial foul call was made on Amen Thompson. That call gave the Nuggets a late free throw, which they converted to tie the score and force overtime.

Houston challenged the decision, but the review upheld the call. Murray then hit a key free throw that tied the ballgame. Those final plays fueled Udoka’s ire, as he felt the call was questionable and inconsistent with previous foul judgments in the game.

Rockets Coach Ime Udoka Blasts Officials After Overtime LossRockets Coach Ime Udoka Blasts Officials After Overtime Loss

Historic Performances From Both Centers

Despite the loss, both teams’ big men delivered remarkable statistical nights. Nikola Jokić posted a massive triple-double with 39 points, 15 rebounds, and 10 assists, asserting his MVP-caliber dominance once again. At the same time, Alperen Şengün recorded his own triple-double with 33 points, 10 rebounds, and 10 assists, marking the first time in NBA history that two centers each notched 30-point triple-doubles in the same game.

Jokić and Şengün’s rare feat added historical significance to the contest and gave fans plenty to discuss beyond the controversial calls.

Rockets Respond Despite Frustration

Rockets players also voiced displeasure with the officiating after the game, though none were as blunt as Udoka. Some mentioned that calls at both ends seemed inconsistent, especially late in regulation and early in overtime. Nuggets guard Jamal Murray acknowledged that officiating is difficult, noting officials may miss calls on both sides in a high-stakes matchup.

Houston played competitive basketball throughout, rallied repeatedly, and nearly completed a late comeback. However, Denver’s late execution and the controversial call altered the final result. The Rockets now drop another tough road contest, adding fuel to early season debates about officiating consistency across the league.

Turbo Moka Pot Cuts Coffee Brewing Time in Half with Turbine-Inspired Base

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A sharp, new twist on the classic moka pot, the Turbo Moka packs a unique design that deletes the line between function and flair. The series of gnarled ridges and channels that encircle its base are designed to increase surface area and better focus flames on efficiency-boosted heating. Long story short, your morning coffee will make it to your mug in half the time.

It’s not easy to improve upon a beautifully timeless and functional classic that’s found itself the subject of design museum exhibits around the world. But that’s exactly what Turbo Moka founder Matteo Frontini sets out to do by revising the near-century-old moka pot.

The original Turbo Moka prototype did not have the clean aesthetics of the production model

Turbo Moka

The original Moka pot was created in Italy in 1933 by Alfonso Bialetti. Not only did Bialetti invent the steam-powered brewing mechanics, he crafted the simple, shiny-aluminum vessel that’s found its way to countless stoves around the globe ever since, transporting the rich taste of espresso out of cafes and into homes. If you close your eyes and think “Moka pot” or maybe “Italian espresso pot,” it’s likely a Bialetti pot that your mind’s eye focuses in on.

While there are plenty of other moka pots of different styles out there, Bialetti’s center-split inverted octagonal semi-pyramids have become synonymous with this particular piece of kitchen ware. The Bialetti company still sells these fascinating pieces of geometry today, and the Bialetti name remains an indelible part of coffee’s past, present and future.

More than just a striking look, the new spiral-bladed base delivers faster, more efficient coffee brewing
More than just a striking look, the new spiral-bladed base delivers faster, more efficient coffee brewing

Turbo Moka

Some might yell “blasphemy!” at the very idea of messing with such a longstanding, segment-defining design, but if all freethinkers thought that way, we’d still be locked in the distant past. A product developer by trade, Frontini determined to give the traditional moka pot a performance makeover without destroying its vintage appeal.

“Preserving tradition while rethinking how it fits into the future,” his company states of its mission.

Traditional moka pot versus Turbo Moka pot design
Traditional moka pot versus Turbo Moka pot design

Turbo Moka

In more specific terms, Frontini set about boosting the efficiency of the moka pot to better align with modern, environmentally conscious expectations. The swirly fins carved into the exterior of the base chamber nearly double the area with which the flame has to make contact, offering a 93-percent increase in surface area overall. The channels between those fins also help to direct and concentrate the flames, leading to improved heating efficiency that Turbo Moka claims cuts brewing time in half, using up to 50 percent less gas during the process.

It’s the same general strategy JetBoil uses to increase the speed of water boiling in its all-in-one outdoor Personal Cooking Systems. The company’s FluxRing heat exchanger replaces the flat pot base surface with a corrugated ring that increases surface area to speed up the heating and boiling processes. Some competitors in the space use similar designs.

It's not designed specifically for the outdoors, but the Turbo Moka's compact size, gas stove optimization and fast brewing make it a natural for early, frigid campsite mornings following rough nights wrestling with foam mattresses only nominally thicker than a stick of gum
It’s not designed specifically for the outdoors, but the Turbo Moka’s compact size, gas stove optimization and fast brewing make it a natural for early, frigid campsite mornings following rough nights wrestling with foam mattresses only nominally thicker than a stick of gum

Turbo Moka

We’ve also seen the strategy previously directed into the home kitchen on products like the Flare Pan and Turbo Pot. But whereas we’re not always eager for our pasta water to boil immediately as we prepare other ingredients, we are always happy to see our coffee brew faster than expected.

What we find even more impressive about the Turbo Moka than its claims of halved timing is that Frontini and co have managed to achieve such improvements in an artistic way that complements rather than detracts from the original Moka pot design. Some might disagree, but we find the swept blades a striking accent that adds a (literal) modern twist without overwhelming the classic style.

The Turbo Moka lends a familiar but wholly unique look from nearly every angle
The Turbo Moka lends a familiar but wholly unique look from nearly every angle

Turbo Moka

The Turbo Moka is available now in a 3-cup (4.4-oz/130-ml) size for a price of €85 (approx. US$100). Each one is crafted out of aluminum in Piedmont, Italy using an age-old lost-wax casting process. While optimized for use with gas stoves, the new pot can also be used on an electric stove, albeit without the same speed benefits. Turbo also offers a €20 adapter for use with induction cooktops.

Source: Turbo Moka

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