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A 9-year-old fascinated with robots now runs his own company with a full-time staff of adults who help teach other children about robotics. A baseball fanatic has created an enterprise that sends out subscription boxes full of baseball gear on a monthly basis, from training equipment to sunflower seeds. And finally, meet the young men who, with the help of music superstar Drake, help people get into the increasingly lucrative world of professional online gaming.
Oil Jumps as OPEC+ Mulls Biggest Production Cut Since Pandemic
India Has a $1.2 Trillion Plan to Snatch Factories From China
Stellantis’s Tavares Sees Microchip Shortage Lasting to End-2023
Minister Denies Truss Banned the King From COP27 Climate Change Summit
Tesla Deliveries Miss Estimates, Slowed by Logistic Snarls
JD.com Tycoon Settles Rape Suit Hours Before US Trial Begins
Phone Alerts Responders After Car Hits Tree, Killing All 6
Venture Capital Firm 83North Raises $400 Million for Latest Fund
Lula, Bolsonaro Neck and Neck in Brazil’s Vote as Runoff Looms
Kwarteng Trying to Head Off Tory Rebellion Over Tax Cut Debacle
Robinhood Is Closing More Offices With Its Growth Plans Thwarted
Inflation Is Hampering Single Americans Looking for Love
Yanks’ Judge Heads on Road Still At 61 Homers; 4 Games Left
Dorrell Out as Coach At Colorado After 0-5 Start to Season
China’s ‘Common Prosperity’ Drive Morphs Into Common Poverty
Ian Is a Wake-Up Call on the Real Costs of Climate Paralysis
Ron DeSantis and the Rise of Free-Lunch Conservatism
Cash Retakes Its Crown as the Fed Wrestles With Inflation
Destino da Amazônia está em jogo na eleição brasileira
The World Sees Brazil’s Election as a Climate Flashpoint. Brazilians Have Other Concerns
Few Florida Homes Hit by Hurricane Ian Are Covered for Floods
Daily Mirror Sorry After Mistaking Man for Chancellor Kwarteng
Tesla Deliveries Miss Estimates, Slowed by Logistic Snarls
Minister Denies Truss Banned the King From COP27 Climate Change Summit
How Do You Wedge a Condo Into a Tiny Site? Work the Angles
Death Toll From Hurricane Ian Likely to Take Weeks to Finalize
NYC Arranges $225 Million in Debt Relief for Taxi Drivers
Bitcoiners Hunker Down for ‘Storms Ahead’ as Retail Stays Away
Coinbase Resolves Problem That Halted Payments From US Banks
Solana Says Successfully Completed Cluster Restart After Outage
Daniel Flatley and
Kelly Gilblom
The US Navy lent Tom Cruise F/A-18 Super Hornets for the new “Top Gun” movie. The only catches: The studio paid as much as $11,374 an hour to use the advanced fighter planes — and Cruise couldn’t touch the controls.
The “Mission Impossible” star, famous for performing his own stunts, insisted that all the actors portraying pilots on the long-delayed “Top Gun: Maverick” film fly in one of the fighter jets built by Boeing Co. so they could understand what it feels like to be a pilot operating under the strain of immense gravitational forces. Cruise, 59, had also flown in a jet for the original “Top Gun,” a smash hit in 1986.