Tyson Foods recalled frozen dino-shaped "fun nuggets" after some consumers reported finding small metal pieces in the chicken.
Driving the news: The voluntary recall announced Saturday affects about 29,819 pounds of the product, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service said.
The era of free returns — an essential part of the rise of online shopping — is ending.
The big picture: Many retailers are fed up with paying for and processing an endless barrage of return packages, and they're starting to charge for it.
The Washington Post on Saturday announced Will Lewis would become publisher and chief executive of the historic newspaper company, effective January 2, 2024.
Why it matters: Lewis, a former journalist turned media executive who has served as CEO of Wall Street Journal parent Dow Jones, will be tasked with making the company profitable again and elevating employee morale following a difficult year.
Several trial witnesses have described in recent days how they were pressured into investing in a business and then found out its leader was also apparently misusing funds and defrauding them. And no, it's not disgraced crypto mogul Sam Bankman-Fried's trial, but one taking place across the country, in California.
Why it matters: Watch enough venture capital-fueled trials, and FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) emerges as the key driving force, along with self-dealing, fake financial reports, and lofty aspirations sold as reality.
It's not oftenthat a new journalistic business model comes along, but Hunterbrook wants to resuscitate one that has, until now, never really taken off: using hedge fund profits to pay for journalism that, in turn, generates trading ideas for the fund.
Why it matters: It's very early days yet — Hunterbrook hasn't even launched — and there's certainly no guarantee of success. But the idea is intriguing.
Do lower-income Americans really need expensive professional advice from financial-services companies or real estate brokers? And would they suffer in its absence?
Why it matters: Those questions are at the heart of current controversies over retirement advice and broker fees.