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  • Forget the Camry – The Subaru SUV That Now Costs Less to Own Over Five Years

    Forget the Camry – The Subaru SUV That Now Costs Less to Own Over Five Years

    The Toyota Camry has been the reliable choice for family vehicles for over thirty years. It was never intended to be exciting, and it wasn’t. The predictable resale curve, the low maintenance costs, and the way it simply appeared every morning without any drama were all quieter aspects of its appeal. Anyone who learned to drive in their parents’ Camry will likely recall the slightly worn cloth seats, the radio dial that was always stuck, and the overall impression that this was a vehicle meant to be forgotten in the best possible way.

    The most recent figures are fascinating because of this. With a five-year ownership cost, the 2026 Subaru Uncharted, an electric compact SUV that most people outside of dealership lots haven’t even seen yet, has surpassed the Camry. Not by a narrow margin either.

    DetailInformation
    Model2026 Subaru Uncharted
    TypeCompact Electric SUV
    Starting Price$34,995
    Competitor Comparison2026 Toyota Camry Hybrid — $29,595
    Estimated 5-Year Fuel Cost$3,000 (Uncharted) vs. $6,500 (Camry)
    Estimated 5-Year Maintenance~$1,600 (Uncharted) vs. ~$1,503 (Camry)
    5-Year Insurance Estimate~$11,750
    Powertrain Reference SourceKelley Blue Book Cost-to-Own data
    Body Style TrendFamily buyers shifting from sedans to SUVs
    Reviewed ByAdam Gray, How-To Geek; Joe Duarte, Top Speed

    The majority of the work is done by the fuel savings alone, which are about $3,000 over five years compared to the Camry’s $6,500. What surprises people is that maintenance costs are almost the same. Theoretically, electric vehicles should be less expensive to operate, but for years, the difference has remained stubbornly small. That needle is finally moved by The Uncharted.

    These days, you can see the shift in any Subaru dealership before anyone speaks. The charging stations in the back are no longer ornamental, but the Foresters and Outbacks still serve as the lot’s anchors. Instead of spending ten years educating skeptical sedan buyers about all-wheel drive, salespeople are now explaining range estimates and home charging configurations. There’s a feeling that Subaru, which has a reputation for practicality and flannel shirts, is figuring out the EV conversation in its own slow, unassuming way.

    Naturally, the Camry is not going anywhere. Last year, Toyota sold a huge number of them, and the hybrid version is still incredibly impressive—quiet, economical, and constructed with the kind of engineering discipline that consistently appears in long-term reliability rankings. The Camry might still be a better option for some buyers, especially those who frequently travel long highway stretches or are unable to charge at home. The more recent technology isn’t always favored by the math.

    Forget the Camry: The Subaru SUV That Now Costs Less to Own Over Five Years
    Forget the Camry: The Subaru SUV That Now Costs Less to Own Over Five Years

    However, the landscape of family cars has changed. No matter how good, a sedan cannot match the higher seating position, cargo flexibility, and all-weather confidence that buyers desire. The Uncharted begins to appear less like an experiment and more like a viable option when you take into account the fuel savings, the federal incentives that are still available for eligible EVs, and the fact that Subaru has a reputation for keeping cars on the road.

    The speed at which this has occurred is difficult to ignore. It would have seemed unrealistic five years ago for an electric Subaru to compete with the Camry on cost-to-own figures. It is now included in a Kelley Blue Book spreadsheet as a footnote. It’s still unclear whether the Uncharted’s depreciation curves, battery life, and other unglamorous factors that truly determine ownership costs will hold up over time. However, the initial indications appear encouraging. And that could be sufficient to alter the conversation for many families who are standing in showrooms this spring.

  • The Swimming Goggle Startup Quietly Disrupting an Industry Dominated by Speedo and TYR

    The Swimming Goggle Startup Quietly Disrupting an Industry Dominated by Speedo and TYR

    The same two logos have been staring back at you from every pool deck in every country for the majority of the past 20 years. One side has a speedo. TYR, however. For a long time, it seemed permanent that they split the swimming world in the same way that Coke and Pepsi used to split supermarket aisles. Then, gradually, something began to change. Not very loudly. Not in the news. There were only a few strange straps fastened behind the heads of swimmers competing in mid-tier events, and there was a growing murmur among coaches that the new equipment was actually superior.

    It seems deliberate that the startup in question maintains a low profile. It doesn’t sponsor Olympic teams, run ostentatious campaigns, or pursue the kind of contracts that secured Speedo’s exclusive aquatic contract with British Swimming in 2022. Rather, it ships goggles in cardboard sleeves, sells them online, and lets the product take its time. It seems as though the founders looked at the mistakes made by the giants and chose not to repeat any of them.

    InformationDetail
    SectorCompetitive and recreational swimwear equipment
    Dominant IncumbentsSpeedo, TYR Sport
    Recent Industry ShiftSpeedo replaced TYR as official sponsor of British Swimming in July 2022
    Notable Sponsorship ReferenceBritish Swimming partnership announced via SportBusiness
    Category TensionBodysuit and goggle technology debates ongoing since 2008
    Key Market PressureRising scrutiny of “performance-enhancing” gear claims
    Independent Research SourceSwimming Science Journal, San Diego State University
    Consumer TrendDirect-to-consumer brands gaining ground in aquatic gear
    Price Range of Challenger GogglesRoughly $18 to $35 retail
    Athlete Sponsorship ModelSmaller, performance-based contracts vs. legacy bulk deals

    The timing is intriguing. The 2008 bodysuit era, which came to an end when FINA banned the most extreme designs after world records began to fall like dominoes, left the swimming gear industry reeling for years. There was an odd aftertaste from that moment. Coaches and swimmers began to quietly doubt marketing claims, questioning how much of the performance was due to the swimmer and how much to the suit. The majority of the magic was in the athlete, according to Brent Rushall’s earlier articles in the Swimming Science Journal, which made this argument with a kind of obstinate clarity. That disagreement never truly subsided. It did nothing but wait.

    A new generation of swimmers is now purchasing equipment in a different way. Before putting their trust in a logo, they are reading reviews on YouTube and Lemon8. Fit, fog resistance, peripheral vision, and other minor details are being compared. By making improvements to its lens coatings every few months and adjusting gasket shapes in response to customer feedback, the startup has created a feedback loop that legacy brands were never able to fully grasp. It’s difficult to ignore how agile they become as a result.

    TYR and Speedo are not currently in danger. Their sponsorships continue to revolve around significant federations, and their distribution continues to dominate retail. However, anyone who watched Dollar Shave Club take a bite out of Gillette will notice a pattern here. One day the math shifts, the incumbents maintain their confidence, and the upstart continues to be inexpensive and compulsive. Although the numbers are still too small to make a clear picture, investors appear to think something similar is developing in aquatic gear.

    The Swimming Goggle Startup Quietly Disrupting an Industry Dominated by Speedo and TYR
    The Swimming Goggle Startup Quietly Disrupting an Industry Dominated by Speedo and TYR

    The quietness of it is what keeps me coming back. There isn’t a manifesto, no founder featured on magazine covers, and no rivalry fostered on social media. Just slightly better-fitting, slightly quicker-shipping, slightly less expensive goggles. It’s possible that supply chain issues or absorption by a larger brand will cause this entire endeavor to fail. We might also be witnessing the early stages of a longer-term phenomenon. In any case, the pool deck now has a different appearance than it did five years ago. The frame is filled with two logos. There’s a third now, and it’s not requesting consent.

  • How North Carolina’s Sports Betting Loophole Left Kentucky Derby Fans Out in the Cold

    How North Carolina’s Sports Betting Loophole Left Kentucky Derby Fans Out in the Cold

    This evening, Churchill Downs will host the 152nd Kentucky Derby. Somewhere in Charlotte or Asheville, a fan wearing a borrowed seersucker jacket will pour a mint julep, settle down on the couch, and realize once more that he cannot lawfully wager two dollars on the horse he likes. It has now been over two years since that little absurdity. In March 2024, sports betting was made legal in North Carolina. The idea was that horse racing would follow suit. It didn’t.

    These mechanics are peculiar and somewhat embarrassing for the state. In theory, pari-mutuel horse race betting was made possible by House Bill 347, which was signed in 2023. After the rulemaking was turned over to the North Carolina State Lottery Commission, things came to a standstill. For a five-year license, operators must pay a million dollars.

    DetailInformation
    Event152nd Kentucky Derby
    DateSaturday, May 2, 2026
    LocationChurchill Downs, Louisville, Kentucky
    Post Time6:57 p.m. ET
    North Carolina LawHouse Bill 347, signed 2023
    Sports Betting Launch in NCMarch 2024
    Total Wagers Placed in NCRoughly $14 billion
    Tax Revenue CollectedOver $275 million
    Licensed OperatorsEight legal sportsbooks
    Horse Race Betting StatusStill unavailable
    License Fee$1 million for five years
    ComparisonTen times higher than New York’s annual fee
    Regulatory BodyNorth Carolina State Lottery Commission

    No one has submitted an application. Not one. In a 2024 report, the commission itself identified the cost as a potential issue, noting that New York has the highest annual fee in the nation at $20,000. For a market that is, in all honesty, smaller and less developed, North Carolina is requesting ten times that up front.

    The legislature might not have given this enough thought. It’s also possible that they did, and the cost was a kind of silent wall that was meant to appear friendly without actually opening anything. The outcome is the same in either case. Since the site’s inception, bettors have placed about $14 billion on basketball, football, and the occasional UFC card. Over $275 million in taxes have been collected by the state. Additionally, the sport that gave rise to American gambling culture is watched rather than played on the first Saturday in May.

    The lottery commission’s public information officer, Ryan Carter, told WRAL that work on a pari-mutuel program is still ongoing. He used the expression “beneficial for the state,” which is what people say when they don’t want to commit to a date. It doesn’t exist. The commission has proposed a workaround that would require a legislative fix: allowing an advance-deposit wagering platform to collaborate with an already-existing sportsbook. Lawmakers have not taken notice of it because they are preoccupied with other matters.

    How North Carolina's Sports Betting Loophole Left Kentucky Derby Fans Out in the Cold
    How North Carolina’s Sports Betting Loophole Left Kentucky Derby Fans Out in the Cold

    In the meantime, the overall picture is more complicated than the initial sales pitch implied. The 2023 bill’s sponsors pledged significant funding for both the general fund and university athletics. In actuality, net proceeds to the public good accounted for less than two percent of total sales, according to the commission’s own December figures.

    The Division of Alcohol Law Enforcement received two million dollars to enforce the under-18 ban and has cited exactly zero people, according to critics like retired deputy state treasurer Charles Heatherly. Three out of four college students reported gambling in the previous year, according to the National Council on Problem Gambling. Observing all of this, it seems as though the state legalized the simple aspects while ignoring the difficult ones.

    Fans of horse racing are currently caught in that void. Some will end up at offshore locations, which is precisely what the law was meant to deter. Some will simply wait, finish the julep, and watch the race. At 6:57 p.m., the Derby begins. Someone will be covered with the roses. Additionally, the current betting windows in North Carolina will remain closed for an additional year.

  • Apple TV Just Broadcast the Miami Grand Prix to the Biggest F1 Audience in American History

    Apple TV Just Broadcast the Miami Grand Prix to the Biggest F1 Audience in American History

    The recent events in Miami have a subtle historic quality. The Formula 1 Crypto.com Miami Grand Prix attracted 2.6 million viewers on Apple TV on Sunday, more than any other live F1 broadcast in American history. The moment feels more significant than a ratings line because of the surrounding context, even though the number itself is astounding.

    For a five-year exclusive agreement, Apple paid about $750 million, almost three times what ESPN was paying when it left. If you’re hedging, you don’t spend that amount. Apple’s senior vice president of services, Eddy Cue, referred to this weekend as a “relaunch,” and you can hear the cautious confidence in that term. Miami became more than just another stop on the schedule after Formula One lost two races in April, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, both of which were canceled due to the conflict with Iran. It turned into the crucial moment for Apple.

    DetailInformation
    EventFormula 1 Crypto.com Miami Grand Prix 2026
    U.S. Broadcast PartnerApple TV (exclusive, 5-year deal)
    Deal ValueApproximately $750 million total / $150 million per year
    Previous BroadcasterESPN (2018–2025, final extension worth nearly $90M)
    Sunday Viewership2.6 million U.S. viewers — largest live audience in American F1 history
    Broadcast Quality4K Dolby Vision with 5.1 surround sound
    Multiview FeedsUp to four simultaneous live feeds
    Additional Live FeedsUp to 30 across all sessions
    Apple Executive LeadEddy Cue, SVP of Services
    F1 President & CEOStefano Domenicali
    New Programming“Circuits in Focus” (Nico Rosberg, Emelia Hartford) and “POV” (Calum Nicholas, Christina Roki)
    Theatrical Distribution50 IMAX locations nationwide; live broadcast in Times Square, New York
    Alternate StreamTubi’s “The Fast Lane: Miami” with Michelle Khare, Jeremiah Burton, Scott Mansell

    You can begin to comprehend why the audience attended by going through the production decisions. Cue likes to point out that Apple isn’t compressing the feed like other broadcasters do, and the race was broadcast in 4K Dolby Vision with 5.1 surround sound. Nearly one-third of viewers made use of the multiview feature, which allowed them to watch up to four feeds simultaneously, including real-time telemetry, podium trackers, and onboard cameras. For ardent F1 TV viewers, this kind of setup used to seem like a luxury. It is now simply present on the same app that people use to watch Ted Lasso.

    As this develops, there’s a feeling that Apple is approaching Formula One more like a piece of software than a sporting event, something ESPN never quite grasped. Apple Maps provides comprehensive circuit layouts. Apple Music playlists selected by drivers. “Circuits in Focus” with Nico Rosberg and “POV,” a post-race analysis presented by former Red Bull technician Calum Nicholas and engineer Christina Roki, are two new programs. By itself, none of that is revolutionary. When combined, it begins to resemble an ecosystem play, something that Apple has successfully executed for the past 20 years while sports leagues have largely failed.

    Apple TV Just Broadcast the Miami Grand Prix to the Biggest F1 Audience in American History
    Apple TV Just Broadcast the Miami Grand Prix to the Biggest F1 Audience in American History

    Another question is whether the numbers hold. The layoff likely caused pent-up demand because Miami is typically one of the most watched races of the year. The true test occurs in the middle of the season, when a routine Tuscan circuit must prove itself on a steamy Sunday afternoon. Apple is placing a wager that the integrations and production quality will be compelling enough to prevent casual viewers from returning to their phones.

    It’s difficult to ignore how very American the entire experience felt. Fifty IMAX theaters showed the race. A broadcast was made in Times Square. Tubi collaborated with YouTube influencers to run a parallel altcast. For ten years, F1 has been chasing the American market, relying on Drive to Survive, night races in Las Vegas, and the Miami circus. With Apple’s arrival, the chase may finally pay off in a way that is independent of Netflix’s ability to sell drama.

    The CEO of Formula One, Stefano Domenicali, referred to it as a new chapter. He has previously uttered variations of that statement. The numbers are beginning to support him this time.

  • The Bloomberg Terminal Is Getting an AI Makeover — and Wall Street Traders Are Bitterly Divided

    The Bloomberg Terminal Is Getting an AI Makeover — and Wall Street Traders Are Bitterly Divided

    The Bloomberg Terminal has always been an oddity. The orange-and-black screen, the cluttered windows, and the keyboard with its strange biometric button all give the impression that it was created in 1994 and has never been updated. They are arranged like aquariums on any trading floor in Manhattan or Canary Wharf, sometimes four to a desk, glowing in the early light before the markets open. No other piece of software in the world may have been able to maintain this level of devotion for as long.

    The machine is now receiving artificial intelligence from Bloomberg, and the people who use it on a daily basis can’t quite agree on what to think of it. The new document summarization tool is adored by some traders. Some claim it’s a gimmick. Though this isn’t always the case, there are portfolio managers who are forty years old who have embraced the AI features and analysts who are twenty-six years old who, on principle, won’t use them.

    Bloomberg L.P. — Key InformationDetails
    CompanyBloomberg L.P.
    Founded1981
    FounderMichael R. Bloomberg
    Headquarters731 Lexington Avenue, New York City
    Flagship ProductBloomberg Terminal (also called Bloomberg Professional Services)
    Annual SubscriptionRoughly $25,000 to $32,000 per user
    Active TerminalsAround 350,000 worldwide
    AI Features IntroducedDocument summarization, earnings call transcript Q&A, news analytics
    Primary CompetitorRefinitiv Workspace (LSEG)
    Industries ServedInvestment banking, asset management, hedge funds, central banks

    The features themselves aren’t very eye-catching. A 200-page bond prospectus can be summarized by the terminal in roughly thirty seconds. You can ask the CFO about the third-quarter margins in an earnings call transcript, just like you would with a chatbot. When it comes to how it uses the technology, Bloomberg has been cautious, almost cautious, and that caution has become a source of controversy. Ask the younger users why it’s so slow. Ask the older ones why so quickly.

    Speaking with those who have worked with these devices for twenty years gives the impression that the terminal isn’t actually software. It’s a process. a muscle memory. In a way, the job is the keyboard shortcuts, the four-letter command codes, and the rhythm of opening a chart and superimposing a yield curve over it. Even with a well-designed interface, introducing a chatbot messes things up. Recently, a seasoned fixed-income trader told a reporter that he would prefer to lose a finger than his Bloomberg muscle memory. This statement may seem absurd until you see him in action.

    However, there is a legitimate case for AI. Investment bank junior analysts burn out at startling rates, and a large portion of this burnout is caused by laboriously going through documents that no one ever reads in their entirety. Why wouldn’t you use a tool that can extract pertinent covenant language from a credit agreement in a matter of seconds? Even though executives are more measured in public, Bloomberg appears to agree with this argument based on the speed at which it is being implemented.

    The Bloomberg Terminal Is Getting an AI Makeover — and Wall Street Traders Are Bitterly Divided
    The Bloomberg Terminal Is Getting an AI Makeover — and Wall Street Traders Are Bitterly Divided

    It’s still unclear if the AI features will truly transform the terminal or if they will merely cover it like a thin layer of paint. Refinitiv has been working with Microsoft to integrate AI more quickly and forcefully, and this pressure is part of what is currently motivating Bloomberg. The terminal’s unique, irreplaceable blend of data, chat, and ritual—the competitive moat it has enjoyed for forty years—is being put to the test in a manner never seen before.

    You get the impression that the terminal will withstand whatever happens as you watch this play out. It has consistently done so. However, those who have built their careers around it will need to pick up new skills, and not all of them want to. In strange ways, Wall Street is sentimental. Most likely, the orange screen will remain orange. Nobody yet knows what the rest are.

  • Brendan Sorsby Is Out — and Texas Tech’s Spring Collapse Has Exposed the Most Fragile Depth Chart in the Big 12

    Brendan Sorsby Is Out — and Texas Tech’s Spring Collapse Has Exposed the Most Fragile Depth Chart in the Big 12

    A quarterback room is rarely as deep as anyone says it is in April. Coaches will tell you that three of their players are capable of winning games. Boosters will give a nod. Then a season begins, someone’s shoulder gives out in the second week, and all of a sudden the depth chart looks like a freshman roster from a west Texas high school.

    Because the man at the top of the chart was unharmed, Lubbock is currently experiencing that movie, only worse. He was apprehended.

    Brendan Sorsby — Key InformationDetails
    Full NameBrendan Sorsby
    PositionQuarterback
    Current TeamTexas Tech Red Raiders (on indefinite leave)
    Previous ProgramsIndiana (2022–2023), Cincinnati (2024–2025)
    Transfer ValueReported $6 million NIL deal
    Career Passing Yards (pre-Tech)7,208
    Career Passing TDs60 through the air, 22 rushing
    Current StatusTreatment program for gambling addiction
    InvestigationActive NCAA inquiry into sports wagering
    Head Coach at Texas TechJoey McGuire
    Reported ByESPN’s Pete Thamel
    AllegationThousands of online bets, including on Indiana football in 2022

    The $6 million addition from Cincinnati, the focal point of Joey McGuire’s most costly offseason, and the player Red Raider supporters had already begun picturing under the lights against Utah, Brendan Sorsby, has left the program to pursue treatment for a gambling addiction.

    According to ESPN’s Pete Thamel, Sorsby wagered thousands of dollars online on a variety of sports, including Indiana football games during his redshirt year in 2022. According to the report, he did not participate in any of the bets. Lawyers will care about that particular detail. The NCAA probably won’t give a damn.

    This week, the program has a subdued, almost ashamed vibe. McGuire’s statement was the kind that coaches are now required to write more frequently than in the past; it was cautious, encouraging, and balanced between institutional damage control and human concern. “We love Brendan and support his decision to seek professional help,” he stated. There are two ways to read that, and the majority of Lubbock residents are doing so.

    The true story is what remains. The obvious heir, Will Hammond, missed the entire spring after tearing his ACL against Oklahoma State in October of last year. Yes, there is hope. According to Pete Nakos at On3, Hammond is throwing once more, and the staff believes he might be prepared for Abilene Christian in the first week. However, that timeline is a hope rather than a plan, as anyone who has witnessed a quarterback recover from a torn knee in nine months will attest. Kirk Francis, a Tulsa transfer with a 58 percent completion rate and more interceptions than you’d like, is seated behind him. Then a true freshman, a redshirt freshman, and a prayer.

    Last year, Texas Tech ran the ball brilliantly. J’Koby Williams and Cameron Dickey are real. Veterans make up the line. The issue of who hands them the football on a third-and-seven in late October in Manhattan, Kansas, remains unresolved.

    Brendan Sorsby Is Out — and Texas Tech's Spring Collapse Has Exposed the Most Fragile Depth Chart in the Big 12
    Brendan Sorsby Is Out — and Texas Tech’s Spring Collapse Has Exposed the Most Fragile Depth Chart in the Big 12

    It’s difficult to ignore how rapidly the Big 12 discourse has changed. Tech was the overwhelming favorite a week ago because they were the league’s most glamorous portal class, defending champions, and a coach who was finally gaining national recognition. Arizona State is currently receiving a lot of attention. Kansas State once more. even BYU. There isn’t currently a clear king in the conference, which is precisely the kind of void that makes a season peculiar.

    Sorsby might return. He might not. The NCAA’s gambling policy permits permanent disqualification, and the precedent is harsh. Observing this from a distance gives me the impression that the program was hit by something it couldn’t have anticipated—a phone in someone’s pocket and a habit that no one noticed, rather than an injury or a transfer war.

    This autumn, Lubbock will play football. Who tosses it and how far is the question.

  • Sir Ken Robinson – The Quiet Liverpudlian Who Made the World Rethink School

    Sir Ken Robinson – The Quiet Liverpudlian Who Made the World Rethink School

    A man who argues the same point for forty years and won’t give up, even when everyone in the room stops paying attention, has a subtle stubbornness about him. That man was Sir Ken Robinson. He didn’t yell. He didn’t strike a pose. He gently, almost apologetically, told audiences that the way we educate children is flawed while standing on stages in a dark suit with his hands folded. And for some reason, everyone believed him.

    He was the fifth of seven children born into a working-class family in Liverpool, close to Goodison Park. When Ken was nine years old, his father, a docker, was paralyzed in an accident at work. After contracting polio at the age of four, Ken spent eight arduous months in the hospital and was left with a limp. It’s the kind of upbringing that could account for a lifetime of resentment. Rather, it appears to have made him more patient. You get the impression from watching this develop over the years in interviews that he discovered early on that neither life nor the kids in our classrooms fit neatly into a mold.

    Bio Data / Key InformationDetails
    Full NameSir Kenneth Robinson
    Born4 March 1950, Liverpool, England
    Died21 August 2020, London (aged 70)
    NationalityBritish
    EducationBretton Hall College (BEd); University of London (PhD, 1981)
    Known ForAuthor, speaker, advocate for creativity in education
    Famous TED Talk“Do Schools Kill Creativity?” (2006)
    Notable BooksOut of Our Minds, The Element, Creative Schools
    Career HighlightsProfessor of Arts Education, University of Warwick (1989–2001); Senior Adviser, J. Paul Getty Trust
    HonoursKnighted in 2003 for services to the arts
    Official SiteSir Ken Robinson Foundation
    FamilyWife Marie-Therese (Terry); two children, Kate and James

    It was almost an accident that the speech changed everything. Robinson gave a 19-minute talk titled “Do Schools Kill Creativity?” at a TED conference in California in February 2006. He didn’t take any notes. He made jokes. He strayed. By the time of his passing, the video had been translated into over sixty languages and viewed hundreds of millions of times on YouTube and the TED platform. Ministers pretended not to see it, parents shared it at dinner parties, and teachers circulated it in staff rooms.

    The odd thing was that politicians were less inclined to interact with Robinson as he gained popularity. In 1997, the government of Tony Blair hired him to oversee a study on creative education. All Our Futures, the resulting report, was quietly shelved by Whitehall after receiving praise from educators. Years later, under Dominic Cummings and Michael Gove, his ideas were met with the kind of contempt that only soft-thinking people could muster. Robinson, on the other hand, appeared unfazed. In 2018, he said to The Independent, “I’d probably be doing something wrong if I didn’t piss somebody off.”

    His main point was surprisingly straightforward. He claimed that children are naturally inquisitive, creative, and willing to make mistakes. That is something that schools, especially the test-driven, league-table-obsessed ones, instill in their students. Naturally, literacy and numeracy are important, but he liked to say that treating them as the entirety of education was like baking a cake and hoping the eggs would show up later. He desired that dance be taught with the same gravity as math. Instead of micromanaging teachers, he wanted them to be trusted. Instead of acting like factories, he wanted schools to act like gardens.

    His theories might have been more effective in theory than in practice. Sometimes, even sympathetic readers questioned how “fostering imagination” could be scaled across a national curriculum. However, the diagnosis persisted. He was onto something genuine, as anyone who has witnessed a teenager lose interest in art class because it didn’t count toward university points or witnessed a child’s spelling test panic will attest.

    Sir Ken Robinson
    Sir Ken Robinson

    In August 2020, he passed away in London at the age of seventy from cancer. The foundation bearing his name is currently run by his daughter Kate. Even though the schools he criticized are largely unchanged after five years, his statements continue to circulate, being pinned to classroom walls, quoted in PTA meetings, and repeated late at night by weary educators who question whether any of it still matters. There’s a persistent sense that it does.

  • Tame Fierce Fergie – The Day Manchester’s Schoolkids Made Sir Alex Smile

    Tame Fierce Fergie – The Day Manchester’s Schoolkids Made Sir Alex Smile

    The thought of Sir Alex Ferguson, of all people, being subdued by a bunch of teenagers from Trafford and Wythenshawe is subtly humorous. Grown men who had captained their nations left his office looking shaken for the majority of his career. Knowing that a single incorrect word could end a press conference early, reporters carefully considered their questions. Nevertheless, a few schoolchildren with notebooks and nervousness were able to persuade him to drop his guard somewhere in the Old Trafford hallways.

    Radiowaves, a youth internet radio station that had been discreetly carrying out this kind of work for years, organized the project, which was named Supporter to Reporter. There were twenty young people involved. Three of them—Danika Scargill, Nathan Tighe, and Shane Gibb—wound up at the center of the narrative, sitting through an actual press conference before covering the United vs. Lyon game live the next evening. It had to have been bizarre. The majority of adults never approach Ferguson within fifty feet, much less have the opportunity to ask him a question.

    Bio Data / Key InformationDetails
    Full NameSir Alex Ferguson CBE
    Date of Birth31 December 1941
    Place of BirthGovan, Glasgow, Scotland
    ProfessionFormer Football Manager
    Most Famous ForManaging Manchester United (1986–2013)
    Major Honours13 Premier League titles, 2 UEFA Champions League trophies
    Knighted1999, for services to football
    Famous NicknameFergie / The Boss
    Notable TraitThe “hairdryer treatment” — fierce dressing-downs
    Project MentionedSupporter to Reporter, run by Radiowaves
    Event CoveredManchester United vs Lyon, Champions League, March 2008
    RetirementMay 2013, after 27 seasons at United

    At the age of fourteen, Shane Gibb was a United supporter and a student at Wellacre Technology College. He questioned Ferguson about how he got young players ready for big nights in Europe. Journalists frequently ask questions like this, but as a child about the same age as some of United’s academy prospects, the answer was different. By all accounts, Ferguson responded calmly. No voice was raised. Avoid being sarcastic. No notorious hair dryer. It’s just a manager talking shop.

    Tame fierce Fergie
    Tame fierce Fergie

    Moments like these are easy to read too much into. After all, Ferguson had a deeper understanding of his audience than the majority of politicians. Depending on who was seated across from him, he could activate or deactivate the threat. He was cautious and sometimes combative with seasoned broadsheet reporters. For a moment, he felt more like a grandfather when children held microphones for the first time. He seemed to have truly enjoyed it.

    When you watch old video of these interactions, you become aware of the little details. When a younger person speaks, he leans forward a little. He pauses before responding, seemingly considering how much to say. After all, he spent decades molding teenagers at Carrington. The Nevilles, Giggs, Beckham, and Scholes. Speaking with fourteen-year-olds was nothing new. In a sense, it was his most comfortable environment.

    The Lyon game itself vanished into football’s extensive repertoire of unmemorable European evenings. As was typical under Ferguson, United made progress. However, the children who covered it most likely recall every second of it. Being trusted with a genuine assignment at that age has a lasting effect on a person. Twenty years later, this is the kind of memory that is recounted at dinner parties.

    Following Ferguson’s retirement, Brendan Rodgers once predicted that the manager’s departure would completely alter United’s perspective. Though probably not in the way he intended, he was correct. The tactical edge and touchline glare were not the only things that vanished. It was the man’s fundamental contradiction. In one room, fierce; in another, gentle. capable of frightening a referee and, ten minutes later, responding to a teen’s query as though it were the most crucial task of the day.

    Fergie people tend to forget that. The one the students encountered. It was mild, fleeting, and in some way more memorable as a result.

  • Pacific Mini Games 2009 – Table Tennis, The Quiet Tournament That Rewrote Vanuatu’s Sporting Story

    Pacific Mini Games 2009 – Table Tennis, The Quiet Tournament That Rewrote Vanuatu’s Sporting Story

    Watching table tennis in the Pacific is a unique experience. The squeak of rubber soles on a court that had likely been cleared of folding chairs an hour earlier, the small hall, the pace. That quality was present in Rarotonga in late September 2009. Outside, the palms close to the Tereora complex were being affected by the trade winds as usual. Four tables in the room were illuminated by fluorescent lights, and for nearly two weeks they were at the center of a quiet, intense story that, although it didn’t make headlines around the world, was very important to the people in the room.

    The eighth Pacific Mini Games took place from September 21 to October 2, 2009. Twenty-one countries showed up. There were fifteen sports on the schedule. Table tennis has seven medal events, which may seem insignificant until you consider the significance of each event for countries that don’t often receive much attention.

    Quick Reference – Pacific Mini Games 2009 Table TennisDetails
    Host CityRarotonga, Cook Islands
    Edition8th Pacific Mini Games
    Dates21 September – 2 October 2009
    VenueSokala Hall / Tereora complex area
    Participating Nations (Table Tennis)Vanuatu, New Caledonia, Tahiti, Fiji, Cook Islands, Kiribati, Samoa, Tonga
    Events Contested7 medal events
    Standout PlayersYoshua Shing, Anolyn Lulu, Priscila Tommy, Ham Frexly Lulu
    Dominant NationVanuatu (men’s & women’s team gold)
    Total Medals at Games415 across all sports
    Final Day of PlayThursday, 1 October 2009

    Vanuatu entered the competition with confidence rather than arrogance and emerged with a performance that would be remembered for years. In finals that were closer than the scores indicated, their men’s and women’s teams defeated New Caledonia to win team gold.

    It’s likely that anyone who saw Yoshua Shing perform that week recalls the serenity. He moved as if he had already decided the outcome before the game even began. At the table, Ham Frexly Lulu had a distinct energy that was sharper, more responsive, and almost impatient. Anolyn Lulu and Priscila Tommy exuded a subdued authority on the female side. It’s difficult to ignore the fact that athletes from smaller federations with fewer resources occasionally play with greater clarity than competitors from more well-funded programs. Coaches in the area continue to argue over whether that is due to coaching, culture, or just plain stubbornness.

    Pacific Mini Games 2009 - Table Tennis
    Pacific Mini Games 2009 – Table Tennis

    The schedule itself seems like a little play. Three days are allotted for group rounds. Qi Wang of Fiji will play Kenji Morin of Tahiti in the quarterfinals on October 1st, while Frexly Lulu will play O.”an Belrose. There were some memorable moments in the women’s bracket, such as the quarterfinal match between Anolyn Lulu and Louisa Manico of the host Cook Islands, which local fans openly hoped would result in an upset. The hall was noisy even though it didn’t. When a hometown player defeats a favorite, Pacific fans make a certain noise. It’s not courteous applause. It’s more truthful.

    It must have hurt that New Caledonia, the dominant force in many regional sports, finished second in the team competitions. Through Tuarikirau Thunot and Tinihau-O-Terai Klouman, Tahiti experienced flashes of genius. Xuan Li from Fiji contributed experience that consistently seems to translate well at this level. The week served as a gauge for the smaller countries, including Kiribati and Tonga, which is essentially the purpose of the Mini Games.

    In retrospect, the 2009 competition seems more like a turning point than a footnote. Expectations were changed by Vanuatu’s twin golds. When the Cook Islands hosted their first Mini Games, they demonstrated that they could plan a multisport event without the mayhem that some had feared. Additionally, Pacific table tennis still relies on the memories left by the players, the majority of whom are now retired or coaching. Even now, there is a feeling that the sport in the area has never fully recovered the intensity of those two weeks in Rarotonga.

  • Swimming Australia Faces a Quiet Reckoning as a New Generation Pushes the Sport Into Uncharted Water

    Swimming Australia Faces a Quiet Reckoning as a New Generation Pushes the Sport Into Uncharted Water

    The way this nation views swimming is distinctly Australian. This is more than just a sport. It’s a backyard custom, a national habit that kids pick up before they can spell. Swimming Australia, an organization that has been subtly influencing the nation’s relationship with the water since 1909—long before the majority of the world had figured out what competitive swimming was supposed to look like—sits at the center of all of that.

    It’s difficult to ignore how deeply the sport permeates everyday life when strolling past any neighborhood pool on a Saturday morning and observing parents in folding chairs and children in bright caps lined up by the blocks. Everything above it is fed by that grassroots layer. There are about 750 clubs, about 66,000 members, coaches who frequently work for almost nothing, and yearly volunteers. Despite appearing chaotic on the outside, this system consistently produces world-beaters.

    InformationDetails
    OrganisationSwimming Australia
    Founded1909 (as Amateur Swimming Union of Australia)
    HeadquartersBelconnen, ACT
    PresidentChris Fydler
    Chief ExecutiveRob Woodhouse
    Head CoachRohan Taylor
    National TeamAustralian Dolphins
    Registered MembersApprox. 66,000–100,000
    Affiliated ClubsAround 750–1,100 nationally
    International BodyWorld Aquatics (since 1909)
    Major SponsorsTech Mahindra, Arena
    Upcoming Events2026 Australian Swimming Trials (June), 2026 Short Course Championships (Sept–Oct)

    Just the past few weeks have been bizarre and brilliant. In less than twelve hours, Andy Donaldson swam fifty-five kilometers down the Ord River while battling heat, currents, and, reportedly, thousands of freshwater crocodiles. At the Australian Masters Nationals in Brisbane, Cam McEvoy, who already held the world record in the 50-meter freestyle, swam the two fastest 25-meter freestyle swims ever. Nine minutes, two seconds, and six seconds. It’s the kind of number that prompts you to pause and read it again.

    As this develops, it seems like Swimming Australia is in one of its more intriguing stages. The president is Chris Fydler, an Olympic gold medallist. The daily operations are managed by Rob Woodhouse. The national team is coached by Rohan Taylor. Even with the marketing partnerships, streaming deals, and polished Dolphins branding that were introduced ten years ago, the culture still feels more like a club than a corporation because a large portion of the leadership is made up of swimmers.

    swimming australia
    swimming australia

    Nevertheless, the organization has experienced difficult times. The organization has had to address issues regarding athlete welfare that other Australian sports have only lately started to raise, and the historical allegations of sexual abuse that have surfaced over the years continue to be a part of its story. Though the current leadership appears more open to discussing it than previous administrations, it’s still unclear if the cultural reforms have gone far enough.

    The odd generational overlap is what makes Swimming Australia intriguing today. A few days ago, 1956 Olympian Brian Wilkinson, Dolphin number 104, passed away. Junior Dolphins, who weren’t around when Ian Thorpe last raced, are being selected for the 2026 Pan Pacs. Everything is under threat from the Brisbane 2032 Olympics, a massive deadline that is already influencing budgets, training facilities, and selection procedures.

    Perhaps the next ten years will be the most pivotal period in the organization’s history. Money is coming in, talent is piling up, and the nation has, for better or worse, made the decision that it expects to succeed in swimming. Nobody has yet to provide a complete answer to the question of whether the system can handle that burden while simultaneously fixing what needs to be fixed. From the outside, it seems like everyone is aware of the risks. And that’s what keeps the sport progressing in its own subtle way.