🎯 Success 💼 Business Growth 🧠 Brain Health
💸 Money & Finance 🏠 Spaces & Living 🌍 Travel Stories 🛳️ Travel Deals
Mad Mad News Logo LIVE ABOVE THE MADNESS
Videos Podcasts
🛒 MadMad Marketplace ▾
Big Hauls Next Car on Amazon
Mindset Shifts. New Wealth Paths. Limitless Discovery.

Fly Above the Madness — Fly Private

✈️ Direct Routes
🛂 Skip Security
🔒 Private Cabin

Explore OGGHY Jet Set →
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Mad Mad News

Live Above The Madness

Ogghy

U.S. and Iran Conclude Fourth Round of Nuclear Talks Ahead of President Trump’s Middle East Visit

May 11, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: Gateway Pundit, INVESTIGATIONS

US Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff

The United States and Iran concluded a fourth round of nuclear negotiations in Oman on Sunday, just days before President Donald Trump embarks on a high-stakes diplomatic tour of the Middle East.

The talks—hailed as “encouraging” by U.S. officials but described as “difficult” by Iran—come as the Trump administration ramps up pressure, making it clear that nothing short of the full dismantlement of Iran’s nuclear program will be tolerated.

The negotiations, held in Muscat and facilitated by Omani mediators, lasted approximately three hours and involved both direct and indirect discussions between U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi.

While Iran continues to insist on its right to enrich uranium for civilian purposes, the U.S. delegation has maintained a firm stance, demanding a total halt to enrichment activities and the dismantling of key nuclear facilities.

Since the U.S. withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear accord in 2018, Iran has significantly increased its uranium enrichment levels, now reaching up to 60% purity.

“The fourth round of indirect Iran-U.S. negotiations is concluded; difficult but useful talks to better understand each other’s positions and to find reasonable & realistic ways to address the differences. Next round will be coordinated and announced by Oman,” said Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei.

PBS reported:

The talks again saw Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and U.S. Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff lead the negotiations. They have met and spoken face-to-face but the majority of the negotiations appear to have been indirect, with Omani Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi shuttling messages between the two sides.

“The discussions included useful and original ideas reflecting a shared wish to reach an honorable agreement,” al-Busaidi wrote afterward on the social platform X.

Iran has insisted that keeping its ability to enrich uranium is a red line for its theocracy, with Araghchi before the talks describing Iran’s program as springing from “the blood of our nuclear scientists.” Israel is widely suspected of carrying out assassinations targeting the program’s scientists.

“From our viewpoint, enrichment is a subject that should definitely continue and there is no room for compromise on that,” Araghchi told Iranian state television after the talks. “It is possible that we consider some limits on its dimensions, amount and level for trust building, similar to the past.”

Witkoff has muddied the issue by first suggesting in a television interview that Iran could enrich uranium at 3.67 percent, then later saying that all enrichment must stop.

“An enrichment program can never exist in the state of Iran ever again,” Witkoff told the right-wing Breitbart news site in a piece published Friday. “That’s our red line. No enrichment. That means dismantlement, it means no weaponization, and it means that Natanz, Fordow, and Isfahan — those are their three enrichment facilities — have to be dismantled.”

 

The post U.S. and Iran Conclude Fourth Round of Nuclear Talks Ahead of President Trump’s Middle East Visit appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

The 3 Mentorship Moves Every Leader Should Master

May 11, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: Addicted2Success, SUCCESS

No one builds a career on their own.
Behind every success story is a mentor or, often, a series of them. These are the people who saw potential before it was obvious. They challenged growth before it was comfortable. And they helped remove obstacles before they became permanent detours.

Mentorship isn’t just a “nice-to-have.”
It’s often the rocket fuel that launches careers, companies, and confidence to new heights.

I know this from experience.

The Mentor Who Changed Everything

I started my first business not long after high school, a small concrete company driven by energy and ambition. But I lacked the foundational knowledge: how to price projects, scope work, and handle problems before they became emergencies.

Enter my uncle, an experienced veteran in the concrete industry. He never handed me a checklist. Instead, he taught me to think ahead. He showed me how to spot small issues before they became expensive ones, and how to lead with consistency and discipline in the day-to-day work that others often overlook.

Those lessons didn’t just help me survive, they became the foundation for every success that followed.
Because mentorship doesn’t remove the challenges. It accelerates your ability to meet them.

Mentorship Isn’t About Telling, It’s About Transforming

Years later, when I took over a struggling youth sports academy, mentorship became even more central to my leadership.

We weren’t just trying to turn around a business. We were trying to rebuild belief in young athletes, in emerging leaders, and in a team that needed more than management. They needed vision, investment, and someone who could see what was possible when they couldn’t yet see it themselves.

In youth sports, it’s easy to get caught up in the scoreboard. But the deeper mission is always bigger than the game: we’re shaping people, not just players.

The best mentors don’t offer ready-made maps. They hand over a compass and teach you how to navigate when the path ahead is uncertain. Mentorship is not about giving shortcuts; it’s about helping others build the endurance to keep going when the map runs out.

At the sports academy, we developed a holistic model focused on mental toughness, leadership, personal responsibility, and discipline, alongside athletic performance. We didn’t just grow a business. We grew people. And that’s why the business grew.

Why Mentorship is a Core Leadership Responsibility

Today, mentoring others isn’t just a side passion. It’s a key way I define leadership success.

Because great leaders don’t just build companies, they build other leaders.
True impact isn’t measured by what you achieve on your own. It’s measured by what others go on to achieve because of how you led them.

If you want to build a career or company that lasts, mentorship isn’t optional. It’s essential.
But first, we need to reframe what mentorship really is.

Mentorship Isn’t:

  • A series of casual coffee chats

  • Giving advice only when asked

  • Offering encouragement without real challenge

Mentorship Is:

  • Helping others think bigger than their current limitations

  • Developing durable confidence, not shallow certainty

  • Teaching how to diagnose, decide, and deliver under pressure

  • Building independence, not dependence

Mentoring isn’t always comfortable, but it’s always transformational.

3 Practical Coaching Moves to Become a Better Mentor

1. Teach Thinking, Not Just Tasks

Don’t just tell people what to do. Teach them how to think. Walk them through your decision-making process, the questions you ask, and the reasoning behind your actions.
Quick Action: In your next mentoring conversation, pause before offering a solution. Instead, help them outline possible options, weigh tradeoffs, and think it through.

2. Share the Invisible Work

Leadership isn’t just what people see. It’s the pressure, doubt, and complexity behind the curtain. Share that.
Quick Action: The next time you give advice, share one internal struggle you faced behind that decision. Let them see the real work behind the result.

3. Challenge Before You Cheer

Encouragement matters, but transformation comes from respectful challenge.
Quick Action: In every mentoring session, ask at least one stretching question. Something that forces them to rethink, not just validate, their plan.

Mentorship Isn’t Charity, It’s Legacy

When you mentor someone, you’re not doing them a favor. You’re helping build a foundation that will carry them forward faster, smarter, and stronger than they could go alone.

And if you do it well, you’ll find something else along the way:
Mentorship doesn’t just shape the mentee. It sharpens the mentor.

It challenges you to be clearer, wiser, and more intentional in how you lead.
Because in the end, leadership isn’t about control. It’s about contribution.

Across my journey, mentors, both visible and behind the scenes, helped me overcome roadblocks, shorten the learning curve, and grow further than I ever could have on my own. Their belief in me changed my life.

The best leaders know:
We go further when we go together.

The post The 3 Mentorship Moves Every Leader Should Master appeared first on Addicted 2 Success.

Ivanka Trump honors late mom Ivana with rare childhood photos in emotional Mother’s Day tribute

May 11, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: NY Post, THE NEWS

Ivana died after falling down the stairs of her New York City apartment in 2022.

Thunderbolts* Nears $280 Million Box Office as Marvel’s The New Avengers Marketing Rumbles On

May 11, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: ENTERTAINMENT, IGN

Thunderbolts* had a strong second weekend hold at the box office for an MCU movie, and has now reached $272.2 million globally.

The Florence Pugh-fronted action flick added $33.1 million domestically and $34 million internationally to top the box office charts for a second week running. That’s a -44% box office drop from the launch weekend, which is stronger than Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (-52%), Captain America: Brave New World (-54%), and Ant-Man and the Wasp; Quantumania (-54%). Thunderbolts* has so far grossed an estimated $128.5 million domestic and $143.7 million internationally.

Marvel’s Thunderbolts* marketing cranked into a higher gear last week, going as far as to officially change the name of the movie to New Avengers. Marvel even dragged the on-screen dispute between Sam Wilson’s Avengers and this new superhero team into the real world. Clearly, Marvel is hoping that interest in Thunderbolts* continues in the coming months as the studio heads into the crucial launch of Phase 6 kickstarter The Fantastic Four: First Steps in July.

According to Variety, Disney spent $180 million to make Thunderbolts* and another $100 million to market it. So Thunderbolts* needs to show staying power globally to turn a profit theatrically.

Last week, Disney boss Bob Iger bigged up Thunderbolts*, saying it’s “the first and best example” of Marvel’s new commitment to quality over quantity.

Thunderbolts* had topped the domestic box office with a $76 million opening, a start that was seen as solid rather than spectacular. For context, that was ahead of Eternals ($71 million) and Ant-Man and the Wasp ($75 million), which were both considered flops, but below most other MCU movies’ opening hauls.

However, Thunderbolts* is going down well with audiences and critics. IGN’s Thunderbolts* review returned a 7/10. We said: “Thunderbolts* has, like its sort-of-not-really antagonist, both a dark half and a light half. But only one of them is actually pretty great (hint: it’s the one that involves plumbing the depths of the characters’ worst memories).”

Disney will be hoping that positive word of mouth helps Thunderbolts* enjoy a better run in theaters than Captain America: Brave New World, which dropped off dramatically. Indeed, Marvel movies have endured a torrid time in recent years apart from the odd blip, such as the billion dollar Deadpool & Wolverine movie.

Looking further ahead, 2026 will see both Avengers: Doomsday (May 1, 2026) and Spider-Man: Brand New Day (July 31, 2026) release, with Avengers: Secret Wars set for May 7, 2027.

Meanwhile, Sinners is now up to $283.3 million at the global box office, and A Minecraft Movie is on $909.6 million after six weekends.

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Zapped: Electric vehicle sales nosedive as Republicans take buzzsaw to Biden mandate

May 11, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: THE NEWS, WND

(Photo by Joe Kovacs)

S""

(Photo by Joe Kovacs)
(Photo by Joe Kovacs)

U.S. electric vehicle sales posted a rare decline in April, falling by roughly 5% even as the broader auto market grew by double digits, according to new data from Motor Intelligence.

The drop — only the third monthly decline in EV sales since 2021 — was felt across nearly all major brands, according to Motor Intelligence data obtained by The Wall Street Journal.

Tesla, which historically accounts for around half of EV sales in the country, saw its U.S. sales sink nearly 13% last month, the outlet reported. Sales of Rivian’s flagship electric pickup and SUV were slashed in half, prompting the company to lower its 2025 forecast by 5,000 units. Other manufacturers, including Ford, Hyundai and Kia, also posted losses.

“The challenge is consumers are more price-sensitive than they typically have been and are looking for lower-price alternatives,” RJ Scaringe, CEO of Rivian, said in an earnings call Tuesday, according to Investing.com.

The sudden halt to the EV boom throws cold water on years of bullish industry forecasts and government-backed electrification targets. Carmakers had leaned heavily on subsidies, tax credits and promotional discounts to buoy sales — tools they’ve now largely withdrawn, according to the outlet. Meanwhile, price-sensitive consumers appear to be hitting their limit. Rivian’s CEO warned buyers are “looking for lower-price alternatives” as inflation, interest rates and real-word charging frustrations take their toll.

While the Biden administration invested billions to promote EV manufacturing, the pivot under President Donald Trump has seen incentives pared back and foreign manufacturing penalized, particularly vehicles or parts sourced from China.

In contrast, sales of traditional gas-powered vehicles rose 10% in April, the outlet reported. Dealers reported growing inventories of unsold EVs, reflecting slower consumer uptake following years of high demand. Mickey Anderson, who runs the Baxter Auto Group dealership chain in Nebraska, Kansas and Colorado, said past EV demand was artificially inflated by discounts.

“I think the natural demand is probably half that,” he told the Journal.

Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

‘Yellowstone’ star Lainey Wilson ‘completely shocked’ by fiancé’s proposal

May 11, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: Fox News, THE NEWS

Employment Data Confirms Economy Is Slowing

May 11, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: THE NEWS, Zerohedge

Employment Data Confirms Economy Is Slowing

Authored by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

While coming in much stronger than expected, the latest employment data confirmed what we already suspected: the economy is slowing. The reason the employment data is so important is that without employment growth, the economy stalls. It takes, on average, about 200,000 jobs each month to keep up with population growth, which ultimately keeps the economy growing. That is because, as discussed in last week’s #BullBearReport, the consumer comprises about 70% of economic growth. To wit:

“There is currently no evidence that the economy is slipping into a recession. However, if you want to know if an economic decline will evolve into a recession, there is one key factor to consider: consumer spending. Consumer spending comprises nearly 70% of the GDP calculation, and everything else, from business investment to imports and exports, is a function of the consumer’s “demand.” In other words, if the consumer is slowing down or contracting spending, businesses will not “invest” in expansion projects, increasing employment, or buying more products for resale. That relationship is shown in the chart below, which compares PCE to employment and private investment.”

However, most crucially, consumers can not consume without producing something first. Production must come first to generate the income needed for that consumption. The cycle is displayed below.

Here is the most critical point. Not all jobs are equal.

“For a household to consume at an economically sustainable rate, such requires full-time employment. These jobs provide higher wages, benefits, and health insurance to support a family. Part-time jobs do not.”

While the media touts the ‘strong employment reports,’ such is mostly the recovery of jobs lost during the economic shutdown. However, the reality is that the full-time employment rate is falling sharply. Historically, when the rate of change in full-time employment dropped below zero, the economy entered a recession.

Notably, given the surge in immigration into the U.S. over the last few years, the all-important ratio of those employed full-time relative to the population has dropped sharply. As noted, given that full-time employment provides the resources for excess consumption, that ratio should increase for the economy to continue growing strongly. However, full-time employment has decreased since the turn of the century as automation, technology, and offshoring have risen. While President Biden recently touted strong employment growth in his SOTU address, full-time employment as a percentage of the working-age population failed to recover to pre-pandemic levels.

Notably, sharp downturns in full-time employment have been coincident with recessionary onsets.

No Recession, But Slower Growth Coming

The latest employment data put to rest recession concerns, at least for now. Employment growth remains strong enough to support economic growth and quell concerns that CEOs are withdrawing from the job creation process. However, compensation continues to decline as economic demand slows.

As is always the case, as the economy slows down, employers begin to change the most costly aspect of any business – employment. Cutting full-time jobs is the most efficient way to protect earnings and profitability. However, employers tend to hang on to employees as long as possible, as good employees are expensive to train and hard to replace. Eventually, if the demand falls too much, full-time employees are sacrificed to protect profits. As such, a reasonably predictable cycle continues until exhaustion is reached.

While we are seeing declines in full-time employment as the economy slows, we are now also seeing cuts in temporary help, which, as shown, is consistent with slowing growth. The reason is that cutting temporary employment is the first step by business owners to reduce employment costs while hanging on to full-time, and mostly crucial, employees. However, as noted above, once temporary workers are exhausted, the next step will ultimately be full-time employees.

The latest employment data did not provide much support for the “recession” crowd in 2025. As such, Wall Street analysts are quickly reversing their recession calls for this year, and are becoming more focused on slowing economic growth. However, that assessment can certainly change promptly if personal consumption expenditures take a turn for the worse. As noted above, nearly 70% of economic growth is derived from consumption; therefore, if consumption declines, employment falls, reducing consumption and further employment declines. When it accelerates, that cycle is the foundation for recession outcomes.

Indicators We Are Watching

As noted, while the employment data is weak, there are certainly indicators we are watching closely to confirm whether “job loss” is accelerating. First, we pay attention to the Conference Board’s measure of CEO confidence. Since the October 2022 lows, CEO confidence has continued to improve, and as of Q1, it rose to 60 from 51 in Q4 of 2024. That confidence increased full-time employment as the outlook for economic growth was improving heading into 2025. However, this is a lagging indicator, and the results of the Q1 survey were taken in February before the market decline and tariff announcements. Later this month, we will get an update to see if sentiment has changed, which could give us clues about future employment reports.

The second indicator we are watching is the NFIB small business confidence index. Specically,.it is their “plans” to increase employment versus what they do. Notably, employment by small businesses, roughly 50% of the total employment in the U.S., has remained stagnant since the pandemic. However, small business owners were very optimistic about hiring post-pandemic, expecting sharp improvements in sales. However, that optimism is fading quickly.

The reason is that, as discussed at the opening of this discussion, employment is a function of the demand for goods and services that businesses supply. As shown, expectations for sales surged following President Trump’s election, but given that actual sales have failed to materialize, that optimism is fading rather quickly. Expectations for business owners are one thing, but without actual increases in sales, which drive revenue, there is little reason to increase full-time employment, which is why it has remained stuck at lower levels since 2020.

Conclusion

Given the importance of consumption in the economy and that employment (production) must come first in the cycle, attention to employment data, particularly full-time employment, is crucial to determining economic risk. The risk of a recession remains very low; however, that can change if something causes consumption to contract quickly. Aside from an unexpected, exogenous impact, investors should expect economic growth to continue to slowly weaken to a longer-term trend slightly less than 2% annually. Unfortunately, while not recessionary, that growth rate will make it hard for corporate profitability to remain at record levels.

Eventually, a valuation adjustment in the financial markets will reflect the reality of a slow-growth economy. However, that isn’t today. However, the risk of a decade of low returns as markets normalize for a slow-growth economy is steadily increasing.

Just something to consider.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 05/11/2025 – 16:35

Oh, So NOW Democrats Are Worried About Arbitrarily Arresting People? That’s ADORABLE, Senator Murphy

May 11, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: THE NEWS, Twitchy

Theranos felon Elizabeth Holmes advising baby-daddy on new blood-testing startup from behind bars: report

May 11, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: NY Post, THE NEWS

Billy Evans, with whom Holmes has two children, has now raised “millions of dollars” for a new startup that sounds eerily similar to what Theranos was involved in, according to reports.

The unique first purchase Travis Hunter made after being drafted by Jaguars

May 11, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: NY Post, THE NEWS

Travis Hunter’s first NFL purchase is not one many would expect.

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 42
  • Page 43
  • Page 44
  • Page 45
  • Page 46
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 5528
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Latest Posts

  • Mercury’s CEO formalizes bets on early-stage founders with a $26M fund
  • Kurdish Militant Group PKK Disbands After 40-Year Conflict With Turkey
  • How Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ gray hair could influence the jury in his sex-trafficking trial
  • Trump takes off for ‘historic’ Mideast trip after string of foreign policy successes
  • ‘In the name of diversity’: Law firms sanctioned by Trump accused of illegally discriminating against whites
  • Dem’s immigration reform plan adds Border Patrol agents, offers select migrants pathway to citizenship
  • Trump rips ABC reporter for asking about accepting jet from Qatar, says she should be ’embarrassed’
  • Mexico Sues Google Over ‘Gulf of America’ Label As Sheinbaum Pushes Back On Trump Renaming Order
  • ‘She’s Done NOTHING!’: WATCHING AOC’s Constituents WALLOP Her for Not Being Around Is a BEAUTIFUL Thing
  • How Will Ospreay, ‘Hangman’ Adam Page made their difficult AEW task look easy
  • Letitia James’ pro-consumer push could spark ‘legal shakedowns’ and boost greedy lawyers, businesses say
  • Leemon Baird on Hedera’s Technical Gambit and AI’s Future
  • Fidelity users report technical issues trying to check their accounts after U.S.-China trade deal sends stocks surging
  • WATCH: Newark Airport update from Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy
  • 7 high-tech fishing gadgets for the modern angler
  • Republicans Push $1.3 Billion Bill To Refill The Strategic Petroleum Reserve
  • NJ politicians who stormed ICE center wanted ‘15 minutes of fame,’ DHS says, as more charges could be coming
  • The best Walmart deals this week, from Dyson vacuums to Crocs
  • Watch Live: Donald Trump and RFK Jr. Hold Press Conference
  • RFK Jr. Dunks on AOC, Bernie Sanders: Trump Taking on Big Pharma Proves He Stands Up to Oligarchs

🚢 Unlock Exclusive Cruise Deals & Sail Away! 🚢

🛩️ Fly Smarter with OGGHY Jet Set
🎟️ Hot Tickets Now
🌴 Explore Tours & Experiences
© 2025 William Liles (dba OGGHYmedia). All rights reserved.