Morning Brew Daily - Warner Bros. Discovery Is Up for Sale & Beyond Meat Meme Stock Moment?

Episode Date: October 22, 2025

Episode 697: Neal and Toby discuss Warner Bros. Discovery opening itself up for sale after getting a lot of interest. Then, leaked documents show Amazon is planning on going all-in on robotics to repl...ace a chunk of their human workforce. Also, Beyond Meat shares skyrocket which has Wall Street wondering if this is another GameStop moment. Meanwhile, the YKK zipper is getting a revamp after over 100 years of consistency and reliability. Finally, OpenAI launches its own web browser. Learn more at disneycampaignmanager.com Get your MBD live show tickets here! https://www.tinyurl.com/MBD-HOLIDAY  Subscribe to Morning Brew Daily for more of the news you need to start your day. Share the show with a friend, and leave us a review on your favorite podcast app. Listen to Morning Brew Daily Here:⁠ ⁠⁠https://www.swap.fm/l/mbd-note⁠⁠⁠  Watch Morning Brew Daily Here:⁠ ⁠⁠https://www.youtube.com/@MorningBrewDailyShow⁠ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Many employees can't afford a hefty medical bill that pops up out of the blue, but it happens. And employees who are financially stressed are, understandably, more likely to be distracted at work, costing their employers greatly in lost productivity. Luckily, AFLAC plans help with out-of-pocket expenses not covered by health insurance and can be offered at no direct cost to businesses. Learn more at aflac.com slash morningbruddaily. That's aflack.com slash morning brewdaily. Good morning for your daily show. I'm Neil Fryman.
Starting point is 00:00:33 And I'm Toby Howell. Today, a tool that hasn't been changed for over a century is finally getting an upgrade. Ben, meme stock lovers have acquired a taste for plant-based burgers, setting shares of Beyond Meat Soaring. It's Wednesday, October 22nd. Let's ride. Here's a new use case for AI. Ask it to help you pick lottery numbers.
Starting point is 00:00:57 Hey, it worked for one woman. Tammy Carvey of Michigan took home a 100,000. dollar prize in last month's powerball jackpot after she asked chat ch pt to generate lottery numbers for her which she played and won the michigan lottery hyped up the moment in a post on x writing tammy carvey turned artificial intelligence into a real life win when she won a 100 000 powerball prize with a set of numbers generated by chat ch p t exclamation mark however they clarified the results of all lottery drawings are random and cannot be predicted by utilizing artificial intelligence or other number generating tools to Toby, I hate to break it to everyone, but computers have been able to generate random numbers for decades. So I don't think this is specific to chat GPT. Still, congrats to Tammy. You crafted a strategy and executed it. It was funny this morning.
Starting point is 00:01:45 What did you do? Obviously, you said, hey, Chad, Jimmy, give me the winning lottery numbers. And it actually won't do that when you frame it that way. But then I came in a little work around, a little smarter approach to it and said, just give me five random numbers and then two extra for the powerball. And I got them here. If anyone wants to hear them right now, 714-63-28-91, and then 47 and 9 are your Powerball numbers right there. So if that hits, you got to loop us in.
Starting point is 00:02:10 You got to bring us into the pot here. Maybe, Lou, send a little money chat CBT's way as well. Again, you don't need chat CBD to generate. No, no, you need it. The computers are talking to each other, okay? And now a word from our sponsor, Disney campaign manager. Disney is the kind of brand that needs no introduction. But we'll give it one anyway.
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Starting point is 00:03:54 Fuel restrictions apply. Seasite for details. Warner Brothers Discovery, the entertainment behemoth, home to Batman, Ron Weasley, and Anderson Cooper is putting itself up for sale. The company announced yesterday that it was considering a variety of deals, either offloading certain assets or taking bids on the kit and caboodle. Earlier this year, it said it was planning to split its streaming and studio business from its cable networks, and it could still pursue that approach if no attractive buyer is found. But executives bragged, they were kind of hot stuff, and suitors were blowing up its phone to take it out for a drink. And his statement, Warner Bros. Discovery said, while we aren't going
Starting point is 00:04:30 to get into the specifics of who as expressed interest, it is safe to assume it is multiple parties. And it's not hard to see why Wonder Bros. Discovery is an alluring target. It owns HBO Max, a growing streaming service with loaded IP, a film studio featuring Superman, Batman, and Harry Potter, and cable networks like CNN, TNT and HGTV, which, while in decline, are still highly profitable. The announcement is also a signal that it's not enticed by existing. offers, most notably by Paramount, which has reportedly sent in two takeover bids already, both of them rejected by the board. Now it wants to play the field to spark a bidding war, and all the big players are circling. Comcast, Netflix, Amazon, Apple, and yes, Paramount
Starting point is 00:05:10 is also in play. Toby, if Warner Bros. does get scooped up, it would help inspire become one of the most competitive entertainment companies around and certainly challenge Disney or Netflix in terms of scale. Yeah, Word Bros. kind of thinks it's the bell of the ball right now. They think, hey, we got all this IP. Everybody wants it. David's Last Love is the CEO and he wants to split the two, you know, shave off the legacy TV division from, you know, more attractive IP and streaming assets. Paramount is coming in saying we actually want the whole thing because remember David Ellison is actually pretty bullish on news media still. Remember, he brought the free press, brought in Barry Weiss to run CBS. He wants to get CNN and CBS under the same umbrella here, which is maybe why
Starting point is 00:05:50 Orrin Bros keeps kind of shying away from that bit and just seeing if anyone else out of. there. Any tech giants want to come in and submit your grid as well. But what might undermine that approach is that a lot of them are saying, we're actually good. Apple doesn't necessarily, they've said on a podcast, some of their streaming leaders that said, we don't necessarily want to go out and buy Apple's brand is kind of, you know, this premium brand. They don't need to buy their own IP. They want to make their own. Same thing with Netflix. They're more of a build and not buy mentality at that company. So maybe even putting yourself up for sale and saying, hey, we got so many offers It's not actually looking like the case because Paramount's the one that keeps banging on the door, banging on the door because it's clearly the most motivated buyer here.
Starting point is 00:06:32 And, you know, these huge mega mergers in media have a pretty awful track record. And for that, you just have to go to the merger that created Warner Brothers Discovery. Back in 2022, Warner Media and Discovery merged. And they created this media behemoth that was exposed to take on Disney, Netflix, Comcast, etc. But this company took on $40 billion in debt. And here we are three years later talking about this company being broken up or sold after that merger in 2022. So these mega mergers have historically not exactly worked out. One that maybe has worked out for both companies is go back to Disney and 21st century Fox's deal.
Starting point is 00:07:12 So Disney paid $70 billion for a bunch of Fox assets. They brought over the Simpsons. They brought over the movie studio. But they also left Fox News. news and a few other cable news assets with Fox. So maybe that's a template for a particular deal that Warner Brothers Discovery might entertain from any of these companies that are interested. Meanwhile, we also got Netflix earnings yesterday, speaking of one of the potential suitors.
Starting point is 00:07:38 And they had a pretty good quarter if you actually look at the fact that they had membership growth. They had record ad sales again. They're saying that AI tailwinds are making their content recommendations even better. They actually did miss revenue expectations, even though it was up 17% year over year, which led to a 6% decline in the stock after they reported earnings. But some of the more fun parts of the earnings were just some of the kind of IP announcements that they did. They are doubling, tripling, quadrupling down on K-pop Demon Hunters. They're partnering with Mattel and Hasbro to roll out a line of K-pop Demon Hunter's toys, which, you know what?
Starting point is 00:08:15 I might twist my arm here. I've seen the movie a couple times at this point. So doubling down on their most popular movie of all time. And then obviously the biggest news of the day is that they're acquiring the global rights to Catan, sellers of Catan, which is a board game that is very near and dear to my heart to develop a sort of unscripted TV live action, I don't know, animation spin-off of that IP. So a couple of fun IP announcements, even though necessarily the top-level earnings weren't what investors wanted to see.
Starting point is 00:08:46 moving on amazon has spent the last 20 years or so defining the modern warehouse job hiring millions of workers to man its miles of fluorescent lit fulfillment centers all to help get you your toilet paper in less than 24 hours now it's sort of preparing to unmake all that it's created a cache of leaked internal documents obtained by the new york times reveals amazon's plan to replace more than half a million u.s jobs with robots over the next decade the audacious goal calls on amazon to doubled the number of products it sells by 2033 without hiring a single additional warehouse worker. That means that the company will forego onboarding 160,000 humans in the U.S. between 2025 and 27, while the robotics team ultimately aimed to automate 75% of Amazon's operations. As one of the largest employers in America, it expects backlash from this automation push, and the leaked docs show that leadership is well aware of the incoming criticism. executives outlined how external communication should avoid using terms like AI or robots and should instead use phrases like advanced technology and co-bots as in collaborative robots to soften the blow.
Starting point is 00:09:58 Though the company denies any coordinated PR campaign, the docs also reveal a concerted effort to boost community engagement through toy drives and local events to offset some of the heat they may take in affected regions. Neil, I wouldn't exactly call it a secret that Amazon is looking to automate much of its fulfillment workforce. But this New York Times piece shows both the scale of the effort and how the company plans to wriggle out of some of the scrutiny that comes along with it. Yeah, totally. This is not a secret. I mean, back in 2012, Amazon really juiced up its robotic push and its warehouse warehouses. It paid $775 million to buy the robotics maker Kiva. And this was a big pet project of Jeff Bezos when he was CEO. And now it is the same for Andy Jassy because they are in a cost-cutting
Starting point is 00:10:44 profit boosting push. Go back to 2020 and talk about Amazon as one of the largest employers in the country. This is really when it kicked into gear. So 2020 was the pandemic. Everyone was buying stuff on Amazon in 10 months in 2020. Amazon hired 427,000 employees. That amounts to an average of 1,400 new workers a day. So it brought on an astonishing amount of workers.
Starting point is 00:11:10 This is the biggest hiring spree in American corporate history. Now we're in 2025 e-commerce growth has slowed down. Andy Jassy is under pressure by the board to boost margins and cut costs. What way are they going to do that by developing robotics and cutting down on the new amount of humans they are hiring? And it's really, you know, astonishing and a milestone moment, Daron Osamoglu, who won the Nobel Prize in economics last year, told the New York Times, kind of distilled what this means. It means one of the biggest employers in the United States will become a net job destroyer. not a net job creator, and that filters down to everyone else because, as you mentioned, Walmart really sets the tone in terms of hiring strategies for warehouse, e-commerce, retail across the board.
Starting point is 00:11:54 You've already said, you said Walmart sets the tone, but Amazon and Walmart do kind of set the tone here because, yeah, Amazon still has 1.2 million workers. That's up three times, three X cents 2018. And you're right. This is in pursuit of savings. They think that they can save about 30 cents per package, which again, doesn't sound like much until you realize that equates to $12.6 billion saved over the next two years just by removing some of the humans from the loop. Also, Amazon is very much a robotics company already. They have a million robots in action throughout the world right now. This is not some pipe dream of automation. They are automating big parts of their warehouses already. They just want to double, triple and
Starting point is 00:12:38 quadrupled down on this because the cost savings are there if they can pull this off. And you are right. It does ripple through the entire workforce because as Amazon goes, others will follow. If FedEx sees how they can more effectively manage their warehouses, of course they're going to do it to save costs as well. And Amazon did respond to this. We should mention. They said the documents viewed by the times were incomplete did not represent the company's overall hiring strategy. They say they have a history of using savings from automation to create new jobs. And I should mention that the people who won the Nobel Prize in Economics this year talked
Starting point is 00:13:13 about that, creative destruction. They also said that we're hiring 250,000 people for the upcoming holiday season, which, as we talked about last week, is half of what everyone across the United States is hiring. So they mentioned those points. But I think there's no question, and they're not going to deny it, that they are trying to automate their warehouses heavily, and that will lead to a lot less humans being hired there. Beyond Meat is finally living up to its namesake with its stock moaning to infinity and beyond over the last three trading sessions. Did people finally acquire a taste for burgers made from beet juice and methyl cellulose?
Starting point is 00:13:47 No. The stock run-up has been a nothing but a good old-fashioned short-squeeze straight from the meme stock playbook. On Friday, things started off innocuously enough with shares jumping 24% to close the week. Then Monday came along and brought with it a 127% gain, only to be topped by the 146% run up yesterday. Its largest one-day gain ever. On Tuesday morning, it was the fourth most traded stock in the U.S., and today it's already up 90% pre-market. While retail traders piling in on the fund likely can't tell you what a Beyond Burger is actually made of, it's easy to see the appeal of the company to a specific audience. It's got a low nominal share price, catnip for retail investors who love stocks who look quote-unquote cheap. It also has elevated short interest with
Starting point is 00:14:33 sets up the potential for a squeeze where bearish traders have to buy shares and cover their positions, adding fuel to the fire. The stock even has its own roaring kitty-esque Messiah figure on Reddit, who goes by Happy Bear stock, a man named Dimitri Semeneckin, who has been evangelizing the company on Wall Street bets. You know, there is a tiny speck of real news here. Beyond Meat is expanding into 2,000 more Walmart stores nationwide, but this move clearly had a little to do with fundamentals. It's been a while since we had a good old fact. in mean stock pop like this. You mentioned low nominal share price. This company was literally a penny stock as recently as last week, trading under a dollar. Now after this huge three-day surge, it's up to a whopping $3.62.
Starting point is 00:15:18 Now, Beyond Meat has always had a little meme stock DNA in it. Because I remember its IPO in 2019, and its stock price searched 163% on the first day of trading. It had a market cap of over $3.7 billion. No one knew what a meme stock was back then. I think the enthusiasm was genuinely around the plant-based meat sector. This was a growing and very exciting time for that. It's not anymore. And now in the last five years, since that first day pop, Beyond Meat has been one of the worst performers in the entire stock market. Think of all the stocks in the stock market. This is one of the worst. I mean, it's still down 99% after these three-day surges. Like, it is a company that, that is down bad. But this guy, who's a real estate developer in Dubai, has put on his roaring kitty hat and said, well, I'm seeing things that other investors are not. There was a big move last week that Beyond made related to a debt deal. And a lot of investors viewed that negatively. And the stock crashed 67% last week alone. And he said people are missing the bigger picture here.
Starting point is 00:16:27 He posted a YouTube video, explained why he bought 4% of Beyond Meat shares. And it seems like this has become a rallying cry for a bunch of retail traders. And then another thing that happened, too, is that it was added to that roundhill meme ETF that we described a few weeks ago, which was the second reincarnation of the meme stock ETF. The first one was basically the GameStop AMC era, this one that you want to rebalance more quickly week-to-week basis to find names like Beyond Meat that are mooning. And so it almost immediately validated the premise of this meme stock ETF that it got
Starting point is 00:17:00 on Beyond Meat. It allowed owners of the ETF to participate in this large share run-up, as you like to call it. And so it really was a meta moment where the meme ETF was fueling a meme rally in a particular stock. So that's an interesting, self-fulfilling cycle that we might see happen with more meme stocks as, you know, the market continues to have a little bit of frothiness in it. Final note on this is if you are in a room with some amount of people today, there is a likelihood that they were trading beyond meat stock yesterday.
Starting point is 00:17:32 because trading volume in the afternoon on Beyond Meat shares had topped 700 million compared to an average of less than 20 million. And Sherwood News kind of did some calculations. They found that Beyond Meat has done plant-based meat sales of 487 million pounds over its entire career as a publicly traded company. And so that means on Monday, more than twice as many shares were traded as pounds sold from Q1, 2018, through Q2 2025. That's what you want. More shares training hands than actual volume of the thing that you sell going out into the world. That means the fundamentals are in the right place. All right, we're going to take a quick break and come back and talk about that invention Neil T's at the beginning of the show. Study and play. Come together on a Windows 11 PC. And for a limited time, college students get the best of both worlds.
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Starting point is 00:19:12 Now through May 6th. Exclusion supplies to homedipo.com slash price match for details. New zipper just dropped. YKK, the Japanese company that supplies half the world's zippers, is rolling out an updated zipper in the biggest change to zippers in more than a century, according to Wired. How can you possibly improve upon the OG zipper? It's not simple because as it's constructed,
Starting point is 00:19:36 the zipper is nearly a perfect tool left largely unchanged since the 1910s. It's like trying to reformulate my dad's Motsabal soup recipe. Unthinkable. But YKK said challenge accepted and went into the garage and came out with a new zipper style it thinks works better in the context of modern 21st century apparel. The airy string zipper, as it's known, removes the fabric tape that keeps the zipper's teeth on your clothes
Starting point is 00:20:00 creating a new fastening system that Wired says sinks into the garment instead of sitting on top of it. This may not seem like that big of an update, but YKK believes it's mission critical in our new fashion environment, which prioritizes lighter and more flexible apparel that intends to move naturally flush against the body. And existing zippers, which are more clunky and stiff, feel inconsistent with a more streamlined approach to clothing. So when will you see this new zipper on your fleece? Maybe not for a bit unless you're super outdoorsy. YKK debuted the technology at a trade show in 2022 and is working with mostly technical sportswear companies like North Face on test runs. For the airy string zipper to gain real traction,
Starting point is 00:20:39 factories will need to buy specialized sewing equipment for mass production. But given YKK's unbeatable track record as the zipper king, they'll probably make the investment. I mean, after we read this article yesterday, we went up to everyone in the office and looked at their zippers because we were trying to figure out, one, what the issue is with having this additional fabric tape and we actually went to our co-worker who does a lot of knitting and she's like it mainly is just it's a little bulkier it's a little less streamlined when you have additional pieces of fabric there and if you can get rid of those it does create a whole new world in terms of zippers if one company can pull this off it is y kkkk they sell zippers they did six billion dollars in
Starting point is 00:21:20 revenue in 2023 they operate in 70 country they have 180 different trademarks this is the zipper king you like to say it. But the thing that they did wisely as they were kind of coming up through the ranks is they made the machines that you need to attach zippers. So they won all of Levi's business back in the day by selling them these specialty machines. It literally reminds me of ASML who, you know, manufactures these silicon chips. They are doing the same thing but in the zipper industry because they just have the specialized machinery you need to attach these things to close around the world. And that's why it's become such a big company. Yeah, if you go down the clothing forums on Reddit, actually, and they talk about zippers and what zippers work best for
Starting point is 00:22:02 backpacks. This company seems like the one quasi-monopoly that people actually appreciate, and they say, you need to get one with a YKK zipper because these are just the best quality. So that's why they supply half the world's zippers. And I just want to mention, they're not just on clothing, but they go on literally everything. Purses, luggage, sleeping bags, tents, a bunch of other accessories. and they also have a great relationship with the medical equipment community. So they have fasteners on CPAP machines. They're on electrocardiography machines. And so they are just absolutely everywhere in the clothing industry and beyond.
Starting point is 00:22:36 What's very funny, too, is that they allocate 5% of their total operating budget towards R&D annually. And you're like, again, what could they possibly be researched in developing? But there's a lot of use cases for fastening. And this is the one that they're most excited about. So I kind of take their word for it. I do want to see it in action. I want to see this seamless attachment in action because I don't necessarily know how you sew directly
Starting point is 00:23:02 into the teeth of the zipper. Again, I need maybe a garment expert. I know. I need a garment expert to, you know, break it down for me. Like, I'm smarter than a fifth grader. But I am excited to, it makes me want to go into a North Face and see exactly, is it better, does it feel lighter, does it feel more streamlined?
Starting point is 00:23:18 Because clearly why KK is excited about it. Let's sprint to the finish with some final headlines. OpenAI wants to control how you browse the internet, releasing a web browser called Atlas. Atlas presents another challenge to Google, which owns the dominant global browser in Chrome with 3 billion users worldwide. Investors were a bit anxious about the threat, sending Google shares down more than 2% on the day. When you use OpenAI's browser, ChatGBTBT will be your guide to the web. In fact, there's no traditional address bar. Instead, you just type the address you want to go to into chat.
Starting point is 00:23:50 Chat GPT's chat window. Analyst say the move is intended to increase distribution for chat GPT and to help it collect user data to build future products. It could also be a way to introduce AI agents to more people, which are AI systems that do tasks for you autonomously, like book flights or shop for clothes. CEO Sam Altman says he believes the chat experience rather than the URL bar will be the way people use the internet going forward. Tabs are great, but we haven't seen a whole lot of innovation since then, he said.
Starting point is 00:24:18 Tabs are great, Toby. Does this improve upon them? I did my homework and downloaded Atlas and I actually made it my primary browser to just really diving the experience. And I could not have had a worse experience. One, the switching costs whenever you adopt a new browser is very high because, you know, Chrome has all my passwords in it. It's logged into all the news sites. And as I was doing, you know, my research for the show, I kept, I would open Wall Street Journal not signed in there. I would have to re-sign into all these things. So just like the very nuts and bolts of switching browsers is annoying. But then also ditching the search bar, I'm not a fan of because I would, you know, I was looking up Netflix earnings.
Starting point is 00:24:57 And it said what it did was give me, you know, the chat CBD rundown of Netflix. But I wanted multiple news articles that I could read about it. And instead it was, you know, feeding me to this other thing. I did have a go and do something for me, you know, adopt the, try out the agent side of things. And what I did is say, please respond to my mom's email, with this response. And that was Erie because I saw it. It doesn't know my mom's email.
Starting point is 00:25:22 It contextually figured it out based off of my previous exchanges with her. I could see it moving my clicker around the screen, clicking on the email thread, drafting the email, and then before it sends it, it actually stops. So that did feel like I was glimpsing the future. Probably this is not the most exciting thing that you could have, you know, an AI agent do for you. But that was interesting.
Starting point is 00:25:42 It also took about three times as long as me just go doing it myself. So overall, I actually made it not my primary browser after experiencing it because it just wasn't very well suited to my specific workflow. Maybe, you know, a writer is not the person that this is necessarily for. Maybe it's for someone who is in the coding world or something like that. But for me, it didn't actually suit my needs very well. Great review. All right. If flying gives you the jitters, maybe skip ahead to the next story.
Starting point is 00:26:11 Last Thursday, a United Airlines flight from Denver to Los Angeles was struck by, something which cracked a large window at the front of the aircraft. Pictures showed the pilot's arm being cut and a little bloody, probably from shards of glass, but the plane made a safe landing in Salt Lake City where it was diverted. Now, what hit the windshield while this plane was flying at 36,000 feet in the air? Aviation Twitter was a flutter after the flight's captain claimed it was space debris, which would be the first time a human-made space object struck a plane, but a new more plausible theory emerged this week, a weather balloon.
Starting point is 00:26:47 The co-founder of Weather Prediction Company, Windborne Systems, said he thinks it was one of his firm's weather research balloons that crack the plane's windshield and is working with investigators to figure out how this happened. This was an exciting time on aviation Twitter for just a little bit because there was the space debris hypothesis, but then people are saying there's no scorch marks, like this doesn't happen. It's a one in a trillion chance. Then the next prevailing theory was hail.
Starting point is 00:27:13 was from someone that we trust. We're like, oh, it's definitely hail. But then a YouTuber kind of got on the case, YouTuber and pilot. He cross-referenced the flight path of the flight with the live tracking data from windborne balloon and found that it was a perfect match. So again, this is not something that happens ever, really.
Starting point is 00:27:31 It really was a one in a million chance. These balloons are not necessarily very big either. Each weighs about 2.6 pounds. So it's not a massive thing in the air, but when you're going that fast, obviously it can lead to some complications. a fun little aviation mystery for a while there before it was solved by, you know, a balloon company coming clean. Finally, Travis Kelsey has been flagged a total of 67 times over his storied NFL career.
Starting point is 00:27:56 I looked it up. But he wants to add six more of them to his repertoire. Taylor Swift's groom to be is teaming up with an activist investor to take a stake in six flags entertainment to help reshape the future of the struggling theme park operator. The group that includes Jana Partners, Kelsey and some, consumer and tech execs revealed yesterday it had built up a stake of roughly 9% in the company, hoping to explore ways to, quote, enhance shareholder value and improve the guest experience. And to be clear, six flags could use help with both.
Starting point is 00:28:26 The stock is down about 48% this year following bad weather, increased competition, and a sluggest rebound from the pandemic. How did the market react to the tight end joining their formation? The stock jumped 15% yesterday following the news. Now, you've got to respect this move from Kelsey. He grew up 65 miles away from Cedar Point Park, which is now under the Six Flags umbrella, and said in an Instagram post that he's a, quote, theme park lover, which checks out. Now he gets to ride the investment roller coaster, too.
Starting point is 00:28:56 As a roller coaster tycoon myself, I know exactly how to fix six flags. You got to place one entertainer near the entrance. You got to place the food and drink stalls as far away from possible from the roller coaster so you don't get puke all over your park. You have to put benches near the coasters, too, so people can take a beat, get hands. Andy men to patrol about five or six patrol tiles. I'm sure Travis Kelsey knows all of this. So he's going to take it.
Starting point is 00:29:19 You really played really closer in time, too. So they're going to need to go to the board with all of these changes. Six Flags is in a bad place. Stock is down more than 50% year to date. But I also want to mention that Jana Partners has a history of bringing in celebrities and other activist investors of bringing in celebrities to their activist campaigns in order to drum up more awareness around them. Jana has to have Dwayne Wade and C.C. Sabathia as special advisors on a campaign for pet food
Starting point is 00:29:46 maker, Fresh Pet, and then probably the most famous example of this is that Shaquille O'Neal O'Neal joined the board of Papa Johns after he teamed up with the activist, investor, Starboard Value, to push for changes over there. And that is all the time we have. Thanks so much for starting your morning with us and have a wonderful Wednesday. As Bon Jovi said, we are halfway there. If you have any feedback on today's episode, send a note to Morning Brew Daily at MorningBrew.com. Let's roll the credits. Emily Milliron is our executive producer. Raymond Lute is our producer. Our associate producers are Olivia Graham and Olivia Lake. Hair and makeup, likes to stock. Devin Emery is our president and our show is the production of Morning Brew.
Starting point is 00:30:24 Great. So, Daniel, let's run it back tomorrow. Yamava Resort and Casino at San Manuel is California's number one entertainment destination for today's superstars. Catch the Jonas Brothers return to the Yamava Theater stage on April 30th, the powerful vocals of Demi Lovato on May 17th. and the signature Southern Country Rock of Eric Church on July 19th. Tickets on sale now at Yamava Theater.com, only at Yamava Resort and Casino, celebrating its 40th anniversary. U.N. must be 21 to enter.

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