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Hereās what you need to know
Ford avoided an autoworkers strike in Canada. The company struck a tentative deal with the union Unifor after a 24-hour extension on talks, even as strikes in the US continueāand could expand.
Disney earmarked $60 billion to spend on theme parks over the next decade. The entertainment giant is almost doubling its investment in one of its most lucrative business divisions.
Amazon is on a hiring spree for the upcoming holiday season. The retail behemoth is onboarding 250,000 logistics employees, which is 100,000 more than last year.
The DOJ is investigating Elon Muskās Tesla perks dating back to 2017. The criminal probe, which is already examining his purchase of a secret glass house, has a longer timeframe than was previously known, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Can TikTok conquer the American shopper?
Last week, TikTok desperately wanted Quartz reporter Scott Nover to buy a hairbrush.
- One influencer hit him repeatedly with the āviral TikTok brushā as part of a paid campaign
- Several smaller influencers hawked the brush as part of an affiliate marketing program
- It was everywhereāāI mean everywhereāāon the TikTok Shop, and weirdly, at different price points
āThe prices were weird, but something else was much weirder. Nothing in the store seemed remotely related to my likes or interests, despite the fact that Iāve probably spent thousands of hours scrolling since I downloaded TikTok in 2019. (What app knows more about what I like than TikTok?)ā observed Scott.
TikTok, like everything else, has to make a living, and it makes sense that shopping is its latest tack. But why is it so bizarre? Scottāwho has no need of a hairbrush, by the wayāwill take you on his long, strange trip.
How to look at the carbon footprint of buildings
At only 6%, buildings donāt make up a huge share of global emissions. But take into account more electricity useāthanks to increased demandāand the materials used to make the structure in the first place, and that buildingās carbon footprint triples.
There are ways to shrink emissions back down to the numbers we thought we were working with already, but theyāre not easy. Clarisa Diaz has the story.
Does X need Google?
In a word, yes! Even before Elon Musk took the reins, Twitter was never a huge hit with advertisers. Now, a name change, rollback of site rules, prioritized engagement of site users, and Muskās edgy persona have made advertisers steer clear.
Enter third-party vendors, who auction off ad space on the platform and bring you those programmatic ads youāve been seeing on X since May. Last week, Google confirmed itās going to sell ad space on X as well. It all implies that X is still struggling to answer the advertising questionāand quickly.
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Surprising discoveries
South Koreaās capital has a very big, very mysterious tunnel underneath it. Feel like doing a little Seoul searching?
Crayola is getting into the flower business. The crayon company thought it was time to diversify into another thing that involves colors and strong smells.
Does it count as birdwatching if youāre watching through a digital camera from really, really far away? Bird Buddy says yes.
The US Senate is now operating sans dress code. Weāre kind of excited to tune into the next vote, but possibly from a digital Bird Buddy camera from really, really far away.
Public TV painter Bob Rossās first on-air painting is up for auction. āA Walk in the Woodsā would make a nice memorandum on your wall, if youāve got happy little millions to throw down.
Our best wishes for a productive day. Send any news, comments, bird buddies, and Senate hoodies to talk@qz.com. Reader support makes Quartz available to allābecome a member. Todayās Daily Brief was brought to you by Morgan Haefner, Susan Howson, Julia Malleck, and special thanks to Shivank Taksali.