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EMPIRE Publishing appoints Vinny Kumar as President as company expands operations into Africa

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Vinny Kumar has been promoted to President of EMPIRE Publishing, expanding his oversight to all global deals.

EMPIRE Publishing is a division of independent music company EMPIRE, founded in 2010 by Ghazi. 

Kumar’s promotion arrives alongside the news of EMPIRE Publishing’s expansion into Africa, with Munyaradzi Chanetsa appointed to run the African division as Managing Director.

Kumar will lead the global publishing team from the company’s HQ in San Francisco.

According to EMPIRE, under Kumar’s leadership, its publishing division has “emerged as one of the leading independent music publishers, representing multiple Grammy and Latin Grammy-nominated songwriters earning recognition across the ASCAP Pop, Country, and Rhythm & Soul Awards, BMI R&B/Hip-Hop, Country, and Gospel Awards, and numerous NMPA Gold & Platinum certifications”.

EMPIRE Publishing reached the Top 10 of Billboard‘s Hot 100 Publisher Rankings for the first time in 2024. The company’s publishing roster includes artists working in Afrobeats, R&B, country, rock, electronic, K-pop and Latin music. Signed talent includes Billy Ray Cyrus, Travis Greene, KEM, Juhn, Fireboy DML, Yung Lan, and a joint venture with Hit-Boy.

“I’m honored to lead this next chapter as we continue building for our writers, producers, and partners worldwide.”

Vinny Kumar, EMPIRE Publishing

Commenting on the promotion, Kumar said: “Over the past few years, EMPIRE Publishing has evolved into one of the most dynamic independent publishers in the world, expanding its global footprint, delivering chart-topping success, and fostering a team that truly embodies our culture.

“I’m honored to lead this next chapter as we continue building for our writers, producers, and partners worldwide.”

EMPIRE Founder & CEO Ghazi added: “Vinny has been instrumental in building EMPIRE Publishing into a global force and there is no better person to lead the team.

“We met nearly two decades ago and he’s been part of the foundation of what this company stands for. He will continue to lead with integrity and creativity, and his passion for music and strategic vision have helped elevate every facet of our publishing business”.

“Vinny has been instrumental in building EMPIRE Publishing into a global force and there is no better person to lead the team.” EMPIRE was founded by Ghazi in 2010.”

Ghazi, EMPIRE

EMPIRE Publishing’s Africa expansion represents EMPIRE’s continued push into the market.

EMPIRE Africa launched in February 2022 to support the company’s roster of artists in Nigeria, Ghana, South Africa and the Ivory Coast.

Since the Africa launch, EMPIRE has expanded to other international markets, including in Asia, where it signed Korean superstar G-Dragon, and the Nordic region.

Elsewhere at EMPIRE, in September, the company partnered with Shaboozey to establish an independent record label called American Dogwood.

In April, EMPIRE teamed up with Cambodian music company Baramey Production to break Cambodian artists globally. In February, the company made a strategic investment in artist marketing platform un:hurd.

Music Business Worldwide

Lu Joseph Commits to Central Connecticut for 2026 after Virgin Islands World Juniors Qualifier

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By Terin Frodyma on SwimSwam

Fitter and Faster Swim Camps is the proud sponsor of SwimSwam’s College Recruiting Channel and all commitment news. For many, swimming in college is a lifelong dream that is pursued with dedication and determination. Fitter and Faster is proud to honor these athletes and those who supported them on their journey.

Saint Croix Dolphins Swim Team’s Lu Joseph has verbally committed to Central Connecticut University as a part of the Blue Devils’ 2026 recruiting class.

Excited to announce my verbal commitment to continue my academic and athletic career at Central Connecticut State University. I want to thank my coaches and family for all the support. I also want to thank Coach Bill Ball and can’t wait to swim with this amazing group of swimmers. Go Blue Devils!

Joseph hails from Christiansted, Saint Croix, in the U.S. Virgin Islands, where she has lived since she was eight years old after being born in Hartford, Conn., which sits just 10 miles from Central Connecticut’s campus in New Britain, Conn.

Joseph represented the Virgin Islands at the World Junior Championships (LCM) this past summer, where she notched a best time in the 100 backstroke in 1:12.32, placing 71st. Her best finish came in the 800 freestyle, where she placed 35th ine10:36.56.

Along with her World Juniors appearance, Joseph also represented her home nation at the Junior Panamerican Games (LCM) in three freestyle races. Her top finish came in the 400 free, where her 4:52.04 was good enough for 18th. She also finished 35th in the 100 free (1:02.33) and 27th in the 200 free (2:17.08).

Joseph holds a plethora of short course yards bests from the ISCA January Classic from this past winter. At that meet, she contested the 50 free (25.80), 200 free (2:03.34), 500 free (5:39.26), 1650 free (20:05.92), 50 butterfly (28.98), 50 backstroke (29.40), and 100 back (1:03.33).

Best Times SCY:

  • 50 Free: 25.80
  • 100 Free: 57.92
  • 200 Free: 2:03.34
  • 500 Free: 5:39.46
  • 1650 Free: 20:05.92
  • 100 Back: 1:03.33
  • 200 IM: 2:36.90

Central Connecticut competes in the Northeast Conference (NEC), where the Blue Devil women captured their 3rd consecutive NEC Swimming and Diving Championship title last season.

Based on Joseph’s best SCY times, she would have placed 42nd in the 50 free, 39th in the 100 free and 28th in the 200 free at the 2025 NEC Swimming and Diving Championships.

Central Connecticut adds Joseph to their 2026 recruiting class alongside Molly Doran.

If you have a commitment to report, please send an email with a photo (landscape, or horizontal, looks best) and a quote to Recruits@swimswam.com.

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Read the full story on SwimSwam: Virgin Islands World Juniors Qualifier Lu Joseph Verbals to Central Connecticut for 2026

Shenzhen sees the formation of Zaha Hadid’s futuristic Yidan Center

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You could be forgiven for thinking that this extraordinary building was dreamed up as some sort of alien megastructure for a sci-fi movie. However, the Yidan Center is very much real and is currently nearing completion.

The Yidan Center, by Zaha Hadid Architects, is located in Shenzhen and forms part of a burgeoning cultural quarter in the Chinese megacity. It will host offices and exhibition spaces, along with collaboration areas, for the philanthropic Chen Yidan Foundation.

Its remarkable design brings to mind the studio’s previous Morpheus and Opus projects, and is defined by a massive void at its center. Like those projects, structurally it consists of two separate tower-like volumes that meet at the top. Its overall form takes inspiration from Shenzhen’s surrounding mountains and canyons, which have served as natural pathways for centuries. In addition to being eye-catching, its design does have some practical purpose too: the large void helps daylight permeate deep within.

The Yidan Center is currently nearing completion and its basic structure is finished

Xue Liang

“Informed by the canyons and valleys of the surrounding mountainous landscapes that have been used as routes of travel and communication for millennia, the Yidan Center is designed as a place of convergence and collaboration – emulating Shenzhen’s position as a global hub of innovation and discovery,” says Zaha Hadid Architects. “Verdant gardens guide visitors from the surrounding streets to the base of the center’s ‘canyon’ with views of the geologic architectural formations overhead. A large oculus skylight at the base of the ‘canyon’ floods the interiors below with natural light and enables visitors within these indoor public spaces to experience the center’s architecture above.”

The project is slated to receive the LEED Gold green building standard and is wrapped in rippling louvers that provide solar shading while still allowing daylight and views. Solar panels are also being installed to reduce its electricity draw on the power grid, and water usage will be mitigated with the collection and reuse of rainwater. Additionally, outdoor terraces and balconies provide ample ventilation.

The Yidan Center will be surrounded by greenery and it will also feature a plant-filled rooftop terrace
The Yidan Center will be surrounded by greenery and it will also feature a plant-filled rooftop terrace

Atchain

The Yidan Center is nearing completion, though we’ve no word yet on an exact date it’s expected to be finished. When it is, it should fit nicely alongside other recent and upcoming out-of-this-world Shenzhen architecture, including the Shenzhen Science & Technology Museum and twisting Tencent Helix.

Source: Zaha Hadid Architects

Retirement Home in Bosnia Devastated by Fire

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new video loaded: Fire in Bosnia Rips Through Retirement Home

A blaze at a retirement home in a Bosnian city killed at least 11 people, mostly residents, according to the authorities. The cause of the fire remains undetermined.

By Nader Ibrahim

November 5, 2025

Challenging Client Situation

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Sudanese Jiu-jitsu Team Overcomes Challenges on Journey to Kenya Despite Sudan War

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In 2019, a Sudanese team of jiu-jitsu athletes set out on an extraordinary quest: to travel by land from Sudan to Kenya, despite having no funding and limited resources, to compete in the LionHeart Nairobi Open.

Together members of the Muqatel Training Center for martial arts travelled across three countries, carrying not just their hopes and dreams, but the spirit of a revolution that reshaped Sudan.

Journey to Kenya is a documentary short about resilience, unity and determination — a powerful reminder that dreams can transcend borders.

A film by Ibrahim “Snoopy” Ahmed, produced by In Deep Visions.

Investors Worry About Tech Valuations, Leading to Stock Drop and Gold Rally

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Stocks drop, as investors fret over tech valuations; gold rallies

Storm causes devastation in the Philippines, leaving at least 85 dead

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George Wright,in London,

Virma Rivera,in Manila and

Koh Ewe,in Singapore

Watch: Filipino families assess damage after Typhoon Kalmaegi

At least 85 people have been killed while hundreds of thousands fled their homes as one of strongest typhoons this year ripped through the central Philippines, authorities say.

Typhoon Kalmaegi has flooded entire towns on the most populated central island of Cebu, where at least 49 of the fatalities were located. There are 75 others missing and 17 injured, officials said on Wednesday.

Videos show people sheltering on rooftops, while cars and shipping containers have been swept through the streets.

The official death toll, which is likely to rise, includes six crew members of a military helicopter that crashed on Mindanao island, south of Cebu, after it was deployed to assist in relief efforts.

Map showing the expected path of Typhoon Kalmaegi across Southeast Asia. The storm moves westward from east of the Philippines, passing near Cebu City at 00:00 Tuesday (GMT), then across the Philippines by 00:00 Wednesday. It continues toward Vietnam, reaching 06:00 Thursday, then 18:00 Thursday near central Vietnam, and finally Thailand by 06:00 Saturday. Red dots mark the projected positions along the path. Source is GDACS.

The aircraft went down on Tuesday near Agusan del Sur and was one of four sent to help.

“Communication with the helicopter was lost, which immediately prompted the launch of a search and rescue operation,” the Philippine Air Force said. Later, a spokeswoman said six bodies had been recovered, believed to be of the pilot and crew.

The typhoon, locally named Tino, has weakened since making landfall early on Tuesday, but has continued to bring winds of more than 80mph (130km/h).

It is forecast to move across the Visayas islands region and out over the South China Sea by Wednesday.

But residents across Cebu province are still reeling from the deadly floods. More than 400,000 people have been displaced by the disaster, according to a report on Wednesday by the national disaster agency.

Jel-an Moira Servas, a business owner who lives in Mandaue city, told the BBC that she found herself waist-deep in water within minutes when her house became flooded. She quickly evacuated with her family, bringing only light items like food and electronics.

“Right now, the rain has completely stopped and the sun is out, but our houses are still filled with mud, and everything inside is in shambles,” she said. “We don’t even know where to start cleaning. I can’t even look at it without crying.”

Jel-an Moira Servas A home with furniture strewn all, and muddy water covering the floor.Jel-an Moira Servas

Jel-an Moira Servas’s home in Mandaue city was damaged by heavy flooding during the typhoon

Rafaelito Alejandro, the deputy administrator at the Office of Civil Defence told local radio station DZMM that the current challenge for rescuers was clearing “debris and cars on the road”.

Carlos Jose Lañas, a volunteer rescuer, told the BBC that despite preparing for the worst case, they were caught off-guard by the extent of the flooding.

“This is the worst flood I’ve ever experienced,” the 19-year-old said. “Almost all the rivers here in Cebu overflowed. Even emergency responders did not expect this kind of scenario.”

“The rescue operation was too overwhelming for the emergency responders around Cebu, because there were a lot of people asking for help.”

In a Facebook post, Cebu governor Pamela Baricuatro described the disaster as “unprecedented”.

“We were expecting the winds to be the dangerous part, but… the water is what’s truly putting our people at risk,” she said. “The floodwaters are just devastating.”

Baricuatro declared a state of calamity in Cebu on Tuesday evening to facilitate disaster relief efforts.

Most of the deaths were due to drowning, reports said. The storm has been sending torrents of muddy water down hillsides and into towns and cities.

Damage to residential areas on Cebu was extensive, with many small buildings swept away and a thick carpet of mud left by the retreating floodwaters. Rescue teams took to boats to free people who were trapped inside their houses.

Don del Rosario, 28, was among those in Cebu City who sought refuge on an upper floor as the storm raged.

“I’ve been here for 28 years, and this is by far the worst we’ve experienced,” he told the AFP news agency.

Moment Philippines floods move shipping containers

The Philippines is hit by an average of 20 storms and typhoons each year.

The latest comes barely a month after back-to-back typhoons killed over a dozen people and wrought damage to infrastructure and crops.

Super Typhoon Ragasa, known locally as Nando, struck in late September, followed swiftly by Typhoon Bualoi, known locally as Opong.

In the months before, an extraordinarily wet monsoon season caused widespread flooding, sparking anger and protests over unfinished and sub-standard flood control systems that have been blamed on corruption.

On 30 September, dozens were killed and injured after a powerful 6.9 magnitude earthquake struck the central Philippines, with Cebu bearing the brunt of the damage.

Typhoon Kalmaegi is forecast to move on to Vietnam, which is already seeing record-breaking rainfall.

With additional reporting by Jonathan Head, South East Asia correspondent

Ex-FBI Agent Reveals Secret Trick for Scoring Top Hotel Rooms: Show Love to the Front Desk Staff

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Former FBI special agent Tom Simon, who spent 26 years investigating financial crimes and national-security matters across the U.S., says he has a straightforward philosophy when it comes to business travel: the people who deserve recognition the least often get it the most, while those who deserve it most are routinely overlooked. And so, through much practice, Simon says he’s developed a trick to getting some of the best rooms in any hotel, which he calls a “gift” for frequent travelers.

His method for securing premium hotel accommodations, which he shared in a TikTok on October 27, revolves around just a few things: genuine appreciation, recognition of the hospitality industry’s most glaring inequity, and a $20 bill, which, he says, “will pay for itself.”

​Simon says if you walk into any hotel—reservation or no reservation, booked online or over the phone, it really doesn’t matter—go straight up to the front desk and chat up the staff there.

“You got your suitcase, and you go, ‘I am checking in, but before I do, I just want you to know I travel on business all the time. I’m always on the road. And it’s never ever made sense to me that everyone in the entire hospitality industry is being taken care of except for you people at the front desk,” Simon said.

“You look at the valet parking guys, these guys are morons. They can’t even fold their wallets at the end of a shift, they’re getting tips so much. Meanwhile, you probably have a degree in hospitality, right? Yet no one ever takes care of you. You’re on your feet for eight hours a day. You’re the front door to this organization. You’re running this hotel as far as I’m concerned.”

He then says to place a $20 bill on their keyboard. “I just want to let you know how much I appreciate everything you do,” he said. “My name is Tom Simon. I’m checking in. If you could get me a decent room, I’d appreciate it.”​

Simon claims he has been using this technique for 20 years with consistent results. During his time as an FBI agent in Honolulu, where he investigated major financial crimes including Ponzi schemes and embezzlement cases, he traveled frequently to Maui and Kauai. “I would get these amazing suites overlooking the ocean,” he recalled.

Most recently, at a casino hotel, Simon said the approach yielded “the biggest hotel room I’ve ever stayed in my life”: a suite with a large living room, stocked bar, expansive bedroom, and bathroom “bigger than my first apartment.” He said the front-desk staff also provided complimentary parking and free breakfast coupons.

The strategy acknowledges a reality of hotel operations: Front-desk staff wield considerable discretionary power over room assignments. They determine proximity to noise sources like ice machines or late-night gatherings, and they often have latitude to upgrade guests when premium rooms remain available. Simon suggests framing requests in personal terms: “Put me in the room you would put your mother in if you wanted to show her a really, really special time here at the hotel.”

Tipping front-desk staff for upgrades is not a universally accepted practice, and policies vary by property. Some hotels explicitly prohibit such gratuities, with employees risking termination if caught accepting them. The practice appears most common in Las Vegas, where discretionary tipping can influence room assignments at Strip properties. In other markets, simply asking politely—without monetary incentive—often yields similar results when occupancy allows.

Simon’s technique differs from standard upgrade strategies recommended by hospitality experts, which typically emphasize loyalty program membership, elite status, booking directly with hotels, and traveling during off-peak periods. His approach introduces a transactional element that exists in a gray area between genuine appreciation and expectation of preferential treatment.

The broader context involves ongoing debates about tipping culture and worker compensation. Wait staff and bartenders derive more than half of their earnings from tips, but front-desk workers typically make their money through more conventional recognition programs in the hospitality industry.

Simon, now a licensed private investigator in Florida operating Simon Worldwide Investigations, continues to share investigative techniques and industry insights through social media. His hotel-room strategy reflects his investigative background: identify leverage points, understand human motivation, and recognize where power actually resides in organizational structures.

“The front-desk people have so much control over the quality of your stay,” Simon said in the video. “They know where the frat party is. They can put you next door to that, or they can put you not next door to that.”

You can watch Simon’s TikTok on the aforementioned hotel-room strategy below:

@simoninvestigations How can you maximize your hotel experience every time? Former FBI Agent Tom Simon, a frequent business traveller and private investigator, explains to @Matthew Cox | True Crime ♬ original sound – Tom Simon: Private Detective

For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing.

Report: Israeli army and settlers conduct 2,350 strikes in West Bank in past month

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‘Cycle of terror’ spikes as Higher Planning Council set to advance plans to build 1,985 new settlement units in occupied West Bank.

Israeli forces and settlers have carried out 2,350 attacks across the occupied West Bank last month in an “ongoing cycle of terror”, according to the Palestinian Authority’s Colonization and Wall Resistance Commission (CRRC).

CRRC head Mu’ayyad Sha’ban said on Wednesday that Israeli forces carried out 1,584 attacks – including direct physical attacks, the demolition of homes and the uprooting of olive trees – with most of the violence focused on the governorates of Ramallah (542), Nablus (412) and Hebron (401).

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The research, compiled in a CRRC monthly report titled Occupation Violations and Colonial Expansion Measures, also noted 766 attacks by settlers. The commission said they are expanding settlements, which are illegal under international law, as part of what it called an “organised strategy that aims to displace the land’s indigenous people and enforce a fully racist colonial regime”.

The report said settler attacks reached a new peak with most targeting the Ramallah governorate (195), Nablus (179) and Hebron (126). Olive pickers received the brunt of attacks, according to the report, which said they were the victims of “state terror” that had been “orchestrated in the dark backrooms of the occupation government”.

It described instances of Israeli “vandalism and theft” carried out in cahoots with Israeli soldiers that have seen the “uprooting, destruction and poisoning” of 1,200 olive trees in Hebron, Ramallah, Tubas, Qalqilya, Nablus and Bethlehem. During the violence, settlers have tried to establish seven new outposts on Palestinian land since October in the governorates of Hebron and Nablus.

For decades, the Israeli military has uprooted olive trees, an important Palestinian cultural symbol, across the West Bank as part of efforts by successive Israeli governments to seize Palestinian land and forcibly displace residents.

The spike in Israeli violence comes amid expectations that Israel’s Higher Planning Council (HPC), part of the Israeli army’s Civil Administration overseeing the occupied West Bank, will meet to discuss the construction of 1,985 new settlement units in the West Bank on Wednesday.

The left-wing Israeli movement Peace Now said 1,288 of the units would be rolled out in two isolated settlements in the northern West Bank, namely Avnei Hefetz and Einav Plan.

It said the HPC had been holding weekly meetings since November last year to advance housing projects in the settlements, thus normalising and accelerating construction on land taken from Palestinians.

Since the beginning of 2025, the HPC has pushed forward a record 28,195 housing units, Peace Now said.

In August, far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich drew international condemnation after saying plans to build thousands of homes as part of the proposed E1 settlement scheme in the West Bank “buries the idea of a Palestinian state”.

The E1 project, shelved for years amid opposition from the United States and European allies, would connect occupied East Jerusalem with the existing illegal Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim.

The Israeli far right’s push to annex the West Bank would essentially end the possibility of implementing a two-state solution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict as outlined in numerous United Nations resolutions.

United States President Donald Trump’s administration has been adamant that it won’t allow Israel to annex the occupied territory.  US Vice President JD Vance, while visiting Israel recently, said Trump would oppose Israeli annexation of the West Bank and it would not happen. Vance said as he left Israel, “If it was a political stunt, it is a very stupid one, and I personally take some insult to it.”

But the US has done nothing to rein in Israel’s assaults and crackdowns on Palestinians in the West Bank as it trumpets its Gaza ceasefire efforts.