Azerbaijan's SOCAR signs oil exploration agreements with Exxon, BP
Over 700 feared dead in Mokwa
The official death toll after deadly floods hit the Nigerian town of Mokwa on Thursday has risen to more than 200, officials say.
Another 500 people are still missing in the town in the central Niger State however, local official Musa Kimboku told the BBC that rescue efforts had ceased because authorities no longer believe anyone could still be found alive.
The floods, said to be worst in the area for 60 years, swept through the Mokwa districts of Tiffin Maza and Anguwan Hausawa after torrential rains.
In an effort to prevent disease in the area, authorities will soon start to dig out corpses buried underground, Mokwa’s district head Muhammadu Aliyu said.
Recounting scenes of catastrophe, local residents told the BBC that they saw their homes and family members get washed away.
One man, Adamu Yusuf, lost his wife and newborn baby.
“I watched helplessly as water washed away my family. I survived because I could swim,” he told the BBC.
Another resident, Saliu Sulaiman, said the floods had left him homeless and destroyed some of his cash business profits.
“I lost at least $1,500 to the floods. It was the proceeds from the sale of my farm produce the previous day. I contemplated going back into the room to get it, but the pressure of the water scared me.”
Some local residents have said that the flooding was so devastating because a nearby dam had burst, however the authorities have not confirmed this.
On Sunday, the National Emergency Management Agency (Nema) announced it had started the process of providing relief packages to people affected.
The agency added in a post on Facebook that roads and bridges were also affected by the flood, which has had a knock-on effect on the local economy and traffic.
The Nigerian Red Cross also released a statement on Friday saying the floods had caused “significant loss of life and widespread distress”.
Floods are not uncommon during the Nigerian rainy season, which lasts from April until October.
In 2024, Nigeria experienced flooding from heavy rain which caused deaths and drove people from their homes.
There was also severe flooding in 2022, when more than 600 people died and 1.3 million were displaced.
Startups created by AI may drive growth in venture capital “zombie” funds
Beware of zombies. That’s the message from some venture capital executives who predict that AI will drive down the cost and time startup founders need to build businesses—but also increase the number of ”zombies.” These are VCs firms who find little demand for their services, and are left to wander the tech landscape without fresh capital or new investments.
Due to AI, founders will become so efficient building companies that they will no longer need to raise multiple rounds of capital, says Sam Tidswell-Norrish, who, in December, left private equity firm Motive Partners, and has since launched professional community platform OPUS.
Tidswell-Norrish predicts that, over the next five years, founders will likely collect enough capital in one round and then achieve profitability. This means VCs will end up competing with each other for fewer allocations and will have to go downstream to find companies, he said.
Ben Savage, a partner at Clocktower Ventures, doesn’t agree. Savage thinks AI will likely spur more ideas that cause founders to create more startups and possibly reinvent more segments of the economy. Matt Harris, a partner with Bain Capital Ventures, pointed to the cloud computing and SaaS boom of the last decade, which some thought would hurt VCs. Harris thinks the current AI revolution could lead to more VC allocations.
For venture capitalists, AI could threaten their position or provide an opportunity, said OPUS’s Tidswell-Norrish. Many firms raised capital, and were investing, during the bull market of 2021 when startup valuations were at a high. Venture funds often take years to sell their stakes, so firms could build their profile and raise multiple funds before having to return capital, he said. The venture industry is currently in a downturn with only the top tier and differentiated funds continuing to raise money, he said. There are already a number of VC firms that aren’t investing further and just running “their existing fund lifespans down passively,” Tidswell-Norrish said.
OPUS’s Tidswell-Norrish thinks AI will create a power shift in favor of the founders, who will need less capital. He expects many VC firms will consolidate or just collapse over the next decade. Because the firms have funds with a 10-year life cycle, many will “take a long time to die,” he said.
Zombies are multiplying
The number of U.S. zombie venture firms has increased. At the beginning of 2025, there were 574 U.S. zombies, or firms that have raised a fund in the prior six years but have no known investments since late December 2023, according to data from research firm PitchBook. This compares to the end of 2021 when there were 382 U.S. zombies that had raised a fund since 2016 but had no known investments since the end of 2020.
Many of the VCs who spoke to Fortune agree there will be a weeding out of the venture capital sector but it’s not necessarily because of AI. The IPO market has been shut for nearly four years while mergers have crawled, making it hard for venture funds to sell their deals.
Funds that started in 2020, invested in 2021— a record time period for deals when companies were selling for high multiples—and still don’t have liquidity in 2025, will have a hard time raising a second pool in 2026 and 2027, said Peter Walker, head of insights at equity management platform Carta. “A lot of funds don’t have great performance metrics right now. If your last fund didn’t do very well, it’s a much tougher climate to raise new funds,” he said.
Clocktower’s Savage said there are always “over performing and underperforming” venture firms but it’s still too early to determine the impact of 2021 investing on fund performance. “There’s a lot of different forces at play in the capital formation of venture capital firms,” Savage said.
Firms that survive will be VCs with a “differentiated means to create value,” said OPUS’s Tidswell-Norrish. This is more than the typical VC strategy of just providing capital but offering unique strategies, or expertise or networks that a founder can use to boost their startup’s growth or chance for success. “Ninety percent of VCs do not have real capability beyond their team supporting,” he said.
The lack of distribution is one reason why Tidswell-Norrish launched OPUS, which aims to provide networking connections for early-stage entrepreneurs and founders. In 2026, OPUS is expected to begin marketing for its first fund, which is targeting $20 million to $40 million, a person familiar with the situation said.
“It’s a huge existential shift. We will see a reckoning,” Tidswell-Norrish added.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
Younger swimmers aim to overthrow Weyant and Grimes in the 400 IM event
2025 U.S. NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS
WOMEN’S 400 IM: BY THE NUMBERS
The Women’s 400 IM field in Paris saw two Americans on the podium. Katie Grimes, a two-time Olympian, claimed her first medal, a silver, and her compatriot Emma Weyant, who collected the bronze medal, backed up her silver from Tokyo. The pair, who also finished in the same position at the 2022 World Championships in Budapest, top the entry lists and will look to represent Team USA again on the world stage.
The pair will be hard-pressed to improve upon their medals as they likely will have to square off against the reigning Olympic Champion, World Record Holder, and only active swimmer with a time under 4:28, Canada’s Summer McIntosh. However, before Grimes and Weyant get a chance to do so, they’ll need to overcome an increasingly young and competitive domestic field first.
“You’re Still The One (two)”
Grimes entered the swimming world in a dramatic fashion, nabbing an Olympic berth at just age 15, in 2021. While primarily seen as a distance freestyler, especially in her earlier years, Grimes has more LC World Championships medals in the IM than she does in the freestyles, as she claimed silver in both 2022 and 2023. The stat changes a little if one were to include her performances from SC Worlds as well.
After keeping the swimming world on tenterhooks about her college decisions, Grimes announced this past fall that she would swim for Virginia and join the squad mid-year. The delay allowed the Sandpipers of Nevada swimmer to gear up for the Short Course Worlds, held this past December in Budapest. In the same pool where she earned her first World medal, Grimes earned a complete set of medals, claiming bronze in the 800 free and a silver in the 400 IM, finishing less than five seconds behind McIntosh’s new World Record time of 4:15.48. Grime’s time of 4:20.14 is not only just over a second off the old World Record but now stands as a new American record.
The swim and performance might have gone a little unnoticed as two day prior, Grimes with club teammate Claire Weinstein, along with future teammate Alex Walsh and UVA alum Paige Madden, came together to slice over half a second off the World record in the women’s 4×200 free relay. The quartet recorded a new mark of 7:30.13, taking over four seconds off the two-year-old former American record.
With that as a backdrop, Grimes hasn’t had the strongest 2025. Acclimatizing to college can be tough, and while she did score in every event at NCAAs, finishing 4th in the 500 free, 4th in the 400 IM, and 13th in the 1650, her times were not close to her PBs. Since then, she has competed once in Fort Lauderdale, where she placed 5th in the finals of the 400 IM, going 4:42.48.
Grimes has a PB of 4:31.41 from Worlds in Fukuoka, a time that makes her the 4th fastest American of all time, and the fastest active swimmer. However, she struggled last year to replicate that time. She went 4:32.45 at the Fran Crippen Swim Meet of Champions in April but won Trials with a 4:35.00 and Olympic Silver with a 4:33.40.
Whereas Grimes entered last summer with confidence, having won silver in Fukuoka, Weyant entered the Olympic Trials with something to prove, as the previous summer she failed to make the Worlds team as she was DQed in the prelims of the 400 IM. She safely advanced through to the finals and qualified for her second Olympic team, going on to earn the bronze medal in Paris in a time of 4:34.93.
Weyant opted not to travel to Budapest for SC Worlds and returned to finish her last year of collegiate swimming at Florida. Like Grimes, Weyant didn’t have the strongest NCAA performance all-around, scoring in two events and not hitting a PB. However, she did place second in the 400 IM in a time of 3:59.05, which is only .05 off her previous best from the season before.
Unlike Grimes, however, Weyant had a very strong showing at the Fort Lauderdale Pro Swim Series. Weyant was the fastest in the 400 IM prelims, going 4:40.43. That evening she dropped a hammer of swim, recording a mark of 4:33.95. The swim, against the backdrop of those of her teammate, Katie Ledecky, as well as Gretchen Walsh‘s two world records does stand out that much, but for Weyant, the swim marked a huge turning point.
Weyant, after the race, stated that she now felt confident in her breaststroke after having been DQed in 2023. Weyant cited Florida Assistant and Olympic Medalist Annie Lazor for helping her mentally get over the lack of self-confidence in the stroke. The 6th fastest American ever, with a PB of 4:32.76 dating back to 2021, her winning time from Fort Lauderdale of 4:33.95 reflected her new confidence as not only was it her 4th fastest performance, but it also was her fastest since the Tokyo Olympics, faster than her 2022 Worlds and 2024 Olympic Bronze medal performances. The time also vaults her up the 2024-2025 rankings to the #2 spot, sitting behind only McIntosh’s 4:26.98 from the Westmont Pro Swim Series.
“Are You That Somebody”
If anyone were to break through the stranglehold that Grimes and Weyant appear to have at the top, one would look to those who have been at the top before. Alex Walsh, who swam the event at the Fukuoka Worlds, has a personal best of 4:34.46 but has since moved on from the long course version of the race as Worlds also represents her last swim. Leah Smith holds a PB of 4:33.86 and finished 4th at last summer’s Olympic Trials, but that appears to have been her last professional race. Lilla Bognar broke 4:40 for the first time to place just ahead of Smith at Trials, going 4:37.86 to place 3rd. However, Bognar, who would go on to win the event at Junior Pan-Pacs, does not appear in the entry lists.
Leah Hayes, the fastest returner from the 2024 Trials, appears to be the best bet to have a chance to break through. Hayes placed 5th last year with a time of 4:41.32, but she holds a PB of 4:36.84 from her gold medal at the 2023 Junior Worlds. The UVA based swimmer, broke through into the senior ranks in 2022 and won a bronze medal in the 200 IM at the Budapest Worlds.
Hayes just wrapped up her first year at Virginia and, like Grimes, had an off NCAAs. While she did score in two events, neither were in personal bests. Her 400 IM time wasn’t even a season-best, but like Weyant, her time of 4:01.62 was less than half a second off her PB, which she set in the fall, so the result wasn’t that far off.
Like her teammate, Hayes has just one long-course meet this season, swimming at the last Pro Swim Series stop. Hayes placed third behind Weyant (the second-fastest American) with a time of 4:38.78. The swim, her fastest since the 2023 Junior Worlds, coupled with PBs in every breaststroke event and equalling her PB in the 200 free, maybe a sign that Hayes is returning to the form that saw her earn her spot and win a Worlds medal as a high schooler.
The 400 IM seems to have a very UVA, Florida, and Stanford tilt. Two of the three fastest Americans, Maya Dirado and Elizabeth Beisel, attended Stanford and Florida, respectively. Both Hayes and Grimes swim for UVA, as did Smith and Weyant, before she transferred to Florida.
While Grimes likely has Hayes to join her in preparing for the 400 IM, Weyant, too, will have plenty of training partners. Zoe Dixon (#7 seed), a fellow Gator, placed 7th last year at Trials, going a PB of 4:42.01. Despite the seemingly common thread of not performing well at NCAA, where she placed 20th in prelims, Dixon had a strong swim at the Fort Lauderdale Pro Swim, placing 10th overall with a time of 4:46.45. While not a PB, the time is more than two seconds faster than her pre-trials time from last year; she swam 4:48.51 in May of 2024, so Dixon could be in line for another drop and perhaps even challenging the 4:40 barrier.
Her teammate, Michaela Mattes (#9 seed), struggled too at NCAAs but had a strong turn-around in Fort Lauderdale as she placed one spot ahead of Dixon, winning the B-Final in a new Personal Best of 4:45.06, her first PB in the event since 2022 when she placed 5th at Junior Pan-Pacs with her time of 4:45.78. In fact, her swim last month was the first time she had been under 4:50 since March of 2023, so if she can continue this positive trend, she too could be in line for a big drop.
The pair, along with Weyant and #19 seed Sofia Plaza (who placed 11th last year at Trials), likely overlap some of their training with the 15th fastest American ever, Katie Ledecky. While obviously, known for her unmatchable freestyle prowess, Ledecky has dabbled in the event, as her PB of 4:35.77 was set at the 2022 US Nationals where she placed 1st. (Remember, in 2022, World Trials and US Nationals were separate events) Ledecky last swam the 400 IM in 2024, where she memorably beat Lilly King in an off-event race between the two World Record holders. However, Ledecky is not entered in the event here, but rather serves to complete our connections as before turning pro and training with Florida, Ledecky competed for the Stanford Cardinal.
Continuing the strong tradition of 400 IM excellence for Stanford are Lucy Bell and Caroline Bricker. Bell, who is wrapping up her junior year, had a strong summer last year as she swam PB in the 200 fly, 200 IM, and 400 IM at Trials. In the 400 IM particularly, she sliced nearly four seconds off her previous best, recording a time of 4:40.79, bettering her Pan-Ams silver medal performance of 4:44.27. While she added a few tenths in finals, placing 6th in a time of 4:41.40, Bell carried on that positive momentum into the college season.
Bucking the trend of down performances at NCAAs, Bell produced PBs in all of her events, placing 6th in the 200 IM, 3rd in the 400 IM (4:00.24), and claiming the national title in the 200 Breast. Joining her in having a strong NCAA was her teammate Bricker. A sophomore, Bricker started off her meet with a win in the 800 free relay and continued the success, also recording PBs in all her events, placing 5th in the 200 IM, 3rd in the 200 fly, and claiming the national title in the 400 IM, breaking four minutes for the second time that season, winning in 3:57.36.
While Bricker took the win in yards, Bell holds the advantage in long course meters as her PB of 4:40.79 makes her the 5th seed, whereas Bricker’s PB is 4:45.68. Bricker swam that time just last month in Fort Lauderdale, where she placed 7th overall, and it is her first PB in the event since 2021. Bricker is entered as the 8th seed with a time of 4:42.38, but we are unsure of where that time comes from. Her PB would place her as the 11th seed, so it is not too much of a difference. While not a perfect tool, SwimSwam’s time converter puts her yards time from NCAA right around the 4:30 mark, so if she can emulate her NCAA win, Bricker could be the spoiler to the Grimes/Weyant party.
Katie McCarthy bucks the Virginia-Florida-Stanford triangle of connection that the other swimmers so nicely made. McCarthy, representing Minnesota, placed 28th at NCAA in the 400 IM, going 4:11.42. However, the Gopher is the 11th seed in Indianapolis courtesy of her seed time of 4:46.27. She placed 14th at Trials last summer, going 4:47.99, but sliced a second and a half off that to win the event at the Minneapolis Futures meet in July.
“Smells like Teen Spirit”
The only swimmer not yet mentioned returning from the Olympic Trials final is Audrey Derivaux. Last year, at the age of 14, the New Jersey native set PBs across the 100 fly, 200 fly, 200 back, and 400 IM, where she went 4:45.23 in prelims to qualify 8th into the final, the youngest to do since the 2012 trials. A two Junior Pan Pacs champ in the fly events, Derivaux has blown past that time, recording a new PB of 4:41.48 at March’s Indianapolis Sectionals. While just 15, Derivaux is a top eight seed in all five of her events, topping out as the #4 seed in both the 200 fly and 200 back.
Derivaux is not the lone junior in the top 16, and in fact, despite being an Olympic Trials finalist, she isn’t even the highest-ranked junior swimmer. Seed two spots ahead of her at #4 is Kayla Han. Recently just turned 17 years old, Han is entered in the meet with a seed time of 4:40.58. Like Derivaux, the time is a recent PB, as she recorded it just last month courtesy of her 4th-place finish in Fort Lauderdale. Before that, she held a PB of 4:42.32 dating back to 2023. The youngest swimmer at the 2021 Olympic Trials, Han placed 10th at last year’s Trials going 4:47.71, so seems to be back on track in the event. Like Derivaux, Han earned international experience at Junior Pan-Pacs, where she won the 800 free, and she represented the US in the event at the 2024 Worlds in Doha, where she finished 13th in the event in a time of 4:47.12.
One of the youngest events, in fact, the only event in which every swimmer was born this century (if you use the definition of centuries starting at year 1 and progressing through year 100), both Ellie Clarke and Alexa McDevitt will be looking to make the A-final and earn themselves a chance at the Worlds team or at the Junior Worlds team. The pair seeded 10th and 13th, respectively, have made strong improvements this season. Each was a little off at the Olympic Trials last year, with the pair finishing 33rd and 34th, respectively, with times of 4:54.40 and 4:57.10; they each recorded new PBs within the last two months, with Clarke, who swims at Carmel Swim Club going 4:45.45 at the Indianapolis Sectionals, and McDevitt a Cal commit, who represents Bellevue Club Swim Team taking 2nd place at the Sacramento Pro Swim Series with a time of 4:46.61.
While not eligible for Junior Worlds, fellow teenager and Cal commit Teagan O’Dell, too, could find herself amongst the top eight. Seeded 12th, the junior Pan-Pac champion in the 200 IM holds a PB and entry time of 4:46.34, from her second-place finish behind McCarthy at the 2024 Minneapolis Futures. She hasn’t swum the event since that meet, but she did go a PB of 4:05.22 in the yards version this past November and just recently cleaned house at the California High School State Championships, where she topped the podium individually in the 200 IM and 100 back as well as leading off the victorious 200 and 400 free relays.
“You Oughta Know”
While Grimes has the better PB and beat Weyant at both Trials and the Olympics last year, Weyant’s stronger showing at NCAAs and in Fort Lauderdale appears to give her the edge this time around. Weyant is entered in just three events over the course of the meet while Grimes is in six, not that that means they each will swim all of them, but Weyant’s focus is much more on this event, whereas Grimes will have to spread her attention to more events (Bell, too, is entered in six events). The 400 IM is smack dab in the middle of the event schedule, being the first event on the middle of five days of competition. The 100 fly and 50 of breaststroke and backstroke follow in that order, so Derivaux, Bricker, and Bell, the #7, 12, and 14 seeds in the 100 fly, may have to choose one or the other to swim.
After the top two things get a little more muddled, Hayes’s strong showing in Fort Lauderdale gives her the edge over the rest of the field, but if Bricker and Bell can transfer their strong NCAA performances to the long course pool, then they could challenge. So, too, could Han, after spending a year at Carmel Swim Club, she returned west to California and hasn’t missed a beat.
SwimSwam’s Picks
Dark Horse: Campbell Stoll – Seeded 21st, one spot behind teammate Campbell Chase, Stoll, a rising junior, placed 10th at NCAAs in a time of 4:04.55; she also placed 12th in the 200 IM and earned an A-final berth in the 200 fly, placing 7th overall. A month earlier, she popped off at SEC, going PBs in those same three events, placing 2nd in the 200s and nabbing the bronze in the 400 IM with a time of 4:03.11, behind only Olympians Weyant and Ella Jansen, who represents Canada internationally. At a meet in Austin last month, Stoll dropped a new PB of 4:48.66, her first since 2023. At that meet, she also recorded PBs in the 200 Fly and 200 IM and equaled her best in the 100 Fly, an event that directly followed the 400 IM.
Large-Scale Drone Attack by Ukraine Targets Russian Air Bases
Ukraine launched one of its broadest assaults of the war against air bases inside Russia, targeting sites from eastern Siberia to Russia’s western border.
The Loneliest Road in America: A Comprehensive Guide to Nevada’s Route 50
Don’t let the title “Loneliest Road in America” fool you. Nevada’s Highway 50 has been a major thoroughfare since the Pony Express connected the West. And when mail by horse faded with the dawn of the telegraph and automobile, the route blazed a new trail as the first transcontinental highway, from New York to San Francisco. We’ll admit that we thought Route 66 held that claim to fame, but the Lincoln Highway came first, and Nevada’s section was a lynchpin to guiding travelers through the desert and over the Sierra Nevada mountains.
Why is Nevada’s Highway 50 called “The Loneliest Road in America”? In 1986, Life Magazine did a feature, damning this 287-mile stretch, saying, “There are no points of interest,” and warned that motorists would need “survival skills” to make it through this high desert. Well, as seasoned road trippers who’ve driven the Alaska Highway, the entirety of The Mother Road, and nine cross-country road trips, we knew better than to let some persnickety editor keep us or Nevada down! We’d taken a bite out of The Loneliest Road in America on previous Nevada trips and were excited to finally drive its full length and explore all its wonders with an eight-day road trip!
Follow our Route 50 Road Survival Guide from Great Basin National Park, through eight historic towns to numerous hot springs, sacred Native American sites, sand dunes, sagebrush saloons, and so many stops to make The Loneliest Road in America a bucket-list road trip.
Loneliest Road in America Map
Our travel guide follows Route 50, heading west from the Utah border through the towns of Baker, Ely, Eureka, Austin, Fallon, Virginia City, and Carson City, and ends along Nevada’s shores of Lake Tahoe. While these towns hold lots of intrigue, it’s all about ambling between them, enjoying the Basin and Range Topography, Bureau of Land Management (BLM) recreation areas, unexpected cultural sites, and watering holes whenever you can find them. As you’d imagine on something called the Loneliest Road in America, there will be some long stretches between services, so keep your gas, water, and snack supply topped up so you can travel with confidence and gusto!
Below, we have broken down Nevada Route 50 by town, the best things to do in each, and the must-see attractions in between!
Great Basin National Park

Home to one of the US’s southernmost glaciers, the world’s oldest trees (5,000+ years!), dazzling caves, and an International Dark Sky Park, Great Basin is one of the most spectacular national parks in the country—yet it’s the third least visited in the lower 48! Called a Desert Mountain Island, this unique ecosystem rises from what was an ancient inland sea and the present-day hydrographic Great Basin area that covers most of Nevada and many parts of the West.
The Basin refers to the fact that this area has no river outlets and that any water that falls, evaporates, sinks underground, or is captured in lakes. This makes for a dry, harsh climate, and is the reason why this 77,000 acres of biodiverse park stand in such stark and stunning contrast.
Here are the best things to do in Great Basin National Park:
Lehman Caves

Sixty-four years before Great Basin became a national park, their spectacular Lehman Caves earned National Monument status. To explore this underground wonderland, we signed up for the park’s most extensive ranger-guided expedition, the 90-minute Grand Palace Tour.
It begins in the Gothic Palace room, where fun formations like “cave bacon,” “soda straws”, and their famous “cave shields” glisten in the dim lighting. To bring us back to the days of the early explorers, the ranger shut off the lights for a minute and said, “In here, our eyes will NEVER adjust.” Only uniquely adapted species like the Great Basin Cave pseudoscorpion and springtails can navigate this darkness…and those with light, like Mr. Lehman who first explored the caves by candle in the 1880s.
The wheel-chair accessible path turned to narrow passageways between the stalactites and stalagmites, as we moved through the Rose Trellis Room, organ-esque Music Room, and the Inscription Room covered in signatures from 19th-century visitors, and the Cypress Swamp with its surreal reflections. At two linear miles, Lehman Caves may not be as big as Carlsbad Caverns National Park, but they boast 500 more cave shields and these stunning circular formations, dripping with petrified droplets, making it one of the most unique and elaborate in the country.
Travel Tip: Sign up for your cave tour as early as possible, since you can’t enter the caves without a guide, and tours can fill up months in advance. If you forget to make reservations, get to the park office before it opens and check for last-minute cancellations.
Wheeler Peak Scenic Drive
Hugging the Snake Range and serpentine curves of this 12-mile road, the Great Basin landscape changed from sagebrush to pinyon pines to rugged cliffs to snowcapped peaks as we ascended to 10,000 feet above sea level. Be sure to pull over at Mather Point for the big vista of the jagged Wheeler Peak and keep going to the end for the Bristlecone-Alpine Lakes Trail!
Travel Tip: Wheeler Road and its mountain trailheads typically close in November for snow, so try to visit from April to October for the full Great Basin experience.
Bristlecone-Alpine Lakes Trail

This 1.6-mile trail leads to one of the oldest forests in the world…the Great Basin Bristlecone Pine Grove! Only found in small sections of California, Utah, and Nevada, and at elevations between 9,800 to 11,000 feet, these hearty trees can live more than 5,000 years! At such heights, snow often dusts the trail, making the steep pitch a little more technical and exhilarating.
We reached the grove of gnarled trees and thought about the millennia of events they’d endured and ancient wonders they outdated (move over Pyramids of Giza!). As if this grove wasn’t impressive enough, the trail continues to one of the southernmost glaciers in North America. We scrambled up the moraine for a straight-on view of Wheeler Peak Glacier and would have sooner guessed we were in Switzerland than Nevada!
For more incredible alpine vibes, extend your hike on the 2.7-mile loop to Teresa & Stella Lake. Short on time? Teresa Lake is just a 10-minute detour off the Bristlecone-Alpine trail and soooo pretty!
Stargazing with the Astronomy Rangers
Great Basin’s remote and arid location makes it one of the premier international Dark Sky Parks in the USA. On a clear, moonless summer night, thousands of stars, the Milky Way, and even distant objects like the Andromeda Galaxy can be seen with the naked eye. To level up our stargazing we joined the park’s regular Astronomy Ranger talk and guided telescope viewing, plus a special NASA scientist talk about the annular eclipse that was happening that week! Our mind was blown as we peered into their $10k telescopes and saw four of Jupiter’s moons and the giant interstellar cloud of the Lagoon Nebula 4,100 light years away (aka 24,600,000,000,000,000 miles from Earth)!
Astronomy programs are held on Wednesday, Thursday, and Saturday from May to September, with the grand finale being the Great Basin Astronomy Festival during the September new moon.
For more photos from Great Basin National Park, see our Instagram gallery.
Ely

Continuing 62 miles along the jagged Snake Range and sea of sagebrush, the town of Ely emerges. Founded as a stagecoach stop and trading post in the 1870s, it became a mining boomtown with cooper riches and a railroad that put it on the map in the early 1900s. Upwards of 100 nationalities flocked to Ely and the town still prides itself on its multicultural heritage with the motto, “Ely, where the world met and became one.”
It was the 2023 Great American Eclipse that brought us to Ely, Nevada, for their multi-day festival and perfect viewing of The Ring of Fire! Watching the moon slowly creep across the sun as the air chilled, the sky grew darker, dogs howled, and new friends gasped in unison was sheer magic! After the hour-long viewing, the merriment continued with a Punkin’ Chunkin’ medieval festival, town-wide cocktail crawl, and events all weekend long.
For fun, any day of the year, try these top things to do in Ely:
Ely Renaissance Village
Honoring their diverse community, the Ely Rennaissance Society has renovated 11 homes of a former mining camp and designed each one to reflect a different ethnicity of Ely’s early residents. Wandering between the villages of Basque, Slavic, Chinese, German, Italian, and many more styles of home, with their respective antiques and everyday items, gave an intimate window into each family’s cultural identity and version of the American dream. We highly recommend this museum and a tour from Glen, one of the people who has committed decades of his life to preserving this village!
Northern Nevada Railway

https://www.facebook.com/reel/3673560962969073
We hopped aboard Ole No. 98, a 114-year-old steam locomotive on the Nevada Northern Railway…America’s best-preserved standard-gauge short line and a complete rail facility! The railway workers were in period costumes and using tools from the days as a mining boomtown. Today it’s not prospectors, but train-fans from around the globe that come for this bucket-list ride.
To hear the whistle, feel the chug, smell the soot, and step back in time as you move from this 70-building train complex to the mining ghost town a few miles down the tracks, is unforgettable. Watch the video above for more on our short-line rail ride and check out their website for more of their themed experiences, from the Roaring 20s to their Haunted Ghost Train.
Ely Mural Walk

Learn about the history of Ely as you stroll through downtown, admiring their 20+ vibrant murals, touching on everything from the evolution of Ely’s transportation to the plight of its indigenous people. (“The Miss is Missing,” painted by a mother-daughter team from the Ely-Shoshone tribe is so moving!) Check out this free audio-guided tour or dial up the hotline below each mural and punch in the respective number to hear more about each piece.
Hit the Strip
With Hotel Nevada’s origins as a gambling getaway to Hollywood Stars, the strip has a retro-fabulous vibe. Follow the sidewalk stars to the hotel that started it all (if you’re staying there, the first drink is on them), and try your luck! Pop across the street to Jailhouse Lounge for mid-century cool vibes and cocktails, then end your night out at The Space at Taproot, Ely’s hottest new music venue.
OHV Ward Mountain

The Ely area has 11.4 million acres of BLM land, which means infinite recreation opportunities and OHV heaven. We rented a side-by-side from Eastern Nevada Adventures (right downtown) and within a mile of The Strip we were scaling mountain trails. We took a bite out of the Ward Mountain Adventure Loop, through sagebrush and mixed Pinyon juniper forest, and fantastic vistas of the Egan Range. Watch this awesome adventure!
Eureka

We pulled into the “Friendliest Town on the Loneliest Road,” and felt the good vibes immediately! Discovered in 1864 by silver prospectors, Eureka became Nevada’s second-fastest-growing mining town, with a very international population (notably Cornish, Chinese, Italian, and Basque). Their 50 mines and 17 smelters processed 700 tons of ore per day and enough wealth to create the fine architecture that still stands today.
Pick up a self-guided tour map to read about each of the marked buildings, like the European American Resources Building and the Eureka Opera House…among the Silver State’s best-preserved 19th-century theatre! We also loved that some buildings haven’t been renovated and just left to nature, with apple trees growing up through the middle!
Austin: Halfway on The Loneliest Road in America

It’s a 70-mile stretch between Eureka and Austin, and while there might not be other towns in between, there are a ton of points of interest in the roughly 20 miles leading up to Austin, so don’t miss these pitstops!
Hickison Petroglyph Recreation Area
The Western Shoshone people have been in this area for over 10,000 years with impressive rock art to show for it. Right along Nevada Route 50 you’ll see the big wooden BLM sign for Hickison Petroglyphs, leading you to the start of the 1.6-mile interpretive trail (and a lovely free camping area). These ancient paintings quickly reveal themselves, but keep going so you can discover more scenes and 360-degree views of the Big Smoky Valley and Toiyabe Mountain Range.
Travel Tip: Want more of Nevada’s vibrant Native American History? Head 26 miles south to Toquima Cave for some of the most vibrant pictographs left in North America.
Lucky Spur Saloon
Named “Best Bar in the Middle of Nowhere” by Men’s Health, Lucky Spur Saloon is straight out of a Western movie. About 18 miles off Nevada Route 50 and down a long dusty road, you’ll think you’re lost until you see a tall, tin windmill, emblazoned with ‘’Lucky Spur.” Order a bloody mary, pull up a saddle barstool, take in the views to Kingston Canyon, and try to hustle some cowboys at a game of pool.
Spencer Hot Springs

Did you know Nevada has more hot springs than any other state in the USA? For the most consistent and scenic on The Loneliest Road in America, you’ve gotta soak up Spencer Hot Springs. We took the six-mile detour down a dirt road and saw the steam rising over the four pools. The sun was setting so we did a quick change and hopped into the “cowboy tub” to soak up the 110-degree waters and sunset.
For a more natural tub and even hotter water (up to 130 degrees), most people head to the lower pools, but we loved the privacy and the wildlife viewing at the top. After sitting still in the moonlight for a while, six wild burros tiptoed to the water’s edge for a drink with us!
Little Blue Bird Turquoise and Jason’s Art Gallery

Civilization emerges again in the town of Austin, with a pretty church, general store, a couple of inns, and the gem of town…Little Blue Bird Turquoise & Jason’s Art Gallery. We walked into this false-front building from 1870 and the owner Duane looked up from polishing a stone to greet us. He and his wife are the silversmiths behind this rock-to-gem jewelry studio of 38 years. We got chatting and the next thing you know, Duane invited us to the back to see how they tumble, polish, and cut the stones into art. So cool!
Stokes Castle
On the cliff at the western edge of town, Stokes Castle stands testament to Austin’s lucrative silver mining past. Built as a vacation home and display of wealth by railroad mining magnate Anson Stokes, it was inspired by a Roman tower from his travels and made with hand-hewn local granite. The family lived here for less than a month, but 130 years later the public can still enjoy the striking exterior and scenic lookout point over Reese River Valley.
Middlegate Station

Sixty miles later, the road cuts through a series of mountain passes that the early land surveyors and Pony Express teams called Uppergate, Middlegate, and Lowergate. You’ll know when you hit Middlegate Station, because it looks like a time capsule, with its wagon wheels, antique cars, telephone booths, old-time gas pumps (still working!), and big BAR sign. We walked in and it just got better, with hundreds of dollar bills pinned to the ceiling and decades of Western knickknacks on the walls.
A place this unique doesn’t even need to have good food or service to warrant a visit, but to our surprise, they had both! We got chatting with the co-owner of 38 years, and she said five generations of her family still work here and live on the premises. Her short-order cook made us one of the best veggie burgers with onion rings! and we left with the biggest smiles on our faces.
The Shoe Tree
Two and a half miles east of Middlegate Station are the remnants of the famed Shoe Tree and its resilient younger sister. Legend has it that a newlywed couple was camping under the cottonwood tree and got in a tiff. She threatened to leave him, but he replied with something to the effect of “If you do, you’ll have to go barefoot,” and threw her shoes in the tree! He sped off to Middlegate Station and the bartender convinced him to go makeup.
A year later, when they had their first child, they returned to the tree and threw the kid’s shoes up there too. So began a tradition of thousands of travelers chucking their kicks into the boughs. Sadly, vandals cut down the original Cottonwood, but the tradition continues in a neighboring tree. Go ahead, hurl yours up there, and join the legacy!
Travel Tip: Middlegate Station allows you to camp for free, for as many days as you’d like! With great food, the occasional band, and stories for miles, it will make for a memorable overnight.
Fallon

By Loneliest Road in America standards, Fallon is a metropolis! There are 9,000 people spread across this verdant valley (largely due to the naval airbase). Set in what was an ancient lake, the Fallon area still has important wetlands and nutrient-rich soil for farming, uncommon in the surrounding desert. These resources made it an important area to early Native Americans, who left behind more noteworthy art and relics. So whether it’s historic art, good restaurants, wildlife watching, ATV adventures, or craft whiskey, the Fallon area has a lot to keep you busy.
The Grid Market & Brewery
The popular Grid restaurant opened up a new brewery and expanded the space with a whiskey and wine tasting room, poke eatery, bar games, and boutique shops. It’s an unsuspecting mashup of businesses that draws locals and out-of-towners for a unique night of eating, shopping, and playing. We got a fantastic vegan poke bowl, drank a flight of craft beers, and played shuffleboard for a great night.
Travel Tip: For more great restaurants in Fallon, try The Slanted Porch, Maine Street Cafe, and Telegraph Coffee.
Sand Mountain
Twenty-five miles southeast of Fallon, a little Sahara Desert appears. When ancient Lake Lahontan dried up 9,000 years ago it left behind thousands of acres of sand dunes. Renowned in the ATV community, this BLM recreation area is an off-roading paradise. Buddy the Camper is far from a 4×4, so we walked the dunes at sunset and thoroughly enjoyed the sand between our toes and watching the parade of headlights zigzag down the soft mountain.
Frey Ranch & Distillery

Distilleries are popping up around the country, but it’s rare to find one that is a true estate distillery that can boast ground-to-glass whiskey, with all the ingredients grown on-site. The Frey family are fifth-generation Nevada farmers who have put their skills together to create the state’s first official distillery. Driving under the tunnel of trees, surrounded by waves of grain, we could already tell this place was special, then the mansion of a former Nevada Senator and a beautiful distillery appeared!
The Freys’ right handyman Sam gave us an excellent tasting of their top-notch spirits (ever tried oat whiskey or Irish-peet smoked single malts before? So good!) Then he walked us around the distillery to see their Vendome copper still on full roar, their vats of mashes bubbling away, and 1000s of white oak barrels aging their whiskeys to perfection. We left with a bottle of their straight rye, flipped it over, and saw their slogan ”Be good to the land and the land will be good to you.”
Grimes Point & Archaeological Area

Listed on the National Register of Historic Places and Nevada’s first National Recreation Trail, Grimes Point and Hidden Cave offer incredible insights into the area’s earliest inhabitants, the Paiute-Shoshone. We walked the path between desert-varnished boulders and marveled at the remarkably intact petroglyphs on the shiny sunbaked rocks. Continuing a little down the road, we hiked up the mountainside and into the series of caves carved by ancient Lake Lahontan and used as primitive shelter and storage. To see the famed Hidden Cave, which was used as a cache 3,500 years ago, and discovered with unbroken and perfectly arranged artifacts, join the BLM’s free public tours on the second and fourth Saturday of each month.
Stillwater National Wildlife Refuge
A few miles east of Fallon, the Stillwater wetlands draw so many migratory birds (hundreds of thousands across 290 different species!) that it’s listed as an area of International Importance by the Western Hemisphere Shorebird Reserve Network. We arrived just after sunrise and drove the roads between the canals and ponds. We hopped out to explore their boardwalk and series of short trails and saw egrets, tundra swans, and countless ducks. Come at sunrise or sunset to see the most bird activity and don’t forget to read the interpretive signs for more about the bird migrations and the ways the Paiute people used these natural resources to thrive.
Virginia City (Loneliest Road in America…Essential Detour!)

On its very own scenic highway, 20 miles off of Nevada Route 50, lies our favorite and one of the best-preserved Western towns in the USA…Virginia City! When prospectors struck the Comstock silver lode of 1859, this place went from a remote mountain outpost to a cosmopolitan city with opera houses, state-of-art schools, hospitals, 100+ saloons, and leading newspapers (with Mark Twain on staff!) Like many old western towns, Virginia had a massive fire, but when their blaze hit in 1875, they were rolling in 7 million tons of silver, so they just built back better. Today the town still shines with grand Victorian architecture, wooden boardwalks, and buckets of Western charm.
Historic Fourth Ward Museum
To get a grand overview of the history of Virginia City in a beautiful and authentic setting, head to the Historic Fourth Ward Museum. When this Victorian Second Empire-style building opened in 1876, it was amongst the most advanced schools in the West, with state-of-the-art heating, ventilation, and sanitation systems. When mining faded away, their population of 1,000 students whittled to a few dozen, and by the 1930s the school closed and the building remained shut for 50 years. With a grant from the Nevada Humanities community, it has been restored as an excellent museum. Learn about the town’s mining history, advanced city planning, educational system, and its famous residents with an hour wandering these hallowed halls.
Looking for more museums and a taste of the 1860s opulence? Try the Mackay Mansion down the street.
Virginia City Hat Maker & Bootmaker

Wandering the shops along South C Street is a step back in time, but no place upholds the craftsmanship of the Old West like Pioneer Emporium & Virginia City Hat Maker. Pascal Baboulin is a fourth-generation hatmaker from Switzerland who fell in love with a Virginia City girl and she encouraged him to bring this art back to town. On the fly, we watched Pascal sculpt beaver felt with steam, massaging, and finesse into a gorgeous headpiece. To further nurture the art of Western fashion, he shares the space with Jake Houston, a custom cowboy bootmaker. The list of country stars waiting in line for his bedazzled kicks is as impressive as the shoes themselves!
Saloon Crawl

While there may not be 100 saloons left in Virginia City, a dozen of the finest remain. Don’t miss the Bucket of Blood for mid-day live music and glorious sunsets over the mountains. The Silver Queen’s name proves true with a towering lady made of 3,261 silver dollars and the tallest back bar in the world! (If you’re into the paranormal, this hotel and bar has been on Ghost Adventures three times for the murdered mistress who still haunts the building.)
The Old Washoe Club doesn’t look the grandest on the ground floor, but it was home to the Millionaires Club and members like Ulysses S Grant frequented their lavish and exclusive lounge upstairs. For an atmospheric bar with good grub, The Red Dog serves pizza with their suds.
Priscilla Pennyworth’s Old-time Photos
Sure getting dressed up in Western garb and taking black-and-white photos is a totally touristy thing to do, but we’re so glad we did! The gals at Priscilla Pennyworth’s were fantastic in helping pick out costumes and poses to strut our stuff like John Wayne and Vera Miles. We hopped into the Virginia City Bath House tub with just the essentials (hat, whiskey, and shotgun) and had some good clean fun, plus three beautifully printed photos to take home. Click through the gallery above for more photos from Virginia City.
Carson City

The road was lonely no more, we made it to the capital of Nevada! Just 15 miles from Virginia City, this accessible valley became the hub for transporting and minting this wealth in the 1800s. During the Civil War, Lincoln saw the area as a valuable partner in the Union’s fight and granted Nevada statehood with Carson City as its capital. Today it’s one of the quaintest little capitals with some impressive sites.
Nevada State Museum
Set in the Historic Carson City Mint, the Nevada State Museum has all your essential topics covered (Native American history, geology, geography, mining, and art of all kinds). Here, you won’t just be wandering stark galleries but exploring a ghost town, mine shaft, coin-making operation, and more. Highly recommend!
Kit Carson Trail
To bring this tiny town to state-capital status, grand homes were built for the new government officials and Comstock millionaires of the 19th century. Follow this curated 2.5-mile route through the historic West Side district to learn about the Victorian homes, museums, churches, and the people behind them. Use the interactive audio guide, download the map, and join a Nevada State Museum docent walk to bring Carson City’s earliest and finest buildings to life.
Carson City Triathlon: Drink, Dine, Dip

From the Washoe Native Americans to the California Gold Rush miners, Carson City Hot Springs has been a staple for the area’s recreation and relaxation. In recent years they’ve leveled it up with the help of some new neighbors and a little humor at the tourism board. If you’re feeling up to the challenge, the Carson City Triathlon involves the low-impact sports of drinking, dining, and soaking.
We started at the mining-themed springs, with some of the purest hot spring water in the world (no chemicals, heat, or tap water added), and took in the waters flowing from the pick axe waterfall and the tipping miner’s trolley. Just across the parking lot was Shoetree Brewing (of Middlegate Station fame), where we had fantastic IPAs and Sour beers brewed by this brother team. The final stretch was at Sassafras restaurant to enjoy their global-inspired, vegan-friendly menu and art-filled space. Best triathlon you can do without breaking a sweat!
Brewery Arts Center
Housed in the oldest commercial building in Nevada (est 1865), the Carson Brewery has gone from making suds to printing news to nurturing artists. For the past 40+ years, this community art center has hosted classes, performances, exhibitions, and parties that bring creativity and connection to the capital. We popped in just as they were closing, but volunteer Patricia Best couldn’t help but tell us about the first annual Mural Festival that was storming the town. Clearly, their creative expression extends beyond the brewery walls. Check out their events calendar to see what’s on while you are in town and what creative types you might meet.
Lake Tahoe: The End of Route 50 Nevada

Nevada’s Route 50 ends along the shores of the stunning Lake Tahoe. It’s such a popular place that it doesn’t exactly qualify as a part of The Loneliest Road in America, but being among the largest alpine lakes in the country, with thousands of acres of wilderness areas, you can still find that serenity and solitude to round out your road trip!
Hug the shore to Cave Rock trail where you can get sweeping views of the Sierra Nevadas and a turquoise lake that extends beyond the state line. While we didn’t make it to Lake Tahoe this trip (we headed south to Genoa, Nevada’s Oldest Town), the Tahoe area is where I spent every fall and spring as a kid, so we can wholeheartedly recommend a couple of days relaxing on this stunning lake for your Route 50 finale!
Where to Stay on the Loneliest Road in America (east to west)

While you could happily stay in any of the towns above, Ely, Fallon, Virginia City, and Lake Tahoe offer the most things to do and are nicely spaced apart. That said if you have an RV or camping setup, Nevada is a dream for fantastic free campsites.
The state is more than 80% public land (for reference, Texas is 4% public land) and the Bureau of Land Management and National Forest do a great job maintaining campgrounds, often with bathrooms, picnic tables, and firepits, without charging fees. As RV owners, we did a mix of both city hotels and remote camping and thought it was the perfect blend. Here are the best places to stay on the Loneliest Road in America:
Stargazer Inn, Baker/Great Basin National Park
Great Basin National Park has great campgrounds, but for more amenities and lots of small-town charm, stay in nearby Baker at The Stargazer Inn. They have nicely updated rooms and are expanding their offerings in 2024. The Bristlecone General Store is the heart of the property with gourmet foods, charming gifts, and handy information to plan your adventures around Great Basin National Park.
Hotel Nevada, Ely
Ely’s most iconic hotel and gambling hall, Hotel Nevada has been a fixture on the strip since 1928. For Hollywood stars en route to Sun Valley Ski Vacations, Hotel Nevada was the most fashionable midway point. Rooms give a nod to their star-studded ties, with suites themed to different old-time actors. Before we checked into “Hoot Gibson’s” room, we were welcomed with a complimentary margarita and craft beer of our choice that set the tone for a night of fun. If you like retro vibes and a piece of history, Hotel Nevada is your Ace of Spades.
Spencer Hot Springs Camping, Greater Austin
With four hot spring pools to choose from and big mountain vistas, this wild camping area is a delight. It’s a true boondocking experience so know that there are no facilities (ie bathrooms, picnic tables, etc) and to come prepared. To help preserve this precious place, follow hot springs etiquette and park at least 100 yards from the water. Cost for camping and spring access? Free.
Holiday Inn Express, Fallon
Fallon doesn’t really have boutique hotel options, so The Holiday Inn Express is the best of the mainstream lodging. The clean room and complimentary breakfast made it a solid launchpad for our greater Fallon adventures.
Sand Mountain Camping, Greater Fallon
If you’re looking for natural beauty, have the gear to camp, and dig ATVing, this dune area is an incredible option outside of Fallon. FYI there is a bit of a party scene here with happy-go-lucky ATVers, but it’s a huge camping area so you can easily tuck away or join the merriment. You need to buy a recreation pass in advance to use the area, but $40 for up to seven days is a pretty darn good deal.
Tahoe House Hotel, Virginia City
Set right on the main drag of Virginia City and in a building built in 1859, the Tahoe House Hotel has recently been restored with contemporary amenities, while maintaining its historic charm. Love their new bar and that their rooms have balconies to take in the ambiance of town.
Edgewood Tahoe Resort
This 150-year-old lakefront ranch, Edgewood Tahoe has been reimagined to meet LEED-certified and five-star standards. Stay in the lodge or their luxe cabin suites, dine at their top-notch restaurants, and enjoy the best of lake life!
Loneliest Road in America/NV Hwy 50 Survival Guide & Passport

To help you navigate to the best stops and commemorate your bold journey, Travel Nevada has created the Loneliest Road in America Survival Guide and Passport. Pick up a guide at the visitor center in any of the towns or have one sent to you before your trip. And keep your eye out for the signs that say “Official Stamp Location” in store windows. Get inked in at least 5 of the 8 towns and send in the back page to receive an official Highway 50 Survivor souvenir and certificate to commemorate your fantastic journey across the Loneliest Road in America!
Many thanks to Travel Nevada for believing we could survive the Loneliest Road in America and do its story justice. To show our appreciation and help preserve the cultural and natural value of the region, we’ve donated to the Nevada chapter of the Trust for Public Land and the Lincoln Highway Association. For more information on the route and inspiration for all your Nevada adventures, be sure to check out TravelNevada.com and our big IG Nevada Highlights reel.
Taylor Swift reclaims ownership of her first six albums from Shamrock Capital
Taylor Swift has successfully acquired the master recordings of her first six studio albums from investment firm Shamrock Capital.
The deal brings to a close one of the music industry’s most high-profile ownership disputes.
Swift confirmed the news on Friday (May 30) in a handwritten letter to her fans.
The transaction involves the master rights to Swift’s albums Taylor Swift, Fearless, Speak Now, Red, 1989, and Reputation – recordings that have been at the center of a six-year battle over artist ownership rights.
The deal represents a remarkable full-circle moment for Swift. The masters sale saga started when Scooter Braun’s Ithaca Holdings acquired Big Machine Label Group (including those six Taylor Swift masters) in 2019.
Ithaca Holdings then sold the master rights to Taylor Swift’s first six studio albums to Shamrock in 2020.
In a statement issued today, Scooter Braun said: “I am happy for her.”
Swift’s response to the sale of her masters was unprecedented in the music industry.
She embarked on an ambitious re-recording project, creating new “Taylor’s Versions” of her classic albums that she would fully own.
Swift has successfully re-recorded four of the six disputed albums: Fearless (Taylor’s Version), Red (Taylor’s Version), Speak Now (Taylor’s Version), and 1989 (Taylor’s Version). Only Reputation and her self-titled debut album remain unreleased as re-recordings.
In her letter to fans on Friday, Swift called the deal with Shamrock her “greatest dream come true”.
Added Swift: “To my fans, you know how important this has been to me – so much so that I meticulously re-recorded and released 4 of my albums, calling them Taylor’s Version.”
Financial details of the buyback have not been disclosed. Variety reports that it was a “nine-figure sum”.
Page Six suggested earlier this month that the deal could be valued between $600 million and $1 billion.
This would represent a significant increase from the $405 million that Shamrock Capital paid Ithaca Holdings for the masters in November 2020.
Swift was the biggest revenue-generating recording artist globally in 2024 according to IFPI data. Her recent Eras Tour became the highest-grossing concert tour in history.
“All I’ve ever wanted was the opportunity to work hard enough to be able to one day purchase my music outright with no strings attached, no partnership, with full autonomy. I will be forever grateful to everyone at Shamrock Capital for being the first people to ever offer this to me.”
Taylor Swift
In her letter to fans on Friday, Swift said: “All I’ve ever wanted was the opportunity to work hard enough to be able to one day purchase my music outright with no strings attached, no partnership, with full autonomy.
“I will be forever grateful to everyone at Shamrock Capital for being the first people to ever offer this to me. The way they’ve handled every interaction we’ve had has been honest, fair, and respectful.
“This was a business deal to them, but I really felt like they saw it for what it was to me: My memories and my sweat and my handwriting and my decades of dreams. I am endlessly thankful. My first tattoo might just be a huge shamrock in the middle of my forehead.”
Music Business Worldwide
Innovation is Not Just an Option, It’s a Responsibility
ISO 56001, the certifiable standard for innovation management systems, has now been published. This milestone represents over 15 years of collaborative efforts in international standardization. I have been fortunate to be involved in this project from the very beginning.
Exploring Beyond Virtuality: The Podium Cafe Meet-Ups
Maybe everybody thinks they were born at exactly the right time, but personally I can make a pretty good case. I can say I remember the 60s (maybe a couple days?), I saw Apocalypse Now! in theaters, and a bunch of other stuff, but all of that is debatable. What is not is that people my age have the healthiest understanding of modern technology, especially the internet. We can remember clearly what life was like before it. [Funny story, I used to play basketball in my friend’s driveway while, I found out much later, his dad was helping to invent the internet, sometimes just 100 feet away in his home office.] We have the pre-internet perspective of how life was, and I’m not just talking about being able to use a rotary phone.
And yet, I was young and childless enough (then) to be able to engage with the ‘net to a reasonable degree, particularly social media. Starting as it did in 2006, the Podium Cafe was populated for a while by people unaccustomed to making online friends. We were the last generation to be suspicious of relationships that didn’t form face-to-face, but as opposed to our parents, we were open to the idea that it wasn’t necessarily a recipe for disaster, on par with picking up hitchhikers at night on the freeway.
So because this is a sports fan community, and a rather civil one compared to the ball sports world, we inevitably started planning in-person gatherings at races. I personally have been at six events where we got organized as a community and had a solid quorum, which are rounded up below. I know other PdC folks have done similar things. And because all of my experiences wound up confirming the real, meat-space-style friendships that I thought I was making online with you guys, I want to spend some time reliving the events we shared. Here we go!
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2009 Amgen Tour of California
Background: Being in Seattle is not a great way to connect to pro cycling, at least logistically. You can meet the occasional athlete (hi Tyler Farrar!), but the events themselves are far away in both space and time. For a while, though, the Amgen Tour of California occupied a spot in the World Tour calendar, first as an elite February training stage race, and later as a more intense, but less well attended alternative to the Giro d’Italia in May. And it was a short flight to Seattle.
The Gathering(s): The race moved around a lot, up and down California, a state roughly the size of Italy plus Switzerland, but the time trial was held in the wine country above Santa Barbara, and the next day’s start was nearby(ish), so we plunked down at a bungalow in Los Olivos on the ITT course, and hosted a larger gathering that same night. Sui Juris, Crashdan, Jimbo and I shared the rental house, and I think we even made Crashdan sit on a bike once. Gavia, LyneL, Clydesdale, NikkiCyp, and a few more whose names elude me joined in the fun. This may explain the lack of clearer memories:
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Clearly those narrow frames hindered my vision and I had no idea what was happening.
Racing Highlight: It was an ITT, so it was more like a steady stream of fun moments. I guess you could say seeing Lance Armstrong race at a time when it didn’t (yet) make us angry?
Non-Racing Highlight: I could take the high road and say catching a friendly word with Tom Boonen on the startline in Santa Clarita the next day. But if I’m being honest, it’s Sui Juris losing his car keys, touching off some anxious moments, only to find them sitting on the trunk of the car. Glad he chose the white Oldsmobuick and not the red Mustang or whatever passed for a sporty rental option in podunky Saint Babs International Airport back then.
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Links: Here is an announcement of festivities and an ITT thread, from Crashdan.
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2010 Ronde van Vlaanderen
Background: One of the highlights of my life — which you are really supposed to reserve for family events… but! My brother was with us, we rode the cobbles together, and he met Fabian Cancellara at the baggage claim! So this counts. I arrived a week early to play at being a journalist at the pre-Ronde warmups, and Mr Van P showed up in time for the gathering to get rolling, including riding the Flanders Sportive the day before the big event.
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The Gathering(s): Flanders Eve, at the Pub (now called Martiko), right on the Grote Maarkt. Solid turnout including Jens, tedvdw (a/k/a Superted), JSallee and his friend (E., forgetting her pdc handle) who got the hero photos, Omnevilnihil and his friend Celerity, Mathieu G and friend and their Quebec flag, Albertina (who we rode with that week), and of course Sui Juris. All met for the first time, except for my bro and Sui, and tedvdw if you count sharing a pad starting the night before. Pete and I were late because we rode so goddam slow at the Sportive, in part because we had to hit every warmup hut in between snow flurries. Also the 150k sportive on the old course caught nearly all the cobbles, which I ceased to regard in purely benign terms. But being cleaned up and dragging our carcasses over to that toasty-warm pub, feasting on stoofvlees, frites and trappist ales, while meeting this group of PdC first-ballot hall of famers… just unforgettable.
Subsequent gatherings the next day in the same spot for the Women’s race departure, the Muur van Geraardsbergen for the rest of the day, the GP Dottignies the next day, and the Scheldeprijs on Wednesday. Probably some other stuff, lost in the fog of time and trappist ales.
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Racing Highlight: Take a wild guess. Recall that we are talking 2010.
Non-Racing Highlight: A lot to choose from, but I will go with the calm after the race went by, having descended the Kapelmuur and parked ourselves at some outdoor tables along the Vesten (mid-Muur), with beer service from the adjacent pub, and watching the finale and aftermath on a giant screen, tingling over what we just experienced. What a day. Even better than talking to Cav in the HTC team car as they got stuck behind a truck during a recon of the Koppenberg.
Links:
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2013 Louisville CX Worlds
Background: Cyclocross had crept into my Flanders-obsessed brain by 2010 — thankfully, as it was a great era in the sport’s history. It started catching on in the US too, with CrossVegas bringing the pros over (ask me about Bart Wellens racing in Seattle!) and the amateur scene catching fire, including my neighborhood race ranking #1 in the world by participation (over 1000 finishers this year!). So when Louisville announced a bid to host the Worlds in 2013, I thought it seemed bonkers at first. As the event approached, though, I got familiar with their new, cleverly designed Eva Bandman CX park, and it made sense.
Then the event arrived and boy, did things get crazy. Heavy rain and snow swelled the Ohio River beyond its banks, and what seemed like a sweet venue on many levels was scheduled to be submerged on Sunday, when the elite events were set to go off. On Friday, while I was in the middle of a one-on-one interview with Marianne Vos (I know!!), word came down that all four events were happening Saturday to wrap up before the waters rose. That meant four events back-to-back, with junior men, open/elite women, U23 men and elite men in what would go down as quite a day for the sport. Kind of cool, unless you ask any fans from Europe booked on Saturday flights, sneaking over to catch the elites Sunday. Somewhere in Belgium, in a Sven Nys Supporters Pub, you can hear people muttering “fuck Louisville!” into their beer.
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The Gathering(s): Also bonkers! We rented a large house about 10 miles away, so we could have a great space, even a hot tub! But the snow Thursday made a holy mess of things, and the planned party fizzled. But we had a post-race huddle close to the event at a place called Sergios, packed to the gills and boasting a huge, Belgium-facing beer list, so it worked out nonetheless.
And of course we were hanging out at the decisive hill location, our PdC banner on display, with Sui Juris, Ant1, Megabeth, Drew, Elvisgoat, his son (future major shredder), and lots of other friends with or without PdC handles.
Racing Highlight: The Women’s race was it. The course started off covered in snow and ice, and the tricky hill was just non-stop action of the slipperiest kind. By the men’s race it had melted, and while still muddy and slick, it was more predictable. Nys winning the elusive rainbow though…
Non-Racing Highlight: Uh, well, with Sunday off and nobody flying out til Monday, we hung out all day drinking (etc.), watching the Super Bowl, and hitting golf balls in the snow.
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Post event wrap, where I am proud to have typed the sentence Mathieu van der Poel is almost certain to be a guy who, in a decade, we look back and say “I saw him when he was a teenager.
2015 Richmond Road Worlds
Background: Following Louisville, the decision to award the Road Worlds to a middling Southern city was a complete head-scratcher. The Virginia capital had no particular connection to the sport, and we all feared that the terrain would make for dull racing. At least when the Worlds came to Colorado Springs in 1986, the culture and terrain were a clear fit. We didn’t complain though, before, during or after.
The Gathering(s): Having learned from Louisville, the PdC House was all about location, and we ended up in a row house just a block or three from the finishing circuit course. While it ended up being an open house most days, the official PdC event was at the New York Deli, a sprawling indoor/outdoor pub not far from home base with the food and beer list worthy of our crowd. This was perhaps our biggest gathering of all, though as usual I was not sober enough to track something as difficult as a head count, but between the official event and many hours along the 23rd street cobbles it was quite a crew. I can’t possibly name them all, but Crashdan, Jimbo, Sui Juris, Drew, Jens, Megabeth, JSallee and Ant1 were at PdC House, with appearances from many, many PdC regulars: Elvisgoat, Majope, Lyne, Hapagal, (Joy), French Kheldar, … the failure of my memory is a recurring theme in this post.
Racing Highlight: I’ll default to the last race, the Elite Men, with peak crowd energy and the big moves happening on 23rd Street, in view from where we stood.
Non-Racing Highlight: Antoine’s beer handups were a microcosm of the weekend, just easy, awesome fun. Also Jimbo accosted Eddy Merckx on our way back from the pub party and Eddy… let’s just say he has mastered the art at spotting and quickly eluding drunken admirers.
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2017 Ronde van Vlaanderen
Background: Seven years wiser, we returned to Flanders for a second week of watching and riding. The course had changed to its current iteration, and the internet had brought all the nuances of the Ronse-Kluisbergen-Oudenaarde triangle into our homes. I had been riding my trainer to a video circuit in there, picking up the Koppenberg, Oude Kruisberg, Oude Kwaremont and Paterberg. 2010 was exploration; 2017 was confirmation.
The Gathering(s): I don’t remember declaring any formal thing. Jens rented a spectacular place in Ronse with lots of outdoor space, a giant (working!) hot tub, a walk-in fridge stocked to the gills with beer, all in the heart of the Flemish Ardennes. The party didn’t need any declaring. Drew, Jimbo, Sui Juris, Megabeth and Jens were the regulars, welcoming WillJ, Broerie, Pigeons, Susie H., and my/Drew’s high school friend Paul to the perpetual hot tub.
Racing Highlight: This was another unforgettable Flanders, with the tension of Phiippe Gilbert’s way-too-early attack building steadily from his first Paterberg pass to his last, aided by a huge screen showing the various developments. Gilbert never had much of a gap, which made for 90 minutes or so of nailbiting fun.
Non-Racing Highlight: The riding. Which one… it’s so hard to choose. the options were Broerie’s Secret Ardennes Circuit, Will’s curated West Flanders History Tour, and the Paris-Roubaix sportive. I’ll go with the middle one. Injured Drew was able to trail by car what was our version of Gent-Wevelgem’s history tour that they have pivoted to recently. It was more than a bike ride.
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2022 Fayetteville CX Worlds
Background: Our cup ranneth over. For some reason, without many American athletes, we got another round of ‘Cross worlds, brought to Fayetteville, Arkansas by the Walton family of Walmart fame. They have lavished some of their wealth on cycling causes, and who am I to complain?
The Gathering(s): With kids in the fold, this was more of a family affair. The hanging was by the course.
Racing Highlight: Hard to pick one. The general theme was that the venue, a pretty dreamy network of trails, had a lot of vertical, essentially a big hill that the race course went up and down various ways. But a warm, dry spell made for fast, tight racing.
Non-Racing Highlight: Just a lot of good friend time. Fayetteville is probably fun if you know it, but we didn’t.
Links: Just the race recap.
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Please, jump in here with additional details and tales of your own meet-ups with fellow community members. And of course, the Cafe may be stopping but the gatherings will go on! Please stay in touch y’all!
ICC Releases Arrest Warrant for Vladimir Putin Regarding Ukraine Situation
The International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday, accusing him of war crimes over the invasion of Ukraine.
Putin and Maria Lvova-Belova, Russia’s commissioner for children’s rights, are both wanted by the ICC for unlawfully deporting and transporting Ukrainian children to Russia.
The arrest warrants mark the first international charges to be brought since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022 and the first against a leader of a country with a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council.
“This is an important moment in the process of justice,” the ICC president, Judge Piotr Hofmański, said in a video statement.
Hofmański noted that, per procedures, the court’s chief prosecutor had presented his case against the pair to a panel of pretrial judges, who concluded that there were “credible allegations” against them.
The ICC does not recognize diplomatic immunity for leaders on charges of war crimes, crimes against humanity, or genocide.
Russia is not a party to the Rome Statute, the treaty that gave rise to the ICC, and is not likely to turn over Putin or Lvova-Belova for prosecution.
“The International Criminal Court has issued an arrest warrant against Vladimir Putin,” Dmitry Medvedev, former Russian presient and current deputy chairman of the Security Council of Russia, wrote on Twitter. “No need to explain WHERE this paper should be used🧻.”
But the charges, which do not expire, will make the pair international pariahs.
The 123 countries that have ratified the Rome Statute are urged to arrest any suspects in their territory.
“The ICC is doing its part of work. As a court of law, the judges issued arrest warrants. Their execution depends on international cooperation,” Hofmański said.