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Semafor Scoops, Elon Revisionism, McCormick’s Curse
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Happy Friday. You’re reading the Daily Courant, our afternoon guide to what’s new at Puck.
Today, Dylan Byers delivers the goods on Justin and Ben Smith’s Semafor, whose globe-spanning ambitions will begin with a local focus on Washington—the site of their highly-anticipated “non-launch” launch party, tonight.
Plus, below the fold, Tina Nguyen examines whether “Dave” McCormick or Dr. Oz will suffer the greater pyrrhic victory in Pennsylvania. And Teddy Schleifer joins Peter to discuss Elon Musk’s crazy past few years—how a guy running an underperforming public company became the world’s richest man and divisive political icon.
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Later tonight, Justin Smith will open his home in Washington's baronial Kalorama neighborhood for an “informal get together” to celebrate Semafor, the new global media start-up that he and Ben Smith plan to launch this fall. The event, which is “not a launch party,” according to the invitation, is nevertheless among the most buzzed-about shindigs on the White House Correspondents Dinner circuit this year—largely because, three and a half months after the Smiths announced their start up, and then semi-breathlessly kept announcing it in a series of early leaks, almost no one in media or politics has any idea what it's going to look like, who's going to be writing for it, or how it intends to differentiate itself and follow through on its promise of better serving the 200 million college-educated, English-reading people who, according to the Smiths, are underserved by the myriad English-language news organizations that already exist.
After the early press wave, The Smiths went underground and began the hard work of raising a business from scratch. They started soliciting capital from family offices and ultra-high-net-worth individuals. They eventually announced hires, such as Caitlin Roman, a former Athletic executive, to run product; Mark Wilkie, the former Buzzfeed C.T.O., to run technology; Rachel Oppenheim, formerly of The New York Times Company, to oversee revenue; Gina Chua, formerly the executive editor of Reuters, to become Ben’s deputy editor; and Steve Clemons, formerly of The Atlantic, to oversee events. Like everyone else running a new venture, the Smiths missed on some things and learned along the way. And spent zillions of hours with models and lawyers...
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| FOUR STORIES WE'RE TALKING ABOUT |
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| A MAGA Casualty? |
| Notes on Dr. Oz’s battle against former beloved hedge fund titan David McCormick for the hearts and minds of the Rust Belt. |
| TINA NGUYEN |
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| Elon's Revisionist History |
| Puck's Schleifer joins Peter to recap Musk’s crazy past few years—from running an underperforming public company (Tesla) to becoming the putative owner of Twitter. |
| PETER HAMBY |
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| Zaslav's Hatchet Man |
| Warner Bros. Discovery’s $3 billion fiscal problem gives rise to an anxiety-inducing question: Who gets the chop? C.F.O. Gunnar Wiedenfels is dropping hints. |
| MATTHEW BELLONI |
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| Tesla Stockpocalypse |
| Securing Twitter with Tesla stock leaves Musk vulnerable to a punishing margin call. Will Tesla shareholders pay for his Twitter folly? |
| WILLIAM D. COHAN |
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