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Oprah has endured as a weight-loss icon. Not even GLP-1s can change that.

Nothing has been more earthshaking than the meteoric rise of GLP-1 drugs for weight loss in the health industry — except perhaps one woman: Oprah Winfrey.

Just when we thought weight loss meds had hit Peak Hype, Winfrey has entered the chat, releasing her latest book, “Enough: Your Health, Your Weight, and What It’s Like To Be Free,” cowritten with Dr. Ania Jastreboff. The book catalogs her seemingly on-again, off-again, now committed relationship to the medication, starting in 2023.

It also comes after her full-throated endorsement of the medications. Winfrey’s embrace of GLP-1s signals a decisive shift away from willpower-based weight loss and toward a medical model that is defining the American wellness zeitgeist.

“She’s giving people permission to talk about it,” said Dr. Holly Wyatt, an endocrinologist who specializes in weight management and metabolism. “It validates what the doctors and scientists have been saying for years, but Oprah brought it to the public in a way that people really heard it.”

How Oprah remains a weight loss icon

Winfrey secured her status as a health authority from early in her career with a unique empathy toward personal weight loss stories.

Her eponymous talk show provided a rare safe space for overweight people to open up about their experiences, said Sabrina Strings, author of “Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia.”

“It was probably the only place you could go in public and not be shamed as long as you were repentant,” she told Business Insider.

A key part of the weight-loss narratives on her show — including Winfrey’s own experience — is the redemption arc, Strings said, offering a vulnerable perspective on how people felt about gaining and losing weight.

That’s particularly poignant in a time when celebs like Serena Williams, Lizzo, and Queen Latifah once pushed back against body shaming — but have lately been called out for promoting weight loss products or routines. Black women have been a particular audience for this new era of marketing, Strings wrote in her blog.

Winfrey has spent decades leveraging her business savvy to make her personal struggle a source of strength and profit.

“She’s open in saying ‘I want to be thin and I have a path to do that,'” Strings said. “That’s why she remains an icon for weight loss in the age of Ozempic.”

Driving the ‘Wagon of Fat’

Three moments explain why Winfrey still moves the weight-loss market. It started with a little red wagon.

In 1988, Winfrey made TV history by sharing her recent weight loss, represented by 67 pounds of animal fat in a Radio Flyer, in the most-watched episode of the already hit show (even beating out later career-highlight interviews with Michael Jackson and Meghan Markle).

In response, liquid diets saw unprecedented success as viewers reached for the products Winfrey credited for helping her shed the pounds. It was an early instance of the “Oprah Effect” that appearing on her show or among her recommendations could lead to almost overnight success.

Decades later, Oprah said the wagon of fat was one of her biggest regrets, and apologized for what she described as her role in shame-centered diet culture.

Dr. Oz makes the mainstream

Starting around 2004, a charismatic heart surgeon, Dr. Mehmet Oz, began appearing on Oprah’s show.

Across more than 50 episodes (and later his own show backed by Oprah’s production company), Oz solidified the “Ask a Doctor” era of TV as audiences clamored for the MD’s advice on everything from supplements to cancer risk.

He also courted controversy over the years through lucrative partnerships with questionable weight-loss products and through hotly criticized statements about COVID-19.


Dr. Oz

Dr. Oz, a former staple of Oprah’s talk show through the 2000s, now works for the Trump Administration alongside Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Celal Gunes/Anadolu via Getty Images



Oz is now the administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, appointed to the position by President Donald Trump shortly after the 2024 election.

‘I Love Bread:’ the WeightWatchers era (and breakup)

In the mid-2010s, Winfrey took on a new role as defender of our right to enjoy carbs.

As keto and Atkins diets were exploding in popularity, she backed WeightWatchers, snapping up 10% of shares and becoming the face of the company in an ad proclaiming her love of bread.


Oprah Winfrey speaks during Oprah's 2020 Vision: Your Life in Focus Tour presented by WW (Weight Watchers Reimagined) at Chase Center on February 22, 2020

Oprah Winfrey speaks during Oprah’s 2020 Vision: Your Life in Focus Tour presented by WW (Weight Watchers Reimagined) at Chase Center on February 22, 2020

Steve Jennings/Getty Images



SNL and other internet parodies had a field day, but WeightWatchers, then struggling to compete in an increasingly competitive industry, increased its value by 1200% over the subsequent three years.

It wasn’t happily ever after, however. Winfrey announced she was leaving WeightWatchers in 2024. Stocks immediately tumbled by 25%.

It seemed to signal a dramatic pivot from old-school American weight loss plans full of calorie-counting and color-coding — ushering in the new Age of GLP-1s.

A messy situationship turned into a commitment with GLP-1s

Even while she was with WeightWatchers, Winfrey was already starting her next big love affair in the health industry.

In 2023, she announced publicly that she had used GLP-1s to lose weight and spoke out about the misconception that medication is somehow a shortcut or easy way out.

The moment coincided with widespread acceptance of Wegovy, Zepound, and their cohort in the mainstream. As many as one in eight Americans had tried the drugs at some point, embracing the idea that biological “food noise” and processed food — not a lack of discipline — can drive us to overeat.


A close-up image of currently available injectable medications Wegovy and Ozempic along with pills for weight loss.

A new generation of weight loss drugs could follow up on the success of Wegovy and Ozempic with more powerful medications that are faster, longer-lasting, and even in pill form.

Michael Siluk/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images



Since then, Winfrey has wrestled with the notion that weight loss or maintenance is about willpower. Late last year, she shared her experience quitting medication through 2025, to see if she could keep her weight stable with lifestyle changes. She said she regained 20 pounds.

Now 71, Winfrey is back on the drugs and considers them a lifelong routine similar to high-blood pressure medication. Her one regret, she said, is not finding GLP-1s sooner.

Now that the Oprah Effect and GLP-1s have converged, the world will be watching for Version 2.0 — the next generation of GLP-1s in pill form or with even more benefits not just for weight but potentially longevity and brain health, too.




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xAI

California sends xAI cease-and-desist letter, saying it must stop allowing sexualized deepfake images of minors


Anadolu/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

  • California sent xAI a cease-and-desist letter, demanding it stop allowing deefake images of minors.
  • Elon Musk’s xAI faces sustained criticism over Grok’s ability to create nonconsensual sexualized images.
  • The letter, sent by AG Rob Bonta, threatens legal action if the deepfakes continue to be permitted.

California Attorney General Rob Bonta has demanded that xAI prevent its chatbot, Grok, from continuing to create sexualized deepfake images of children.

Bonta’s office sent a cease-and-desist letter to Elon Musk’s AI startup on Friday after sustained criticism over the bot’s ability to create nonconsensual sexualized images, including those of minors.

Earlier this week, X said that it implemented restrictions on Grok.

“We have implemented technological measures to prevent the Grok account from allowing the editing of images of real people in revealing clothing such as bikinis,” X’s safety account said in a blog post on the platform on Wednesday. “This restriction applies to all users, including paid subscribers.”

However, that didn’t stop the X or Grok app from creating sexualized images, Business Insider’s Henry Chandonnet found on Thursday.

Representatives for the CA Attorney General’s office did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.

In an automated response to Business Insider, xAI said, “Legacy Media Lies.”

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.




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Figma CEO Dylan Field says he has a ‘bias’ for hiring young workers because they’re likely AI natives

Many young people are worried that AI is muscling in on the entry-level job market.

Dylan Field, the 34-year-old billionaire CEO of Figma, however, says AI gives young people an advantage in the hiring process.

During a recent appearance on the “In Good Company” podcast, produced by Norges Bank Investment Management, Field said the effect of AI on hiring is a “critical” debate happening now in the software industry.

“Does AI mean that you should hire senior people or middle-level, or junior, or are all the jobs going to go away because AI will replace them all?” Field asked. “I’ve heard that last one a bunch of times, and it hasn’t come true yet. All the people have said that. They continue to hire.”

Field said that, in his opinion, young professionals have an advantage because they tend to have a better understanding of AI, an increasingly important skill.

“My bias actually is a lot more toward the junior folks, and I think people that are younger are AI native in a way that folks that are older have to learn,” Field said.

He said Figma, which offers design products and services and competes directly with Adobe, has always hired a mix of ages, but that an understanding and passion for AI is a must going forward.

“I think that it is important that people come in, first of all, knowing that we’re pushing full steam ahead into the AI era,” Field said. “So, if you have a bias against AI, that’s a great dinner-table conversation between us, but we’re very focused on making sure that we build for this AI age.”

Young professionals are navigating a labor market bogged down in unemployment and uneven job growth. The Bureau of Labor Statistics in December published its final 2025 jobs report, which showed that the job market has remained stagnant, economists said.

The rise of AI has only added to that instability. Many companies these days are betting that AI will be able to do many of the tasks of entry-level workers, and economists say that could lead them to pause hiring young professionals.

Field, however, doesn’t share that outlook.

During an October 2025 appearance on “Lenny’s Podcast,” Field said he doesn’t think AI will take human jobs at all.




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I was skeptical, but Martha Stewart’s crispy tofu recipe is my new favorite for a meatless, protein-packed lunch

  • I’ve been looking for a high-protein, meatless recipe that I could use for quick, easy lunches.
  • I decided to try Martha Stewart’s crispy fried tofu recipe, and it’s become my new go-to.
  • The tofu is flavorful enough on its own, but I love adding it to grain-and-veggie bowls.

Traumatizing: that’s the word I’d use to describe my first experience with tofu.

The first time I tried cooking tofu at home, it was completely flavorless, and worse yet, the texture reminded me of a soggy marshmallow.

It was almost enough to make me swear off tofu completely, but I’ve been on the hunt for high-protein, plant-based recipes, so I thought I’d bravely give it another go with Martha Stewart’s crispy fried tofu.

Stewart says that her recipe is not only a cinch to make, but also yields super-crunchy tofu. After trying it myself, I agree.

Not only was this tofu delicious, but it filled me up for several hours.

Extra-firm tofu in particular, which this recipe calls for, contains about 14 grams of protein per 3-ounce serving, although this can depend on the brand and product you buy.

Here’s how I make it.

You only need a few ingredients.

The ingredient list was short and sweet, and I already had several in my pantry.

Rebecca Strong

Conveniently, I already had most of the required ingredients for this recipe in my pantry and fridge.

Aside from extra-firm tofu, the recipe calls for a neutral cooking oil (like safflower), salt, and cornstarch.

Stewart also recommends grabbing mayonnaise and Sriracha for a dipping sauce, as well as chopped scallions and lime wedges for serving.

First, drain the tofu to ensure crispy results.


The writer draining tofu on a baking sheet.

In my experience, taking some time to drain the tofu is worth it.

Rebecca Strong

Although draining liquid out of tofu may take a little extra time, trust me when I say it’s worth it — because excess moisture will prevent your tofu from crisping up.

Stewart recommends lining a baking sheet with multiple layers of paper towels, arranging the sliced tofu on top, and then layering more paper towels on top of the tofu before weighing it down with another baking sheet topped with some heavy cans.

Then, wait 30 minutes for the liquid to drain onto the paper towels.

Stewart suggests slicing the tofu lengthwise into long strips, but I prefer to cut mine into cubes — I find that smaller pieces yield crispier edges.

Don’t forget to dredge the tofu.


The writer dredging the tofu in a bowl.

Next, I coated the tofu in cornstarch.

Rebecca Strong

After draining the tofu, coating it in cornstarch is key: When I first tried a fried-tofu recipe, I didn’t follow this step, and it didn’t crisp up nearly as well.

Stewart suggests mixing any of your preferred spices into the cornstarch prior to dredging, so I added garlic powder, sea salt, and sesame seeds. Other options mentioned in the recipe include Cajun seasoning, onion powder, and ground cumin.

To coat it, pour the cornstarch and spices into a large bowl or container, then add the tofu. Once everything’s in the bowl, either toss it with your hands or pop on a lid and shake it all up until all the sides are coated.

Next, it’s time to fry.


The writer frying the crispy tofu on a stovetop.

I used organic canola oil to fry my tofu.

Rebecca Strong

Heat up your oil in a large, heavy-bottomed pan over medium.

Stewart’s favorite oil for this recipe is safflower, since it has a high smoke point and neutral flavor — but canola oil, sunflower oil, vegetable oil, and peanut oil also work. I used organic canola oil because it’s what I had on hand.

If the tofu is too crowded in the pan, it won’t get evenly crunchy on the outside — so, Stewart says it’s best to split the tofu into two batches.

Fry each batch until the exterior of the tofu has just turned golden brown, turning every minute or two to ensure all sides make contact with the oil.

This should take five minutes, according to Stewart, but it took me closer to seven — perhaps because I like mine extra crunchy.

Finally, transfer your tofu to a paper-towel-lined plate and season it.


The finished crispy tofu on a paper towel.

The tofu came out looking crunchy and delicious.

Rebecca Strong

Once the tofu is done cooking, transfer it to a plate lined with paper towels to soak up any excess oil.

This is when Stewart recommends seasoning the tofu with salt, but because I already added salt to the cornstarch coating, I skipped that step.

Stewart’s favorite dipping sauce for this tofu is a mixture of mayo and Sriracha. I’m not a huge mayo fan, so I used a spicy tahini for a similar but nuttier vibe.

I did, however, follow her tips to garnish with scallions for a pleasantly peppery bite.

Now, I love adding this tofu to grain-and-veggie bowls for easy, high-protein lunches.


The tofu in a bowl with scallions, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, and rice.

This tofu is great on its own, or as the starring ingredient in a veggie bowl.

Rebecca Strong

Miraculously, this recipe completely transformed my feelings about tofu.

I was amazed by the satisfying, crunchy texture and the sheer amount of flavor it held when seasoned well and served with the right sauce.

Best of all, this tofu is super versatile. Since falling in love with this recipe, I’ve started adding it to grain bowls with veggies for a super-satiating lunch or dinner.

My favorite combo is quinoa or white rice with roasted or sauteed Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, and broccoli. Sometimes I’ll toss in some avocado for creamy texture and healthy fats, or take a cue from Stewart and add a squeeze of lime.

I also believe this tofu would be a tasty addition to a Caesar salad, lettuce wrap, or taco with black beans and avocado.




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Elon Musk says Europe’s biggest airline will lose customers without Starlink

The CEO of Europe’s biggest airline is in an escalating war of words with Elon Musk over Starlink.

Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary isn’t convinced by Starlink, Musk’s satellite internet provider, which is becoming more popular among airlines.

For example, Lufthansa — the German flag carrier which runs the continent’s second-largest airline group — announced on Tuesday that it would introduce the service. The following day, Scandinavian Airlines operated its first flight with Starlink.

However, as a budget airline, Ryanair is known for its no-frills offering.

“We don’t think ‍our ⁠passengers are willing to pay for WiFi for an average ⁠one-hour flight,” O’Leary told Reuters on Wednesday.

His comments sparked a debate on X. Musk said in a post: “They [Ryanair] will lose customers to airlines that do have internet.”

In a subsequent interview on Irish radio on Thursday, the outspoken Ryanair boss said adding Starlink would cost the airline between $200 million and $250 million a year.

“In other words, about an extra dollar for every passenger we fly, and the reality for us is we can’t afford those costs,” he told Newstalk.

“Passengers won’t pay for internet usage; if it’s free, they’ll use it — but they won’t pay one euro each to use the internet.”

He then hit back at Musk, saying people should “pay no attention whatsoever to Elon Musk.”

“He’s an idiot. Very wealthy, but he’s still an idiot,” O’Leary added.

Ryanair and its subsidiaries operate a fleet of 643 airplanes, which handled 206 million passengers last year. 2024’s statistics showed that it was the world’s third-largest airline group, behind American Airlines and Delta Air Lines.

The Irish airline’s low-cost business model allows it to offer tickets as low as 15 euros, or about $17.40. It focuses on quick turnarounds between flights, charging for add-ons like sitting next to your friends, and on-board sales, including scratchcards and duty-free cigarettes.

Every airline that’s announced Starlink deals so far has included free in-flight internet for everyone on board. So, even if O’Leary changed his mind, it seems unlikely that Musk’s company would let him charge Ryanair passengers to use Starlink.

SpaceX executives also took umbrage at what they said was incorrect information about the fuel costs incurred by installing Starlink.

“You need to put [an] antenna on [the] fuselage — it comes with a 2% fuel ⁠penalty because of ​the weight and ​drag,” O’Leary told Reuters.

Michael Nicolls, the VP of Starlink engineering, said in an X post that Starlink terminals have a more fuel-efficient profile than other airplane internet providers. He added that SpaceX’s analysis showed a Starlink terminal instead increased fuel costs by 0.3% on a Boeing 737-800, the model that makes up the bulk of Ryanair’s fleet.

“Hmm, must be a way to get that down under 0.1%,” Musk replied to him.

Ryanair declined to comment on Musk’s and Nicolls’ remarks when contacted by Business Insider. SpaceX did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

While US budget airlines have recently pivoted to offer more premium options under intense financial pressures, Ryanair has little reason to do so. Adding an amenity like Starlink would be at odds with its business model, especially if it were free for passengers.

Post-pandemic, more American travellers have been paying extra for more luxurious flights. Budget airlines have also struggled to compete on price with legacy carriers.

But on the other side of the Atlantic, Ryanair has managed to balance a spartan approach with financial success.

In its latest quarterly earnings, Ryanair posted after-tax profits of 1.72 billion euros, about $2 billion — a 20% increase from a year earlier. Southwest Airlines’ latest quarterly earnings were down nearly 20% year-over-year to $54 million.




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LinkedIn cofounder Reid Hoffman’s go-to gift this Christmas was an AI-generated music album

Reid Hoffman loves AI. So much so that, for Christmas, instead of fuzzy socks or wool sweaters, he gave his friends and family an AI music album.

The LinkedIn cofounder and Greylock partner, who Forbes estimates has a $2.5 billion net worth, recently told Wired he generated silly Christmas songs using AI and pressed them onto records.

“There’s a song on ugly sweaters and all of this kinda stuff,” he said. “As opposed to the ‘Holly, Jolly Christmas,’ you know, something that actually has some humor. Almost like what ‘Weird Al’ Yankovic would do if he was doing a Christmas album.”

To create the Christmas music, Hoffman said he used two different AI agents: one to write the lyrics and another to compose the music.

It’s not clear which AI tool Hoffman used to generated the songs. His current firm, Greylock, doesn’t list any of the major music-generating apps — like Suno, Udio, or AIVA — in its investment portfolio.

But, whichever tool he used, Hoffman said he was impressed by the result.

He said he told everyone who received the gift that it was AI, but when he played it for his wife, she couldn’t tell it was computer-generated.

The Christmas surprise comes as Hoffman has been talking about AI while promoting a new book published with journalist Greg Beato titled “Superagency: What Could Possibly Go Right with Our AI Future.”

In it, the two argue that AI doesn’t need to be a dystopian technology destined to displace workers or lead to human extinction, as some more pessimistic about the technology have warned.

Hoffman argues that AI skeptics are falling into the same trap that has gripped tech cynics in the past, including existential complaints during the rollouts of the printing press, electricity, and the internet.

“My push for people is if you are not using AI in a way today that isn’t seriously helpful to you, you are not actually trying hard enough,” he told Wired. “Now, of course it’ll transform jobs, and there’ll be a bunch of pain in that transformation. But the way that you as an individual can avoid that is to be engaged.”




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ICE arrested 2 truck drivers heading to a major Meta data center project

  • ICE arrested two drivers on Wednesday near a Meta construction project in Louisiana, officials said.
  • The individuals were detained during a traffic stop inspection of vehicles heading to the site.
  • “ICE did not enter the Meta site at any time,” the local sheriff’s office said.

Meta’s new mega data center project had a brush with immigration authorities.

The Sheriff’s Office in Louisiana’s Richland Parish, where the massive Hyperion Data Center is under construction, said Wednesday that US Immigration and Customs Enforcement detained two dump truck drivers traveling to the site during a traffic stop inspection.

“During those stops, two drivers were arrested by ICE due to their immigration status,” the office said. The drivers were from Guatemala and Honduras.

“ICE did not enter the Meta site at any time,” the office said.

In a statement to Business Insider late Thursday, the Department of Homeland Security said that ICE did not target a Meta data center in Louisiana.

The DHS spokesperson said that the ICE agents had carried out a “targeted operation” to arrest the truck driver from Honduras, and had encountered another driver from Guatemala. It said both were arrested and are in ICE custody.

Meta declined to comment to Business Insider.

The Meta project is the largest of several multi-gigawatt data centers that CEO Mark Zuckerberg has said will come online as the company races to catch up on AI computing capacity.

Wednesday’s arrests crystallize an issue that companies have increasingly had to grapple with over the past year: how to prepare workers for an ICE encounter, whether on or off company property.

The action also follows a recent surge of ICE activity in cities and towns across the US, which has met some resistance in Democratic-led states.

Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry has been a prominent supporter of President Donald Trump’s immigration policies. The state is receiving nearly $1 million a month to house detainees at its Angola prison, Axios reported, citing public records.

January 15, 11.25 p.m. E.T. — This story was updated to include comments from a DHS spokesperson.




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Amanda Goh

For this mom, moving to work in South Korea felt like a ‘full-circle moment’ — even if it came with one sacrifice

When Motolani Adedipe moved from Oklahoma to Seoul, South Korea, in August, she didn’t just pack her suitcase — she brought along her 6-year-old daughter, newborn baby, and mom.

Adedipe, who is from Nigeria and moved to the US to attend grad school in Texas, first grew curious about South Korea while interning at a biotech firm in Boston, where she shared an apartment with a Korean roommate.

“For that summer, I ate a lot of Korean food. She put me on K-dramas,” Adedipe, now 39, told Business Insider. That early curiosity soon grew into an interest in Korea’s history, economy, and language.


A woman posing with calligrpahy.

She became interested in Korean culture after sharing an apartment with a Korean roommate in Boston.

Provided by Motolani Adedipe.



Adedipe began learning Korean nine years ago online and continued after she moved to Oklahoma for work, where she became an associate professor at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center.

In September 2024, Adedipe applied for a Fulbright scholarship to extend her research in prostate cancer survivorship. She already knew she wanted to go to South Korea — even as she prepared to give birth to her second child that November.

She made it through the first review in December, but when months passed with no update, she figured she hadn’t made it. So when the acceptance came through in April, the moment felt surreal.


A woman giving a presentation at a podium on stage.

Winning the Fulbright scholarship gave her a chance to further her research in South Korea.

Provided by Motolani Adedipe.



“It was like the best news and almost the worst news at the same time. Best because finally I get to do this. But of course, the anxiety, how do we start planning now?” Adedipe said.

Thankfully, her family was supportive, especially her husband.

“It required faith, sacrifice, structure, and for both of us to really imagine a life that looked very different from what we had planned,” she said.

Moving to Seoul

Her physician husband couldn’t accompany her to South Korea, but they agreed that she would bring both daughters along.

“How many of her peers would ever say, ‘Oh, I took a gap year in Korea’?” she said, referring to their 6-year-old.

Knowing the scholarship would last just one year made the decision easier. Her husband has visited them in South Korea several times and plans to make more trips over the coming months.

“I saw it as an opportunity for my children to experience another culture, language, and way of life, while still having a clear sense of return,” Adedipe said.

Now, she homeschools her daughter in the morning before sending her to a “hagwon,” a type of private academy that many Korean students attend after school.


A young girl wearing a hanbok, photographed from the back.

She says she sends her daughter to an after-school academy in Seoul.

Provided by Motolani Adedipe.



“Not all of her friends speak English, so they kind of communicate through play,” she said.

Adedipe’s mom, who had traveled to Oklahoma to help out with the kids, joined them in Seoul.

As she searched for housing, Adedipe had a long checklist: enough space for her family, easy access to the subway, flat streets her mother, in her early 60s, could navigate, and a neighborhood that felt safe for kids.

She found a two-bedroom, one-bathroom apartment in Mapo-gu, a district in western Seoul home to several universities.


A woman posing in Bukchon Hanok Village in South Korea.

Her two-bedroom apartment is about a 30-minute commute to her office.

Provided by Motolani Adedipe.



Although the apartment was smaller than she initially hoped for, it turned out to be a great fit: It’s surrounded by greenery and about a 30-minute commute to her workplace.

Her scholarship includes a housing stipend that covers her rent, which she declined to share.

Per the latest December data from the Korea Real Estate Board, the median monthly rent for an apartment in Mapo-gu is 1.39 million Korean won, or about $940.

Adedipe says her schedule varies from week to week, but her work typically starts in the afternoons. She goes into her office at Seoul National University Hospital several times a week, while continuing to supervise her lab in Oklahoma remotely at night.

Forging closer relationships with her loved ones

Data from the Ministry of Justice showed that the number of foreigners living in South Korea at the end of 2024 stood at 2.65 million, a 5.7% increase from the previous year.

A US veteran who had retired in South Korea previously told Business Insider that he appreciated the country’s safety and culture of respect. Meanwhile, a millennial who moved from Switzerland to Seoul said she valued the convenience of city life, including how most stores stay open late.


A woman posing with a famous Little Prince statue in Busan, South Korea.

She says she has been surprised by the kindness of strangers in the city.

Provided by Motolani Adedipe.



One of the biggest adjustments, Adedipe said, has been the extent to which technology is deeply woven into daily life in Seoul. Nearly everything is tied to having a registered phone number.

“Once I got my card and I got a bank account and I got a phone number that was registered, life became easy,” she said.

Even though the city is known for its fast-paced lifestyle, Adedipe says she’s been surprised by its human side.

“I lost my stylus in the bus, and I was able to get it back. It was tagged, and they verified they found it. That could never happen in the US,” she said.

Watching her daughter flourish and adapt to their life in Seoul has been especially meaningful.

“Now that I’m seeing where she’s shining. My goal is to keep encouraging her to find her passion in life and do that,” she said.


A woman wearing a traditional hanbok.

Being able to live and work in South Korea felt like a “full circle moment” for her.

Provided by Motolani Adedipe.



In addition to learning Korean, her daughter takes part in extracurricular activities, such as piano, inline skating, and Taekwondo.

“She’s doing everything that I never could have been able to give her because in Oklahoma, if you’re doing all those classes, you have to drive your kids to all those classes,” she said. “But here in Korea, because of how the education is structured, she does all of that in a school, and she loves it.”

Living abroad with her mother has brought them closer. After leaving Nigeria for the US in her 20s, Adedipe went nearly eight years without seeing her mom because of visa issues.

“And now that I get to live with her again, it’s like a dream come true,” she said.

Looking back on her own experience, Adedipe says living and working in South Korea has felt like a “full circle moment,” after years of interest in the country.

“It felt like all the pieces of my life — research, storytelling, culture, and well-being — were suddenly being invited into the same room,” she said.

Do you have a story to share about relocating to a new city? Contact this reporter at agoh@businessinsider.com.




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Macron said that Ukraine now gets ‘two-thirds’ of its intelligence from France, not the US

French President Emmanuel Macron said on Thursday that his country has now overtaken the US as the main provider of intelligence to Ukraine.

“Where Ukraine was overwhelmingly dependent on American intelligence capacity, a year ago, two-thirds is today provided by France. Two-thirds,” Macron said in a New Year’s speech to the French military.

The French leader’s comments indicate a shift in the dynamics of Western contributions to the war and suggest that the US may have scaled back its military relationship with Ukraine.

The US briefly suspended intelligence-sharing and aid to Ukraine in March 2025, as the Trump administration was attempting to negotiate a ceasefire between Kyiv and Moscow. After roughly a week, Washington said it was lifting the suspension.

But it’s been unclear so far whether the Pentagon has continued to provide intelligence at the same level as it did during the Biden administration.

The New York Times previously reported that, in those years, US-Ukrainian intelligence-sharing ties had been so close that officials from both countries worked in the same facility to coordinate military strikes.

One of the most vital roles played by US intelligence at the time was providing targeting data and situational awareness for Ukrainian troops, especially when the latter were using American-made systems for the attacks.

Ukraine has since been trying to develop its own strike capabilities, including long-range precision missiles, that might allow it to strike Russia without Western approval.

It’s also unclear exactly how Macron quantified two-thirds of Ukrainian intelligence capabilities. His speech did not say whether he was referring to two-thirds of the intelligence provided by Ukraine’s foreign partners or to two-thirds of all the intelligence used by Ukraine’s forces.

The Élysée Palace and French defense ministry did not respond to requests for comment sent outside regular business hours. Ukraine’s defense ministry and the Pentagon have also not responded to similar requests for comment on Macron’s remarks.

The French president’s point on intelligence-sharing with Ukraine aligns with his larger push to position Paris as a regional military leader, while the Trump administration seeks to curb American involvement in Europe. President Donald Trump has also recently rattled European leaders by alluding that the US could try to take over Greenland, a Danish territory.

Macron said on Thursday that France had helped Ukraine to rebuild its forces and provided Kyiv with security guarantees in the event of a ceasefire.

Last week, European NATO members and the US issued a declaration that said willing countries would form a multinational, “European-led” force to provide “reassurances” to Ukraine and stave off a second Russian invasion or attack.

“The signal sent to our Ukrainian partners, to other Europeans, and to the world is that we are ready,” Macron said. “We are ready to sustain this effort of resistance. We are ready to deter new aggressions or to maintain peace on our soil.”




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Ashley St. Clair sues Elon Musk’s xAI over alleged explicit Grok deepfake images

Ashley St. Clair, who gave birth to one of Elon Musk’s sons in 2024, sued Musk’s xAI in a New York court on Thursday, alleging that its chatbot Grok generated sexually explicit deepfake images of her at users’ request.

In the complaint, St. Clair, a writer, influencer, and political strategist, claims X users prompted Grok to manipulate images of her, including photos from when she was 14, into graphic sexual content. She alleges some images remained online for more than a week and that her premium X account was later terminated after she complained.

She is also requesting a temporary restraining order to compel xAI to immediately cease from “the intentional disclosure of nonconsensual intimate images.”

xAI did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

“Grok first promised Ms. St. Clair that it would refrain from manufacturing more images unclothing her,” the complaint read. “Instead, Defendant retaliated against her, demonetizing her X account and generating multitudes more images of her,” the suit alleged.

St. Clair is also involved in a separate suit with Musk over the custody of their son, in which she sought sole custody.

xAI responded the same day with a separate lawsuit, arguing that St. Clair agreed to its terms of service, which requires any litigation to be heard in Texas. St. Clair is represented by attorney Carrie Goldberg, who specializes in cases involving abuse and has represented clients against Harvey Weinstein.

“xAI is not a reasonably safe product,” Goldberg said in a statement to Business Insider. “This harm flowed directly from deliberate design choices that enabled Grok to be used as a tool of harassment and humiliation. Companies should not be able to escape responsibility when the products they build predictably cause this kind of harm.”

The lawsuit followed international backlash against the Grok chatbot for its ability to undress images of real people and create sexualized images without their consent at users’ request.

Indonesia and Malaysia blocked access to Grok, while UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer called explicit images generated by Grok “disgusting” and “shameful” in a meeting with the House of Commons.

On Wednesday, California Attorney General Rob Bonta also announced that his office is investigating the “non-consensual, sexually explicit material that xAI has produced and posted online” of “women and children in nude and sexually explicit situations.”

X said on the same day in a blog post that users would no longer be allowed to create AI photos of real people in sexualized or revealing clothing on the platform, adding that the restriction “applies to all users, including paid subscribers.”

As of Thursday morning, Business Insider reporter Henry Chandonnet found that it is still “surprisingly easy” to prompt Grok to create nude images of him by going to the app itself instead of using the Grok chatbot on X.




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