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FCC Chair Brendan Carr responds to Stephen Colbert, calling incident ‘Democrat on Democrat violence’

Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr said it’s “fake news” to suggest that the government pressured CBS to pull a Democratic lawmaker’s interview from Stephen Colbert’s “The Late Show” earlier this week.

Carr addressed the latest flash point moment between broadcasters and the FCC in his Wednesday remarks during the commission’s February open meeting, saying there was “no censorship by the government here.”

Speaking to Fox News’ Laura Ingraham on Wednesday evening, Carr doubled down, describing the incident as “Democrat on Democrat violence,” rather than evidence that the commission had pressured CBS not to air the interview.

Instead, Carr said, CBS’s advice to “The Late Show” not to air an interview with James Talarico, a Democratic Texas state representative running for a hotly contested US Senate seat, was an appropriate response to prevent the commission from enforcing its equal time rule.

The equal time rule requires TV and radio broadcast stations to provide equivalent airtime opportunities to legally qualified political candidates, or risk fines or, potentially, the revocation of their broadcast license. The rule does not apply to bona fide newscasts, interviews, or on-the-spot news.

The rule has rarely been applied in recent decades. Broadcasters had generally understood a 2006 FCC ruling to mean that interviews on daytime and late-night talk shows were exempt from the rule. However, the FCC said in revised guidance sent to stations last month that “This is not the case.”

“Perhaps Colbert and other establishment Democrats want to put the thumb on the scale in this Democrat primary for one candidate over the other,” Carr told Ingraham. “I don’t know, you’ll have to ask them, but we’re going to enforce the law and hold broadcasters accountable.”

Carr told reporters during the FCC’s open meeting that the commission was pursuing “enforcement actions” against the talk show “The View” over its broadcast of an interview with Talarico.

“What we’re doing now is simply applying the law on the books in an even-handed manner, and for people that benefited from a two-tier system of justice during the Biden years, they may feel like that’s weaponization, but that doesn’t make it so,” Carr told Ingraham.

Representatives for Fox News, CBS, The Late Show, and the campaigns of Talarico and primary opponent Jasmine Crockett did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Business Insider. The FCC pointed to Carr’s remarks during the open meeting when reached for comment.

CBS previously said in a statement that it did not specifically prohibit “The Late Show” from broadcasting the interview, but that it did provide the show with legal guidance.

Colbert, who has hosted “The Late Show” since 2015, told his viewers on Monday that CBS lawyers said “in no uncertain terms” that his late-night talk show could not air the interview with Talarico. He also said he was told not to acknowledge the decision on air, which prompted his decision to post the interview on YouTube.

By the time of Carr’s appearance on The Ingraham Angle, Colbert’s interview with Talarico had received more than 3.8 million views — significantly more than other recent interviews, which average between about 75,000 and 510,000 views.

Rep. Crockett, a Democrat running against Talarico, said during a Tuesday appearance on “The Briefing with Jen Psaki” likely gave her primary rival a “boost.”

In a Wednesday social media post, Talarico’s campaign confirmed that the fervor around the incident had a positive effect, saying it had raised $2.5 million in 24 hours after the Colbert interview was scrapped.




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DoorDash’s CEO says he’s got an edge on Amazon in groceries

DoorDash CEO Tony Xu says that his company’s grocery offering has a key advantage over Amazon: choice.

Amazon is doubling down on grocery delivery, especially perishables like produce and ice cream. The retail and tech giant said last month that it’s expanding same- and next-day grocery delivery to more parts of the US this year, adding to the thousands of towns and cities it already serves — news that sent shares of Instacart and DoorDash tumbling at the time.

DoorDash, though, has something that shoppers want and that Amazon isn’t replicating, Xu said on the company’s fourth-quarter earnings call on Wednesday.

Unlike Amazon, which owns Whole Foods and several of its own food brands, DoorDash works with existing grocery chains. The delivery service has struck deals in recent years. Last year, it expanded its partnership with Kroger and signed new deals with regional chains, including Schnucks in the Midwest.

Few customers complete all their grocery shopping at a single chain, Xu said. Many stop at multiple stores each week, especially to find specific fresh groceries, such as produce, meat, and seafood.

“Consumers prefer choice,” Xu said on the call, adding that he expects there to “continue to be very strong interest in the DoorDash product” as a result.

DoorDash is also expanding its services for retailers, such as fulfillment through its DashMarts, convenience store-sized retail spaces designed for picking and delivering orders.

Xu said DoorDash is “doing that for every single grocer so that they have the capability to compete against companies like Amazon.”

DoorDash shares rose as much as 14% in after-market trading on Wednesday, despite disappointing fourth-quarter earnings and guidance for 2026. The company’s stock took its biggest one-day hit in November after it unveiled plans to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on tech improvements.

While DoorDash has become known for restaurant deliveries, its gig workers are increasingly making grocery deliveries — many of which make more financial sense for DoorDash.

Xu said DoorDash has attracted more big grocery orders from customers, not just small fill-in trips. That matters in the grocery industry, where grocers tend to make more money when customers buy a wider range of goods.

“People use us for both the quick runs as well as the stock-up use cases,” he said.

Ravi Inukonda, DoorDash’s CFO, said on the call that DoorDash’s retail and grocery business expects to “be unit-economic positive” in the second half of 2026.

Have a tip? Contact this reporter at abitter@businessinsider.com or via encrypted messaging app Signal at 808-854-4501. Use a personal email address, a nonwork WiFi network, and a nonwork device; here’s our guide to sharing information securely.




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Nvidia tightens its hold on Meta with a ‘multigenerational’ deal

Meta is doubling down on its relationship with Nvidia in what the AI chip giant called a “multigenerational” deal.

The agreement, announced Tuesday, calls for Meta to build data centers powered by millions of Nvidia’s current and next-generation chips for AI training and inference.

The move underscores how Meta is deepening its reliance on Nvidia, even as the social networking giant develops its own in-house chips and works with competing suppliers like AMD. Reports also suggested Meta has explored using TPUs — chips designed by its rival, Google.

The Nvidia deal could cool speculation around Meta’s purported TPU talks, said Patrick Moorhead, chief analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy — though Big Tech companies often test several suppliers at the same time.

The deal arrives amid increased competition in AI infrastructure. While Nvidia leads the market, rivals including Google, AMD, and Broadcom are working to chip away at its dominance.

Crucially, the partnership will see Meta deploy not only Nvidia’s GPUs, but also CPUs.

CPUs, long dominated by Intel and AMD, are the central processors that work with GPUs inside data centers. They’re used for general computing tasks and are core to essentially all modern computing systems, whereas GPUs are used in specialized cases that require more compute power, such as AI training and graphics in gaming. By supplying both, Nvidia stands to capture even more spend and deepen its role within Meta’s AI stack.

While that increases competitive pressure, Moorhead said the demand for infrastructure has become so high that Nvidia’s rivals will unlikely see outright declines in the near term.

Nvidia has been making its CPU ambitions more explicit, Moorhead said, including marketing its forthcoming Vera CPU as a stand-alone product. This emphasis reflects how CPUs play a larger role as AI workloads move beyond model training and toward inference.

“CPUs tend to be cheaper and a bit more power-efficient for inference,” said Rob Enderle, principal analyst at Enderle Group.

Both Moorhead and Enderle said that Meta’s decision to source both GPUs and CPUs from a single vendor can also reduce complexity, with chief information officers often favoring a “one-throat-to-choke” approach to problem resolution.

In addition to GPUs and CPUs, Meta will use Nvidia’s networking equipment inside data centers as part of the deal, as well as its confidential computing technology to run AI features within WhatsApp.

The companies will also work together to deploy Nvidia’s next-generation Vera CPUs beyond the current Grace CPU model, Nvidia said.

Have a tip? Contact this reporter via email at gweiss@businessinsider.com or Signal at @geoffweiss.25. Use a personal email address, a nonwork WiFi network, and a nonwork device; here’s our guide to sharing information securely.




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Zuckerberg’s courthouse entourage showed up in Meta Ray-Bans

As Mark Zuckerberg was ushered into the Los Angeles Superior Court early on Wednesday morning, one accessory in his entourage stood out: Meta Ray-Ban glasses.

Zuckerberg, wearing a navy blue suit and tie, arrived without any glasses. Flanking either side of him as he walked up to the courthouse were longtime executive assistant Andrea Besmehn and an unidentified man donning Meta’s Ray-Ban glasses.

Meta declined to comment about the accessory choice.

AI-powered smart glasses weren’t just a hot accessory in the California sun. They were a hot topic inside the courtroom.

The judge presiding over the trial announced that anyone using glasses to record inside the courtroom would be “held in contempt of the court,” according to CNBC.

This isn’t the first trial where Meta’s glasses have caused issues.

Last year, while Meta battled the Federal Trade Commission’s antitrust allegations, New York Times reporter Mike Isaac posted on X (formerly Twitter) that he had been reprimanded by the court for wearing Meta Ray-Bans.


Meta Ray-Bans on Zuckerberg executive assistant and security detail

Andrea Besmehn (left) and an unidentified man donning Meta’s Ray-Ban glasses while accompanying Zuckerberg.

Frederic J. Brown / AFP via Getty Images; Mike Blake/Reuters



The glasses cameo came as Zuckerberg took the stand in a Los Angeles trial accusing major social media companies of building addictive products that harm young users. The case centers on a now-20-year-old plaintiff, identified in court filings as “KGM,” who alleged that Instagram and YouTube worsened her depression and suicidal thoughts after she started using the apps as a child. TikTok and Snap have already settled, leaving Meta and Google’s YouTube as the remaining defendants in the trial, which could shape similar lawsuits nationwide.

The trial underway in Los Angeles is focused on design features that plaintiffs say keep teens scrolling. Zuckerberg’s testimony follows an earlier appearance from Instagram chief Adam Mosseri.

Meta’s Ray Ban smart glasses have become a surprise hit. On the company’s earnings call last month, Zuckerberg said that sales of the glasses more than tripled in 2025, and compared the moment to the shift from flip phones to smartphones.

Meta has increasingly positioned the glasses as a vehicle for its AI ambitions. In addition to taking pictures and playing music, users can ask questions to Meta AI, Meta’s AI assistant, about anything that they’re looking at through the glasses.

Last week, the New York Times reported that Meta is planning to add facial recognition technology to the glasses.




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11 surprising moments from Gordon Ramsay’s new Netflix documentary

22 Bishopsgate will feature the restaurants Lucky Cat, Lucky Cat Terrace, Bread Street Kitchen, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay High, and the culinary school Gordon Ramsay Academy.

Lucky Cat is a 250-seat Asian-inspired restaurant, while Lucky Cat Terrace has 60 seats in a rooftop garden with a retractable roof. Restaurant Gordon Ramsay High is a 12-seat fine-dining restaurant, and Bread Street Kitchen will be an all-day brasserie.

Ramsay said he wants to make sure 22 Bishopsgate has “some of the best restaurants in the world.”

“It’s sort of one of my final stakes in the ground, something I’m going to be best remembered for,” he added.

Ramsay, who has a 20-year lease on the building, called it one of the “most fraught projects I’ve ever done.”

“The pressure with this project is that if it doesn’t go to plan, it’s my neck on the line, and I have to guarantee that every penny that we’re borrowing, if it doesn’t work, I have to pay that back personally,” he said.

“We have to create something incredibly special to keep alive for 20 years, without a doubt.”




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Look inside Vizcaya, Miami’s 45,000-square-foot Gilded Age mansion that now counts Ken Griffin as a neighbor

Updated

  • Vizcaya, built by James Deering more than a century ago, might be Miami’s most valuable real estate.
  • The 45,000-square-foot mansion has a total of 54 rooms, with the main house open to the public.
  • Citadel CEO Ken Griffin began assembling a waterfront compound next to the historic mansion in 2022.

The exorbitant price tags on Miami’s luxury real estate are not a secret to anyone, least of all the flock of billionaires moving to the city.

But unlike the high-rise apartments in the financial center of Brickell or exclusive mansions in Indian Creek — where you might be neighbors with Jeff Bezos or Ivanka Trump — the city’s potentially most valuable piece of real estate is decorated with limestone, mangroves, and tiles salvaged from Cuban estates.

Built between 1914 and 1922 by International Harvester heir and Gilded Age millionaire James Deering as a winter home, Villa Vizcaya sits fewer than 10 minutes from downtown Miami, in a waterfront neighborhood that’s quickly becoming a magnet for the city’s new billionaire residents.

While built in the years following the Gilded Age, it is notable for its Gilded Age-era extravagance, technologies, and collection of fine art. Vizcaya Museum & Gardens estimates the mansion cost $26 million to build, which is more than $800 million in today’s money, per the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Florida International University estimates that the mansion is worth over $1 billion today.

In 1962, Miami-Dade County bought the property for $1 million, and today, the 45,000-square-foot mansion and its surrounding gardens operate as a museum open to the public.

Shortly after announcing that Citadel would move its headquarters from Chicago to Miami, CEO Ken Griffin bought up a waterfront compound less than a half-mile from Vizcaya, in the neighborhood of Coconut Grove. The $106.9 million sale set a country record for the most expensive residential property purchase at the time.

Since then, the hedge fund magnate has proposed relocating the historic Villa Serena mansion, located on his estate, to Vizcaya’s campus after he donated $20 million to Vizcaya Museum and Gardens.

Take a look inside James Deering’s historic mansion and see how its new neighbor could alter the surrounding landscape.

Vizcaya was James Deering’s winter home from 1916 until his death in 1925.

Deering moved to South Florida in hopes that the tropical climate would help improve his health.

Robin Hill Photography/Courtesy of Vizcaya Museum & Gardens

Struggling with illness toward the end of his life, James Deering came to Miami, then a small city surrounded by mangrove forests and wetlands, looking for tropical warmth, which was believed to help improve health.

By the turn of the century, the Deering family had begun to develop estates around South Florida, with patriarch William Deering purchasing a home in Coconut Grove in 1900.

By the time James Deering began building Vizcaya, his brother, Charles Deering, was also developing a winter home in the south of Miami. The property, known today as Deering Estate, also operates as a museum and is open to the public.

The main house features 54 rooms, including 34 rooms decorated with their original furniture.


entrance to villa vizcaya

Over 30 rooms furnished with their original decoration are open to the public to explore.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

Spanning over 45,225 square feet, Vizcaya’s main house features the living spaces of James Deering himself, his guests, and the house staff.

Envisioned by interior designer Paul Chalfin, Vizcaya drew inspiration from the Italian Renaissance, adapted to South Florida’s subtropical climate, and showcases furniture, artworks, and artifacts purchased by Chalfin and Deering on their travels to Europe.

Although Miami’s population was estimated to be only 10,000 in 1916, the construction of the Vizcaya estate employed an estimated 1,000 workers, many of whom were Black immigrants from the Bahamas.

Apart from the main house, Vizcaya is also home to the Vizcaya Village, the historic quarters of the mansion’s workers and farmers that allowed Vizcaya to serve as a self-sufficient farm-to-table estate. The Village expands over 12 acres and includes 11 “architecturally significant” buildings, according to the museum’s website.

The tour begins in the courtyard, which is adorned with tropical plants.


vizcaya mansion courtyard miami

Crotons, philodendrons, and palms bring Florida’s tropical nature to the European-inspired mansion.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

Lined with tropical plants such as palms and philodendrons, the courtyard highlights South Florida’s natural beauty while reflecting the mansion’s European inspirations.

While today the courtyard is covered by a glass canopy that allows for the estate’s air conditioning, it was originally open to the elements, allowing the tropical climate to seep into the main house.

Meant to be used as Vizcaya’s main entrance, the East Loggia opens up to the Biscayne Bay.


east loggia at vizcaya

The “main” entrance features marble decorations and arches opening up to the Biscayne Bay.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

Featuring marble floors and columns and decorated ceilings, the East Loggia was meant to serve as Vizcaya’s main entrance for guests arriving by sea, which was Deering’s intended — and preferred — way of entering the mansion.

It was used as an entrance for guests who arrived by boat, while the current main entrance of the museum was used as a back entrance for guests arriving by car.

The room also features a model boat hanging from its ceiling in honor of the explorers who inspired Deering’s interpretation of Vizcaya.

Although he began living in Vizcaya during his retirement, Deering included multiple working spaces in the property.


james deering's library in villa vizcaya in miami, florida

Located steps from the entrance hall, the downstairs library was Deering’s business meeting space.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

James Deering was heir to the International Harvester manufacturing firm, which produced tractors and other agricultural machinery, and he worked as its vice president from 1902 until 1909.

Deering might have been one of the first prominent Florida “snowbirds,” retirees who travel South during the colder months.

His downstairs library, located in the northwest corner of the main house, is steps from the entrance hall that welcomes guests. It features Deering’s personal book collection, desks for him and a secretary, and seats for business guests.

When closed, the door leading to the next room — a reception room meant for entertaining guests — is concealed within the book-lined walls.

The reception room features a ceiling imported from Venice, which had to be resized to fit.


reception room vizcaya mansion

The reception room was meant for guests to sit upon arrival during parties and visits.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

The reception room is lined with tropical-inspired silk panels showing palm trees.

Our tour guide brought our attention to the ceiling, which is decorated with sculpted panels that extend to the sides of the room. The ceiling was imported from Venice and purchased before construction on the property was finished. By the time workers were putting up the decorations in the mansion, they realized that the ceiling panel did not fit the room dimensions, leading to the restructuring of the panel, which curved into the walls.

“We should remember that this house was built during the First World War,” curator Flaminia Gennari said in the audio tour. “So to import large quantities from Italy in the middle of the war was very complicated.”

Vizcaya’s telephone line was one of the first in Miami.


phone booth at james deering's villa vizcaya

The mansion features a telephone system that was innovative for the time.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

Wired throughout the house, Vizcaya features a highly innovative telephone system for the time. Only 17 years before the start of Vizcaya’s construction, the Miami Telephone Company began providing telephone service to the city.

Vizcaya’s telephones also featured automatic electric exchange, allowing users to connect directly to the number they dialed without going through a human operator.

The telephone room, located between two of Vizcaya’s main entertainment rooms, was meant for guests to communicate privately without disturbing the flow of the entertainment.

The living room showcased Deering’s most impressive collections.


living room vizcaya mansion

Baroque-style decorations fill the ornately decorated room.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

The living room, with its 1600s limestone fireplace, features some of Vizcaya’s most impressive items, including an “admiral carpet” originally commissioned in the 1450s by the grandfather of King Ferdinand II of Spain, the Spanish king who sponsored Christopher Columbus’ exploration of the Americas.

The room also features throne-like armchairs where US President Ronald Reagan and Pope John Paul II sat in 1987 during the Pope’s visit to America.

A centerpiece of the room is the Welte Philharmonic Organ, designed to fill the house with music through elaborate sound systems. Designed for guests rather than full-time professional players, the organ uses perforated paper rolls to aid the musicians’ performance by adjusting notes and volume.

Concealing the organ pipes is an oil painting, which was cut in half to cover wooden doors.

“Chalfin had the idea of cutting it in half and using it as the doors of the organs, which is not a very respectful thing to do for a representation of the Virgin Mary, the child, and the saints, but it somehow testifies to the freedom and positive carelessness that they had around old objects,” Gennari said in the audio tour.

The mansion’s formal dining room features the house’s oldest artifacts, although it was rarely used.


Formal dining room at the Vizcaya Mansion

The room features marble artifacts unearthed near Pompeii.

Robin Hill Photography/Courtesy of Vizcaya Museum & Gardens

While Deering himself didn’t often eat in the formal dining room, he made sure it was impressively decorated for his guests.

Sitting to the side is the room’s most awe-inspiring feature: a marble tabletop on carved bases resembling mythical creatures, historical artifacts unearthed near Pompeii, dating back to the times before Mount Vesuvius’ eruption.

Next to the dining room, on the south side of the mansion, the enclosed loggia gave guests a view of the gardens.


enclosed loggia at vizcaya mansion

The glass panels were made specifically for Vizcaya.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

The colorful glass panels, designed for Vizcaya, feature the estate’s main symbols: the seahorse and the caravan.

Providing a view of the garden through the glass panels and double doors, the enclosed loggia allowed guests to take in the garden views while staying cool from the Florida sun.

The loggia also connects the gardens to the main house through sculpted iron gates.


loggia at vizcaya mansion

The room is decorated with ornate murals and wall sculptures.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

Aside from giving guests an inside view of the gardens from the ground level, the room also connects the outdoors to the rest of the mansion.

Downstairs, the kitchen worked as a serving space for staff to plate food and bring it to guests.


china at the vizcaya mansion

The downstairs kitchen has one set of Deering’s china on display — the main house had about 24.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

When designing Vizcaya, Deering asked for the main kitchen to be built upstairs as he didn’t want the smell of food to flood the main entertaining rooms on the first floor. To facilitate the transportation of meals and the serving of guests to the dining room, the entertaining rooms, and the loggia, he built a downstairs serving pantry.

Today, the serving pantry cabinets display one set of Deering’s fine dining china, the one designated for his 80-foot-long luxury yacht, Nepenthe. Commissioned in 1912 to be shipped from Europe, the original set of china purchased by Deering was transported to America as cargo aboard the Titanic. After the ship sank, a replacement set was ordered and is now displayed.

The kitchens feature state-of-the-art Gilded Age technology.


kitchen technology at james deering's villa vizcaya

Vizcaya kitchen technology includes a refrigerator, dumbwaiter, and other Gilded Age technology.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

Throughout the house, Deering incorporated cutting-edge technology, including annunciators with bells connected throughout the house that Deering or guests could ring at any time to get the house staff’s attention.

Another then-advanced feature of the serving kitchen were its refrigerators, which were rare at the time. The kitchen also featured a warming oven that helped keep food warm while guests were served.

Connecting to the upstairs kitchen, which serves as the house’s main cooking area, was a dumbwaiter: a food elevator meant to carry the food cooked upstairs to the downstairs plating area, where staff would then take it to the main entertaining rooms, like the dining and sitting rooms.

Upstairs, 24 rooms housed guests, staff, and Deering himself.


guest bedroom at villa vizcaya

The mansion has nine guest bedrooms on the second floor and North and South towers.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

Nine of the bedrooms were dedicated to guests and each was given a name and decorated uniquely, showcasing the artifacts and furniture purchased by Deering and Chalfin on trips to Europe.

While not open to the public, an additional 14 rooms housed staff.

Another then-advanced technological feature of Vizcaya was its elevator.


elevator in james deering's villa vizcaya in miami

The elevator is located next to Deering’s suite.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

Deering was motivated to move to South Florida because of his illness, so accessibility features were built throughout the house, including an elevator he would use when using a wheelchair or to avoid walking upstairs.

Today, the elevator isn’t open to the public, and the museum’s second floor is not wheelchair accessible.

Deering’s main office was inspired by the Napoleonic era.


room at james deering's villa vizcaya

The sitting room features desks for Deering and a secretary.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

Connected to Deering’s bedroom and bathroom, the sitting room was his office where he would tend to business and personal matters, such as sorting his mail.

The decoration style was inspired by Napoleonic France.

Deering’s bedroom was modest compared to some of his guest bedrooms.


james deering's bedroom at the vizcaya mansion in miami, florida

At the end of his bed is his signature monogrammed Louis Vuitton luggage.

Robin Hill/Courtesy of Vizcaya Museum and Gardens

Unmarried all his life, Deering’s room features a single bed rather than a larger size, and his room is furnished for practicality rather than aesthetics.

His personal bathroom has one of the most breathtaking views of the property.


james deering bathroom at villa vizcaya

The owner’s bathroom directly overlooks the Biscayne Bay.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

Opening onto a balcony, Deering’s bathroom overlooks Biscayne Bay and offers one of the best views of the house, although it is not accessible to the public today.

The closed-off balcony also leads to a secret door to the Espagnolette, the guest bedroom located next to his, usually reserved for Deering’s dearest guests.

Spiral staircases lead to the South tower.


staircase at villa vizcaya

The staircases also provide access to the staff offices between the first and second floors.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

A set of spiral staircases leads up to the South tower, one of the two guest suites overlooking the estate.

The tower bedroom has views of the bay and the gardens.


Giudecca upstairs guest room at vizcaya

The room was inspired by Venice.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

The corner room atop the North tower was designed to transport guests to Europe.

“Water reflects upwards to the ceiling and the sound of waves is audible in this room, precisely as upon the quay of this great canal of Venice,” noted Chalfin about the room, according to the mansion’s website.

A central piece in the room is a large wardrobe assembled with 1700s Venetian panels, as well as antique painted closet doors.

The breakfast room was Deering’s preferred dining space.


james deering's breakfast room at the vizcaya mansion in Miami, Florida

The room features floor-to-ceiling oil paintings from Italy.

Robin Hill Photography/Courtesy of Vizcaya Museum & Gardens

Back on the second floor, the breakfast room was the central entertaining spot.

The room is lined with oil paintings depicting ocean scenes, and the windows slide into pocket doors, revealing views of the garden.

It also features a sound system, with a piano hidden in a room off the spiral staircase next door and connected to the breakfast room through floor vents that allow sound to travel into the space.

Most of the time, Deering opted to dine in this room rather than the formal dining space.

Tucked next to the breakfast room is the main kitchen.


upstairs kitchen

The kitchen is designed for peak efficiency.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

Designed to maximize staff efficiency, the main kitchen upstairs has different areas for different tasks, including separate sinks for washing dishes and produce. It also features ice boxes, or refrigerators of the time, powered by salt water.

During Deering’s time at the estate, Vizcaya employed two French chefs dedicated to food and pastries.

Food served at the mansion was sourced from the staff village built across the street, where a farm provided vegetables, dairy, chicken, herbs, and citrus.

“You and I could come down and drive into the farm area, stop and buy a dozen Deering eggs and take them home and have them for breakfast, and I think that was probably particularly important during World War I,” historian Arva Moore Parks said in the audio tour. “He was able to supply not only himself but his workers also.”

Inspired by European designs, the gardens feature mazes, terraces, fountains, and more.


gardens at james deering's villa vizcaya

Today, the gardens cover around 10 acres of land, including native hammocks.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

Inspired by 17th- and 18th-century Italian and French villas, the Vizcaya gardens feature a variety of scenes, from a garden theater to multiple paths and mazes, intended to highlight and enhance the native South Florida flora surrounding the estate.

The original layout of Vizcaya featured over 180 acres of subtropical forests. Today, that number has gone down to 50 acres.

In 1987, President Ronald Reagan hosted Pope John Paul II at the estate.


US President Ronald Reagan and Pope John Paul II at Vizcaya Museum and Gardens

The two world leaders while exploring the gardens.

Diana Walker/Getty Images

On September 10, 1987, President Ronald Reagan welcomed Pope John Paul II at Vizcaya, where the two conversed while exploring the gardens and the estate.

Atop a garden mount is the Casino, a focal point of the gardens.


casino vizcaya mansion miami

The casino gave guests a place to enjoy the garden without sitting out in the sun.

Robin Hill/Courtesy of Vizcaya Museums and Gardens

Located at the top of garden mounds designed to block the reflection of water ponds into the main house, the garden casino — Italian for “little house” — was a space where Deering and his guests could take in the garden views or enjoy the subtropical weather without being in direct contact with the sun.

Inside the building, a painted ceiling depicts heavenly images. Underneath, bathrooms and other now closed-off areas hide under decorated ceilings.

Originally, the casino overlooked a water park part of the estate, where gondolas would be launched, a crucial part of Deering’s vision for Vizcaya. Today, the water park no longer exists, and the land is instead taken up by a Catholic church, hospital, and schools after the Deering family sold part of the property to the Catholic Diocese of St. Augustine in 1946.

The opposite side of the estate was once used for clandestine entertainment; now, it is a café.


vizcaya mansion cafe

Underneath the mansion, Deering used to hide liquor during the Prohibition years.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

While today a café sits underneath the mansion, the space served as a leisure center during Deering’s stay. The rooms were filled with billiard tables, bowling alleys, and leather chairs. Hidden underneath the billiards table was also a roulette table, which Deering often used when his college friends visited the estate.

The mansion, which opened at the peak of the Prohibition era, also had a decent supply of liquor, which Deering smuggled into the estate and hid in secret bars and cellars.

The swimming pool is half-covered, providing relief from South Florida’s relentless sun.


james deering's pool at the vizcaya mansion in miami, florida

Vizcaya’s only swimming pool is located underneath the mansion, next to the café.

Robin Hill/Courtesy of Vizcaya Museum and Gardens

Tucked next to the leisure rooms underneath the main house is the half-indoor swimming pool, in which Deering is said to have only swum once.

Designed as the main entry point to the mansion, the east side of the mansion opens up to a stone barge in the Biscayne Bay.


stone barge at villa vizcaya

The barge serves as a breakwater, protecting the estate from rising tides.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

When he first moved into his winter home in December 1916, Deering arrived by sea on what he intended was the front entrance to Vizcaya.

Opening up to the Biscayne Bay, the waterfront side of the property features a stone barge, a sculpted structure that acts as a breakwater and protects the main house from changing tides and waves.

Today, the mansion hosts private events and has become a local staple for Quinceañera pictures.


vizcaya mansion in miami, florida

The mansion is often used for private events, such as this.

Kristine Villarroel/Business Insider

Purchased from the Deering family by Miami-Dade County for $1 million in 1962, Vizcaya today operates as a museum open to the public and for private reservations.

The estate often serves as the backdrop for Quinceañera pictures among Miami’s large Hispanic population. Walking around the gardens, I saw multiple young women dressed in extravagant gowns posing in the many stunning locations of the estate.

Along with being a photographic hot spot, Vizcaya also hosts private events, from Miami Swim Week runway shows to floral-decorated weddings in the gardens.

Today, the estate remains an icon of Miami, a city that many would often relate to modern luxury rather than the old and classic wealth on display in Gilded Age-style mansions like Vizcaya.

The Vizcaya Village could be the future home of Ken Griffin’s Villa Serena.


Aerial view of the Vizcaya Village in Miami

The Citadel CEO proposed moving the historic Villa Serena to Vizcaya’s campus.

Robin Hil Photography/Courtesy of Vizcaya Museum and Gardens

After purchasing the historic Villa Serena estate in Coconut Grove in 2022, Citadel CEO Ken Griffin proposed relocating the 1913 Mediterranean Revival mansion to Vizcaya’s Village campus.

The home, designed by architect August Geiger for William Jennings Bryan, a three-time Democratic presidential candidate and former US secretary of state, is considered one of Miami’s earliest grand waterfront residences.

The proposal would move the century-old home from Griffin’s property to Vizcaya’s Village grounds, where it would be open to the public for the first time in its history and would benefit from an additional $5 million endowment provided by Griffin for its preservation.

Any relocation would require extensive planning and government approvals, which have not yet been cleared.

Skeptics have said that moving the structure would be an ambitious undertaking that wouldn’t align with preservation goals.

“Moving a historic structure is absolutely a last resort solution, to be done only if (there) is no other way possible to save a structure… It is not a preservation-minded alternative just because someone bought it and now doesn’t want it,” Kathleen Slesnick Kauffman, Miami’s former historic preservation officer, told the Chicago Tribune in 2023.

The Village originally served as Vizcaya’s self-sufficient farm and the servants’ quarters.


One of a dozen buildings in Vizcaya Museum and Gardens' Vizcaya Village

The Village was crucial to the daily operations of the Vizcaya mansion during Deering’s ownership.

Robin Hil Photography/Courtesy of Vizcaya Museum and Gardens

The Vizcaya Village, which covers about 12 acres of agricultural fields and includes nearly a dozen buildings, was originally built as the quarters for the mansion’s servants and farmers.

Today, the campus houses a café and hosts a weekly farmers market, and is undergoing construction and expansions to transform the grounds into a cultural and community space.

The Citadel CEO’s $20 million donation will expand the village’s role in the community.


Courtyards at the Vizcaya Village in Miami's Vizcaya Museum and Gardens

Vizcaya Museum and Gardens announced the creation of a Center for Learning and Discovery within the Village grounds.

Robin Hil Photography/Courtesy of Vizcaya Museum and Gardens

In November 2025, Vizcaya Museum and Gardens announced a $20 million capital donation from Griffin and said that the funds would be used toward building a brand new Center for Learning and Discovery in the village grounds.

Once open, the center will offer educational programming like “hands-on artmaking and urban-agriculture experiences,” the museum organization wrote in the announcement.

The expansion will seek to expand Vizcaya’s role in its community.




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The US Navy is pulling more and more warships into its Middle East force buildup

The US military added another warship to its large Middle East buildup in recent days, and a second carrier strike group is on its way, bringing additional fighter jets and missiles toward the region.

The large-scale deployment of American forces to the Middle East has escalated significantly this month as the Trump administration pressures Iran to strike a deal that would limit its nuclear and military capabilities.

As the US Navy’s Middle East force presence has grown, its footprint in the Caribbean Sea — once the site of a substantial show of force ahead of US military action against Venezuela and its former president Nicolás Maduro — has shrunk dramatically.

There are 10 warships and an aircraft carrier positioned in the Central Command area of responsibility, the Middle East, and two more vessels situated on the outskirts of the region, according to a defense official.

Middle East

Much of the US naval force in the Middle East was operating in the Arabian Sea as of Tuesday. That includes the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln and its strike group — the guided-missile destroyers USS Spruance, USS Frank E. Petersen Jr., and USS Michael Murphy.


An F/A-18E Super Hornet, attached to Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 14, prepares to make an arrested landing on the flight deck of Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72) on Jan. 9, 2026.

The carrier Abraham Lincoln has dozens of embarked fighter jets.

US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Samuel Evarts



The Lincoln has dozens of embarked aircraft, including fighters, electronic attack jets, and early warning planes. The destroyers escorting the carrier are equipped with Tomahawk cruise missiles. Among its air wing are F-35 stealth fighters.

Three additional destroyers — USS Mitscher, USS McFaul, and USS Pinckney — are also in the Arabian Sea. Pinckney arrived in the region in the past couple of days, the defense official said.

Another destroyer, USS Delbert D. Black, is in the Red Sea. And three littoral combat ships — USS Santa Barbara, USS Tulsa, and USS Canberra — are in the Arabian Gulf. These warships are designed for near-shore operations.

European waters

USS Roosevelt and USS Bulkeley, two destroyers capable of ballistic missile defense, are operating in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea, which is part of US Naval Forces Europe and Africa’s area of responsibility.

The defense official said the aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford and its strike group — destroyers USS Mahan, USS Winston S. Churchill, and USS Bainbridge — are also operating under that command, which covers the eastern half of the Atlantic Ocean.


The world's largest aircraft carrier, Ford-class aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78), transits the Caribbean Sea during Carrier Air Wing 8's aerial change of command ceremony, Jan. 19, 2026.

The Ford is the Navy’s largest and most advanced carrier.

US Navy photo



The Ford carrier strike group had been operating in the Caribbean for months. However, earlier this month, it was reported that the Navy’s newest and most advanced aircraft carrier was being sent to the Middle East.

As of Wednesday, the aircraft carrier was operating off the coast of Morocco near the Strait of Gibraltar, ship-tracking data shows.

Two additional destroyers — USS Thomas Hudner and USS Stockdale — that were previously in the Caribbean are now in the US Naval Forces Europe and Africa area of responsibility as well.

Caribbean

The departure of Ford and the five destroyers has diminished the Navy’s presence in the Caribbean, which falls under the Southern Command area of responsibility.

The US armed forces initially positioned a large number of warships in the waters near Venezuela last year as part of President Donald Trump’s effort to pressure Maduro. A few weeks after his capture, a dozen vessels were still present in the region.


Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruiser USS Gettysburg prepares to steam alongside Supply-class fast combat support ship USNS Supply and San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock USS Fort Lauderdale (LPD 28), in the Caribbean Sea, January 29, 2026.

The Navy had a dozen warships deployed to the Caribbean earlier this year.

US Navy photo



Now, only five remain, the defense official said. Those include the cruiser USS Lake Erie, the destroyer USS Truxtun, the amphibious assault ship USS Iwo Jima, and the amphibious transport dock ships USS Fort Lauderdale and USS San Antonio.

Eyes on Iran

The US and Iran held indirect talks earlier in the week, and officials hinted that additional dialogue could be on the horizon.

However, US military assets — including aircraft such as fighter jets and refueling tankers — are still moving into and toward the Middle East, giving Trump plenty of options to strike Iran for a second time, which he has threatened. The US military bombed Iran’s nuclear sites last year as part of Operation Midnight Hammer.

Iran, meanwhile, conducted military exercises in the strategic Strait of Hormuz this week, and Tehran’s leadership warned the US warships deployed to the region that it is capable of sinking them in the event of a fight.




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levittown 1950s

Vintage photos show daily life in America’s first ’50s suburb


Bernard Hoffman/Getty Images

Updated

  • Thanks to the postwar Baby Boom and other factors, families in the ’50s began moving to the suburbs.
  • Levittown in Long Island, New York, is widely recognized as the first modern American suburb.
  • Each home looked the same — they were all built in the Cape Cod-style and cost around $7,000.

As World War II came to an end, families looked for ways to start over. Emboldened by the GI Bill’s provisions for home loans, they moved out of the cities in droves for newly developed suburban communities. 

In fact, the suburbs expanded by 47% during the 1950s, according to the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History.

Levittown in Long Island, New York, was one of the first to introduce the idea of a pre-planned, mass-produced uniform suburban community, The New York Times reported. Families started moving there on October 1, 1947.

Though the community welcomed an influx of families, non-white prospects weren’t allowed. Notably, African Americans didn’t see the same benefits from the GI Bill, and it would take some years before racial and ethnic minorities broadly shifted to the suburbs.

Here’s what it was like to live in America’s first modern suburb in the 1950s. 

Before the 1950s, people mostly lived in cities to be close to factory jobs.


children in 1940s


Historical/Getty Images

At the time, most people lived close to the city center to work in factories, or they lived in rural communities to work on farms, according to economist Jay Zagorsky.

Everything changed in the 1950s when soldiers returned from World War II, sparking the great migration to the suburbs.


soldier returns home from war


Irving Haberman/IH Images/Getty Images

The 1950 Census found that 60% of people lived in cities, while 40% lived in the suburbs. 

Thanks to factors like the construction of highways, the development of new neighborhoods from farmland, and even safety in the event of an atomic attack, these percentages would soon shift drastically.

The GI Bill made it easier to afford a new home, prompting this transition from urban to suburban.


levittown 1950s


Newsday LLC/Getty Images

The GI Bill provided each returning soldier with benefits designed to stimulate economic growth. Each soldier was given a year of unemployment and free tuition to go to college. The military pledged to back all home loans, which allowed veterans to buy houses with little to no down payments. 

The Baby Boom started at the same time, causing many families to outgrow their city apartments.


A family of four stands in front of their house in Levittown, NY.


Joseph Scherschel/Getty Images

Shortly after WWII ended, the Baby Boom began. In 1946, 3.4 million babies were born, more than ever before, and 20% more than in 1945, per History.com. This trend continued into the ’50s.

By the end of the boom in 1964, this generation made up 40% of the country’s population.

Most historians think it was because Americans were eager to have families after having postponed marriage and childbirth because of the Great Depression and World War II.

Whatever the reason, people flocked to the suburbs to accommodate their growing families.

In response to this growing need for space, suburban communities popped up at a faster rate in the ’50s.


aerial view of suburban community

An aerial view of a suburban community.

Hulton Archive/Getty Images

During the war, factories focused on creating wartime essentials, like airplanes and barracks. In the ’50s, they refocused their efforts on building home components and automobiles using the new practices — like the assembly line — they implemented in the war,

As a result, factories were able to produce materials for homes faster than ever before.

Levittown in Long Island, New York, is widely recognized as the first modern American suburb.


levittown 1950s


Tony Linck/Getty Images

Levitt and Sons, a construction company, purchased a 7-square-mile plot of potato and onion farms in Long Island in 1947. They set out to build one of the first uniform suburban communities in the US.

People flocked to home sale events to get themselves a slice of suburbia.


home sale in levittown


Al Fenn/Getty Images

The first homes in Levittown cost new residents around $7,000, The Guardian reported. For veterans, there was no down payment.

When adjusting for inflation, a Levittown home in 1950 would be roughly $97,000 in today’s money.

Every house in Levittown was identical. The Levitt family called it “the best house in the US.”


levittown


Joseph Scherschel/Getty Images

At first, all the homes were built in the same style, and some residents even admitted to walking into the wrong house at times because they couldn’t tell them apart, according to Khan Academy, citing Kenneth T. Jackson’s “Crabgrass Frontier: The Suburbanization of the United States.”

Outdoor spaces, like backyards, became focal points.


levittown


Robert W. Kelley/Getty Images

With the growing number of children, outdoor spaces became increasingly important to the suburban neighborhood. 

Inside each home, there were four rooms, a built-in TV set, and Hi-Fi for the radio.


levittown interior


Joseph Scherschel/Getty Images

At first, they were modest homes, but most families saw their new suburban lives as luxurious. 

Most Levittown residents experienced the responsibilities of owning a home for the first time.


A man and a woman clean opposite sides of a window.

A man and a woman clean opposite sides of a window. Many homeowners experienced the responsibilities of owning a home for the first time.

Newsday LLC/Newsday via Getty Images

Many Levittown homeowners learned homeownership responsibilities, such as tending to a lawn.

The suburb helped cement the idea of the “nuclear family” in American culture.

Levittown also had seven shopping centers.


levittown suburbs


Underwood Archives/Getty Images

The shopping centers were called “village greens” and were designed to make the town more of a bustling community, per Encyclopedia.com.

The suburbs were also known for being a safe alternative to the gritty city streets.


levittown school


Joseph Scherschel/Getty Images

Since the streets in the suburban neighborhood were considered safer than those in the city, parents used to allow children to bike around by themselves, per the National Center for Safe Routes to School.

Levittown was also known as a cheaper option compared to an apartment in the city.


levittown 1950s


Bernard Hoffman/Getty Images

The mortgage on a home in Levittown was reportedly about $29 per month, while most paid $90 per month in the city. 

By comparison, the average rent in New York City in 2026 is just under $3,500, according to Zillow. The monthly cost of a 30-year mortgage on a Levittown home today would be roughly $2,000.

With all the amenities and perks, the community grew rapidly. In less than a decade, the population of Levittown reached 82,000.


levittown


Bettmann/Getty Images

The community has over 17,000 homes, making it one of the largest private housing projects in the history of the US.

As a result, Levittown became a model for other suburban communities in the US during the 1950s.


suburban community in the 1950s

A suburban community in the 1950s.

Joseph Scherschel/Getty Images

Suburban home construction boomed in the 1950s. In fact, at least 15 million units were under construction by the end of the decade, according to the Wealth Management Group.

Although suburban communities boomed in the ’50s, the shift was reserved for white Americans.


levittown family


Joseph Scherschel/Getty Images

For years, there were rules that restricted minorities from buying homes in Levittown, and even as the Civil Rights Movement was starting to take form and the rest of the country began integrating after Brown v Board of Education in 1954, Levittown remained mostly white.

Two-thirds of Levittown residents today are white, according US Census estimates.

Some of the few non-white families resisted this standard.


William Cotter's Levittown home, plastered with signs.

Some non-white residents like William Cotter and his family fought against Levittown’s whites-only standard.

Newsday LLC/Newsday RM via Getty Images

In 1952, William Cotter, a Black man, and his family, sublet a home at 26 Butternut Lane. When the lease was up, Levitt refused to renew it or sell them the home.

The refusal sparked support for the Cotters, and the family eventually purchased another home from a white homeowner.

With modern highways leading to the suburbs, men commuted into the city.


Traffic on a highway near Levittown, New York.

New highways leading to the suburbs didn’t come without traffic.

Newsday LLC/Newsday via Getty Images

The suburban boom corresponded with the expansion of interstate highways in the US, starting the modern iteration of the commute from the suburbs to the city.

In 1950, 80% of men in Levittown commuted to Manhattan for work, The Guardian reported.

During a typical day, the streets of Levittown were filled with women, as the men were mostly working in the city.


levittown women


Bettmann/Getty Images

When men left to fight in WWII, women began entering the workforce, gaining newfound independence and freedom. However, they were suddenly expected to give this up again and instead focus on childbearing and rearing.

In 1963, author Betty Friedan wrote in “The Feminine Mystique” that the suburbs “were burying women alive.” However, some believe that women’s dissatisfaction with staying home “contributed to the rebirth of the feminist movement in the 1960s,” History.com reported.

Women also got active in civic engagement.


Women and children protest in favor of new stop signs.

Women and children protest in favor of new stop signs.

Newsday LLC/Newsday RM via Getty Images

In 1959, women of Levittown, with children in hand, protested in favor of putting stop signs in an area with automobile-related deaths.

Levittown became a symbol of prosperity and anticommunism in American politics and culture.


William J. Levitt speaks with three senators.

William J. Levitt speaks with three senators.

Bettmann/Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

As American politics increasingly centered on anticommunism and Cold War tensions rose, Levittown and suburbs like it took on a symbolic meaning in American culture, representing prosperity and the “American Dream.”

Levitt was once quoted saying, “No man who owns his own house and lot can be a Communist. He has too much to do.”

In 2026, Levittown is still a sizable community with a population of about 50,000. Though it’s full of modern businesses and technology, the community still holds a legacy as a post-war suburban haven.




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Ukraine’s drone war showed the West it needs to view small drones less like prized gear and more like expendable ammo

Ukraine’s large-scale drone war is pushing Western militaries to treat small drones less as high-end equipment and more as expendable ammunition that isn’t meant to come back.

US Army and British Army officials, as well as a NATO veteran who volunteered to fight in Ukraine, told Business Insider that effective drone warfare requires sending large numbers forward — and accepting many will be lost as a routine cost.

Maj. Rachel Martin, the director of the US Army’s new drone lethality course, told Business Insider that the conflict shows that “if you’re going to flood the zone with drones,” especially in a combat situation where electronic warfare is heavy, “you’re going to lose a lot of drones.”

She said it’s a “transition from the army of old,” where a lost drone was “a significant emotional event” that was reported to senior leadership. In Ukraine, it’s different. “Drones go down all the time.” There, losses are typically shrugged off, rather than investigated.


A figure in camouflage gear squats with their arm up and a small drone hovering above him, with another figure in camouflage standing behind and holding a controller, under a grey sky and on grass and with two cars, light and dark grey, behind them

Drones are key to Ukraine’s fight, and the idea that many will be lost is understood across the military.

Sean Gallup/Getty Images



That shifting mindset is shaping how Western militaries train.

Lt. Col. Ben Irwin-Clark, the commanding officer of the British Army’s 1st Battalion of the Irish Guards, told Business Insider that his battalion has changed its training to allow drones to be damaged or even destroyed to reflect battlefield realities. “I absolutely think they need to be disposable because otherwise you’re not training realistically,” he said.

Not high-end equipment

Jakub Jajcay, a former special forces member from Slovakia who fought in Ukraine, told Business Insider that if NATO militaries want to start using drones for real missions, they “need to get used to the fact that they’re basically expendable material more akin to ammunition or fuel or gasoline, things like that, rather than specialized high-end pieces of equipment that need to be looked after.”

He said when he was serving in the military for his home country, “drones were very specialized pieces of equipment.”

The drones were fairly expensive, he shared, “and there was always a sort of bureaucratic process” in using them. Sometimes, only designated individuals were allowed to use the drones.


A figure in camouflage gear and with their back turned holds an arm up holding a small black drone under a blue cloudy sk,y and on shubbery

Ukraine uses small drones differently from the way that Western militaries did in previous conflicts.

Paula Bronstein/Getty Images



If something happened to a drone, “that would’ve been a big problem in training. If we had lost a drone, somebody would’ve been in big trouble for that.” The war in Ukraine shows how poorly that peacetime mindset fits large-scale combat.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has featured drones on an unprecedented scale. Ukraine says roughly 80% of its strikes are carried out using drones rather than other weapons. Many never reach their targets and are lost along the way, though.

Cheap drones worth several hundred dollars have destroyed weaponry worth millions. But many of them don’t have any effect. A report last year from the UK’s Royal United Services Institute said that “between 60 and 80% of Ukrainian FPVs fail to reach their target, depending on the part of the front and the skill of the operators.”

Some drones are jammed or disrupted by electronic warfare, while others are shot down or get their cables cut. Sometimes they’re knocked out by soldiers on their own side.

Many of the drones on the battlefield are single-use, designed to explode when they hit their target, but many of them are destroyed, damaged, or disabled before they even reach that point.

Jajcay said that even drones designed to be used again and again “have a lifespan of maybe a few dozen missions at most.”

He also said that drones failed “all the time,” and those losses were expected.


Four men in camouflage stand under a blue cloudy sky that has a small grey drone hovering in it with an explosive hanging from it

Allies want to learn as much as possible from Ukraine’s drone warfare.

Paula Bronstein /Getty Images



The West is changing its view

The US Army is recognizing and learning from these dynamics in Ukraine, as are other Western militaries, as they incorporate the idea that drones cannot be treated as overly precious assets into their drone warfare training and doctrine.

Maj. Wolf Amacker, who leads the Army’s Unmanned Aircraft Systems and Tactics Branch at the Aviation Center of Excellence, told Business Insider that out of the thousands of drones used daily, only around 30% of them hit their targets, while many others don’t have a significant impact on their targets.

The Army is learning that lots of drones need to be sent forward.

Irwin-Clark told Business Insider that the way the UK sees drones has also shifted. He said “every time there’s an iterative change in technology in the battlefield, everyone gets very excited about it and the ownership of that asset tends to be far too high.”


US Army soldiers during drone operator training.

The US Army is training troops for drone warfare.

US Army/Leslie Herlick



He said that often when a new and powerful technology emerges, senior leaders will try to tightly control it, arguing that because there are only a handful available, only a select few should have the authority to decide when it’s used. The assets are carefully protected, at least initially. Later on, trust is imparted to soldiers to handle technology previously in the charge of higher-ups.

That pattern, Irwin-Clark said, is “exactly what’s happening with drones.”

His battalion wrapped the first drones it received years ago in bubble wrap, “and we didn’t fly them very often,” he said. “When we did,” he continued, “we made sure we flew in the middle of a field with nothing, no obstacles around.”

Now, his battalion is deliberately crashing its latest drone delivery into targets, while looking at how to make repairs. “It really doesn’t matter if we break them,” Irwin-Clark said.

The US is coming at it the same way. Martin, who previously commanded a Gray Eagle drone company, said her course takes into account that “drones crash. I’ll say that to the day I die having owned drones as a commander: drones crash.”

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said last year that the defense department needs to view small drones as consumables rather than “durable property” — more like ammunition than valuable equipment. It’s a change that Jajcay described as “a step in the right direction.”

Western armies were using various drones in warfare before Russia’s invasion, often using them as surveillance platforms or tools for launching missile strikes. Small drones weren’t used the way they’re being used in Ukraine, but the US, UK, and others are learning drone lessons from the war.

Martin said the ongoing conflict in Ukraine shows that even when you lose drones, it’s ultimately “still cheaper than employing missiles on specific targets.” That’s an equation the US Army can’t totally ignore.

“They’re cheaper, and you’re not putting human lives in danger” to carry out the mission, she shared. And the Army knows that “they’re going to crash. It’s going to happen.”




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Why Berkshire Hathaway’s New York Times bet is a fitting end to the Warren Buffett era

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway bought one new stock in his last quarter as CEO: The New York Times Company. It’s a fitting final bet for the Buffett era.

The famed investor’s conglomerate scooped up around 5.1 million shares of the newspaper publisher, securing a stake worth $352 million at December’s close, a Tuesday filing revealed.

The position’s small size points to one of Buffett’s two investment managers at the time — Ted Weschler and the since-departed Todd Combs — making the purchase.

Read all about it

Buffett is a lifelong lover of newspapers. He delivered 500,000 papers as a teenager running multiple routes, and for years, he challenged shareholders to best him at newspaper tossing during Berkshire’s annual meetings.

He went from throwing newspapers to owning dozens of publishers, including The Buffalo News and The Omaha World-Herald. He was close friends with the late publisher of The Washington Post, Katharine Graham, and one of the paper’s biggest financial backers.

By 2010, the billionaire stock picker was openly worried about declining circulation and advertising revenues for newspapers.

During Berkshire’s 2010 meeting, he recalled looking at the circulation of major titles such as the San Francisco Chronicle, and said it “blows your mind how fast people are dropping it.”

“The world has really changed, in terms of the essential nature of newspapers,” he said.

In 1965 or 1970, there was “probably nothing looked more bulletproof than a daily newspaper where the competition had melted away,” he continued. “But it’s a form of distributing information and entertainment that has lost its immediacy in many cases.”

Buffett pointed out that people no longer rely on papers to find out how their stocks were performing, or whether their sports team won. The resulting decline in circulation made newspapers less attractive to advertisers, he noted.

“And so you get this chicken and egg thing that the newspaper becomes less valuable as the advertisers float away, and the advertisers float away as the subscribers diminish,” he said.


Warren Buffett newspaper toss

Warren Buffett made the newspaper toss a fixture at Berkshire Hathaway’s shareholder meetings.



Rick Wilking/Reuters



Despite his concerns, he acquired 28 daily papers in the early 2010s.

“Charlie and I believe that papers delivering comprehensive and reliable information to tightly-bound communities and having a sensible Internet strategy will remain viable for a long time,” Buffett wrote in his 2012 letter to shareholders. “Charlie” referred to his late business partner, Charlie Munger.

“Newspapers continue to reign supreme … in the delivery of local news,” he added.

Buffett struck a far more bearish tone in 2019, telling Yahoo Finance that he expected only a few national titles, such as The New York Times, to survive, while the rest would “disappear.” He also bemoaned the demise of the newspaper ad business.

“It went from monopoly to franchise to competitive to … toast,” he said.

Berkshire’s surprise return

Buffett offloaded Berkshire’s newspapers to publisher Lee Enterprises in 2020. Given his long history in the newspaper business and eventual exit from it, it’s striking to see Berkshire return with its recent stock purchase.

One reason was undoubtedly The New York Times’ recovery in recent years. It grew revenues by 9% to $2.8 billion and its net income by 17% to $344 million last year, as subscription revenues rose 9% and advertising revenues jumped 12%.

A key driver was the paper’s addition of 1.4 million digital-only subscribers, which lifted its total subscriber count to 12.78 million as of December 31.

The publisher’s stock price has already seen some of the benefits. After collapsing from over $50 in mid-2002 to below $5 in early 2009, it has surged roughly 15-fold — including 50% in the past year — to trade at a record high of $74 at Tuesday’s close.

The shares gained another 3% in Wednesday’s premarket, perhaps marking one of the final cases of the “Buffett Effect,” where other investors mimic his buys and sells, moving markets.

The publisher’s comeback might explain why Buffett and his team decided to revisit one of his favorite industries so soon after turning the page.




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