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The FIFA World Cup and the Rise of Experience Rights

On Location’s Paul Caine explores why the economics of live sports are shifting beyond tickets and media rights toward premium hospitality and immersive experiences. Caine argues that as A.I. makes digital content increasingly abundant, the greatest competitive advantage will come from creating live moments that can’t be replicated.

Stanford’s A.I. Hiring Study Exposes a Human Problem

Findem’s Tina Shah Paikeday examines new research from the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered AI showing how widely used hiring tools can reinforce bias. Paikeday argues that responsible A.I. depends on the governance, accountability and human judgment guiding the technology’s design and evaluation.

The Most Valuable Tennis Memorabilia Ever Sold at Auction

From Djokovic’s record-smashing Australian Open racquet to Federer’s pristine Wimbledon whites, Grand Slam history now routinely sells in the six-digit range.

Media and Corporate Moguls Touch Down in Sun Valley for ‘Billionaire Summer Camp’

Media moguls, tech executives and billionaires arrive in Sun Valley for a week of networking, signaling deals, alliances and industry shifts.

Meet the A.I. Ph.D. Who Took Human Error Out of the World’s Biggest Games

Andre Agassi once described Paul Hawkins’ A.I. as "the biggest thing to happen in tennis for 40 years." The system was first introduced to professional tennis at the 2006 Miami Masters, ushering in electronic line-calling and improving accuracy.

For Collector Marie-Cécile Zinsou, Building a Museum in Benin Was Just the Beginning

Her unflinching drive has helped shift the general attitude toward the arts in the West African country and create an active scene.

At Lisson Gallery, Kelly Akashi Gives Resilience Form

In "Heirloom," the artist transforms mallow weeds, lace, quartz, Corten steel and cast glass into fragile but forceful meditations on memory, inheritance and regeneration.

The Future Perfect’s Laura Young Makes the Case for Design as the Next Collecting Frontier

She reflects on collectors, craft, functionality and why the sofa should no longer be an afterthought.

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At Ebbio, the Parisian Art Consultancy IDA Offers Artists the Luxury of Unstructured Time

Florence Marmiesse and Camilla D’Alfonso’s two-week-long Italian residency prioritizes both research and rest.

Kingsley Ng and Angel Hui’s “Fermata” Brings the Rhythms of Hong Kong to Venice

The exhibition builds a visual and sonic bridge between two cities shaped by water and strong maritime histories.

Phillips’s CEO Martin Wilson On What the House’s 507ドル Million Spring Reveals About the Market

From priority bidding to record watch sales and a 40 percent new-buyer rate, the auction house’s spring season tells a story about where the auction market is heading.

Stefanie Hessler’s Vision for Swiss Institute’s New Permanent Bowery Home

In moving to the Bowery, the institution joins an expanding local ecosystem of cultural institutions anchored by the recently reopened New Museum, as well as Giorno Poetry Systems, Participant Inc. and other galleries and organizations.

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Zohran Mamdani’s Culture Budget Is Historic, But New York Needs a Broader Plan for Protecting Artists and the Arts

The question now is whether the city can port cultural funding into a strategy for urban development, artistic resilience and civic capability.

How the Wimbledon Foundation Became Tennis’s Quiet Philanthropic Force

Since 2013, the Wimbledon Foundation has turned tennis proceeds into grants for homelessness, youth sports, health and local nonprofits.

Positioned for Growth, Riga Contemporary Is Small by Design and Serious About Staying That Way

Maintaining an intimate scale—and refusing to aspire to be a massive event in the long term—draws, perhaps, just a small portion of the population, but an audience large enough to feel like a viable alternative.

How Brooks Nader’s Wimbledon-Season Wardrobe Malfunction Became the Blueprint for Modern PR

When Brooks Nader’s courtside period mishap went viral, most brands would have waited out the news cycle. ABMC didn’t. Within days, Nader was on a red carpet for U by Kotex, transforming an embarrassing moment into 12ドル million in earned media. With Wimbledon underway, the campaign is a case study in how the establishment of modern marketing now runs on hours, not quarters, and why the brands willing to move fastest are the ones that get remembered.

Meet Naomi Osaka’s Business Partners Behind Her Wimbledon Comeback

Naomi Osaka has returned to IMG while continuing to build Hana Kuma, KINLÒ and an investment portfolio spanning sports and startups.

Serena Williams’ Venture Firm Is Building Its Own Grand Slam Portfolio

Serena Ventures has quietly built a portfolio spanning women’s health, fintech, sponsorships and consumer startups led largely by underrepresented founders.

Anoushka Mirchandani On the Body as Personal and Familial Archive

She describes the women in her paintings as anonymous but deeply personal, in that they condense her matrilineage—images of her mother, grandmother and sister—into a single subject.