Antagonizing the company that was Twitter's top advertiser is a fight that Musk simply can't win, Hayes Brown writes.

Rather than have his people call Apple's people for a chat, Twitter CEO Elon Musk used his new social media platform to blast the company and its CEO Tim Cook for reducing its advertising on the site. Hayes Brown says antagonizing the company that was Twitter's top advertiser is a fight that Musk "absolutely cannot win." Brown says in his attempt to "make Apple his new scapegoat for his failures at the helm of Twitter," Musk is "channeling the energy of the 'break up Big Tech' movement." The glaring flaw, Brown writes, is that "Musk doesn't seem to realize that he is Big Tech." Read Hayes Brown's full analysis in your Wednesday MSNBC Daily. |
| |
Charges like these are incredibly uncommon and hard to prove. Prosecutors succeeded anyway. Read more. |
|
|
Protests against China's zero-Covid policy were inevitable. Xi Jinping's response was rare. Read more. |
|
|
Americans must be careful not to let our love for international sports, and our desire to be seen as liberators, lead us to unearned arrogance. Read more. |
|
|
Sen. Lindsey Graham is trying a little too hard to find a "double standard." Read more. |
|
| Tuesday, join MSNBC for live coverage and analysis of the highly contested Georgia Runoff. The Decision 2022 team including Rachel Maddow, Joy Reid, Nicolle Wallace, and Steve Kornacki will break down the results as votes are counted. Then, Stephanie Ruhle continues coverage on "The 11th Hour," starting at 11PM Eastern. Watch special coverage of the Georgia Runoff, Tuesday at 7PM Eastern on MSNBC and streaming on Peacock. |
|
|
This week on "Into America," as the nation faces pilot shortages during the busy holiday season, Trymaine Lee sits down with a few Black pilots to learn about their barrier-breaking careers in the skies, and how they inspire the next generation of Black pilots. Listen now, wherever you get your podcasts. |
|
|
30 Rockefeller Plaza New York, NY 10112 |
|
|
|