
- A cyberattack shut down Canvas, an education platform used by more than 30 million students and staff at universities and K-12 schools globally. The outage is happening at a time when many students are taking or prepping for final exams.
- The American Hotel and Lodging Association says demand for hotel rooms for the FIFA World Cup this summer is well below expectations, and the issue is a lack of visitors coming to the U.S. from other nations. As a result, the AHLA says the revenue host cities see “may fall short of expectations.”
- Thermos has recalled 8.2 million bottles because a lack of pressure-relief valves can allow the bottle tops to “explode” when opened if food and liquids are left in them for long periods of time.
- The cruise industry is bracing for a drop in passengers following a hantavirus outbreak on a cruise ship that departed Argentina that has killed three passengers so far. While the contagion is isolated to South America, Florida is particularly concerned because it is home to the three busiest cruise ports in the world and generates more than $24 billion in annual cruise-related revenues.
- Five children attending a youth camp in Austria were injured when they unknowingly built a campfire on top of an unexploded bomb from World War II. The five were treated for minor injuries.
- Tabloids were heartbroken this week when actress Blake Lively and producer Justin Baldoni ended their long-running legal fight and settled just weeks before it was set to go to trial.
- A student bus driver taking a training run in Paris accidentally veered off the road and plunged into the River Seine.
- A former Chick-fil-A employee scammed a Grapevine, Texas, location out of $80,000. He was caught when the company noticed they had refunded the $80,000 to a single credit card, all for returned mac-and-cheese.
- GameStop CEO Ryan Cohen participated in the worst CNBC interview since Cadbury‘s Brad Irwin. Cohen had trouble explaining how GameStop with a market cap of $11 billion could fund a stock-and-cash deal to acquire Ebay, valued at $56 billion. The CNBC anchor did the math live on air that showed that even with $20 million in outside financing, the deal was still short $16 billion, and the best Cohen could come up with was, “We’ll see what happens.” (Hat tip to SE2‘s Eric Anderson for sharing the video).
- Finally, political polling that actually matters. A YouGov poll found that just 33% of Republicans think they could beat 79-year-old President Donald Trump in a fistfight, while 54% of Democrats think an average eight-year-old boy could beat him.
- My fellow native Atlantans and I are mourning the death of billionaire and media mogul Ted Turner. Unlike today’s generation of tech bros (I’m looking at you Zuckerberg, Musk, Bezos, et al.), Turner was a throwback to when billionaires had style. Turner founded CNN, TBS and TNT, won the America’s Cup yacht race, owned the Atlanta Braves (and served as manager for a game before MLB put a stop to it), donated $1 billion to the United Nations, founded the Goodwill Games, married Jane Fonda (she refers to him as her favorite ex-husband) and was a conservationist who amassed more than two million acres of land from Montana to New Mexico.
Who won the week?
- Denver Health named Mike DelliVeneri as Marketing Director.
- Adams County Government has named Amber Ferguson as Communications Director. She previously was Deputy Director of Communications.
- PR Week released its 2026 Agency Business Report, and among the findings:
- Edelman is the largest PR agency in the world. Its $950 million in 2025 revenue was down 4% from 2024, though.
- Linhart PR was the only Denver firm to report revenue to PR Week, and they came in at $2.67 million, up 7% from a year ago.
- U.S. agency revenues increased 1% on average, while headcount dropped 2% and revenue per staff member rose 4%.
- Three-quarters of agencies say they are using AI for idea generation, while more than two-thirds say they are using it for writing and content refinement.
- The New York Times reported that it surpassed 13 million subscribers after adding 310,000 in Q1. The company is currently on pace to meet its goal of 15 million subscribers by the end of next year.
- The 2026 Pulitzer Prizes were announced this week, and the winners included The New York Times (three awards), The Washington Post (two awards), Reuters (two awards), The Minneapolis Star Tribune, the San Francisco Chronicle, ProPublica/the Chicago Tribune, the Associated Press, Texas Monthly, The Dallas Morning News, Bloomberg News and the podcast “Pablo Torre Finds Out.”




