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Disney succession, SBF speaks, and tech billionaires’ California dream: Leadership news roundup

Disney succession, SBF speaks, and tech billionaires’ California dream: Leadership news roundup

Image: Bloomberg / Contributor (Getty Images), Hannah McKay (Reuters), Bloomberg (Getty Images), Photo: Mike Segar (Reuters), CrizzyStudio (Shutterstock), Mike Blake (Reuters), Philip Pacheco/Bloomberg (Getty Images), Screenshot: YouTube / Milken Institute (Fair Use)

Photo: Mike Segar (Reuters)

Bob Iger’s current contract with Disney ends in 2026. Image: Hannah McKay (Reuters)

Photo: CrizzyStudio (Shutterstock)

At least 13 countries around the world have adopted “right to disconnect” laws in recent years, banning employers from forcing workers to always be ready to answer emails and phone calls outside of work hours. And California could be next if new legislation makes its way through the state legislature.

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Griffin said the “surging U.S. public debt” is a “growing concern that cannot be overlooked” in his annual letter to shareholders.Photo: Mike Blake (Reuters)

Citadel founder and CEO Ken Griffin is worried about the national debt — and what it could mean for your great-grandkids. Griffin called the “surging U.S. public debt” a “growing concern that cannot be overlooked,” in his year-end letter to investors on Monday.

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Miron and Newhouse were appointed to the Warner Bros. Discovery board after a merger between Discovery, Inc. and WarnerMedia on April 8, 2022.Image: Bloomberg (Getty Images)

Elon Musk being interviewed in May 2013 during the Milken Institute Global Conference.
Screenshot: YouTube / Milken Institute (Fair Use)

Elon Musk has spent the better part of a year complaining about “illegal immigrants” who are “invading” the country. But an old video from 2013 resurfaced on Saturday that appears to show the billionaire admitting he was at one point building his small business in the country illegally, describing it as a “gray area.”

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Photo: Philip Pacheco/Bloomberg (Getty Images)

Less than a year ago, we learned that a bunch of Bay Area tech billionaires had their sights set on creating a brand new city out of thousands of acres of California farmland. The so-called California Forever project, initially announced last August, has captured the world’s attention with its god-like ambitions and impressive financial backing. With support from the likes of Marc Andreessen and Reid Hoffman, the project has an ample financial war chest and a veritable army of people working overtime to make sure that this pipe-dream-esque concept becomes a reality.

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