If you come across a time machine today, definitely make a stop in 1999 to plunk down every dollar youâve got on Nvidiaâs IPO. The chipmaker, which passed Microsoft and Apple this week for its first stint as the worldâs most valuable company, remains on an unreal heater: its stock has now posted a 591,078% return since going public.
In todayâs email:
Money dysmorphia: Another challenge exacerbated by social media.
When nature calls: Campgrounds are the hot new Zoom background.
Sega: The gaming legendâs unexpected origin story.
Around the web: Guess the TV show, and more.
đ Listen: Is AI coming for freelance jobs? Hear which professions are feeling the most heat.
The Big Idea
What is money dysmorphia?
Many Gen Z and millennial workers feel poor, even if theyâre not.
2024-06-20T00:00:00Z
Juliet Bennett Rylah
Body dysmorphia is a mental health condition in which someone obsesses over perceived physical flaws that arenât apparent to others.
Now, a similar term has been coined to describe people who have a skewed perception of their finances: âmoney dysmorphia.â
Money dysmorphiaâŠ
⊠is when someone feels stressed or insecure about their finances, regardless of any real issues. It largely affects younger earners:
Per a Credit Karma survey, 43% of Gen Z and 41% of millennials say they have money dysmorphia.
A majority of people who experience money dysmorphia feel âbehind,â even if theyâre financially stable or have a nice chunk in savings.
So, why do people feel this way?
Both Gen Z and millennials have experienced some pretty weird times, including a pandemic and a recession, that have impeded the career growth their elders enjoyed.
Add student loan debt and the rising cost of housing and living, and many milestones â home ownership, starting a family, etc. â are often delayed or missed.
YetâŠ
⊠over half of respondents who said they experienced money dysmorphia arenât just looking for stability, but to be rich.
Credit Karma posits that the two generationsâ constant exposure to social media, where influencers and celebrities flaunt their wealth, has led to unrealistic lifestyle comparisons. This can lead to poor financial choices, including overspending to keep up.
Itâs worth noting that brands often give influencers and celebs free experiences or products due to their following, which makes it seem like they can afford luxuries they actually canât.
How to cope
Experts advise consulting a financial advisor, learning about finances, and putting together a monthly budget.
Oh, and perhaps key: stop scrolling social media, where youâre more likely to make impulsive purchases and feel bad that you donât have a yacht.
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Apple is working backward on the Vision Pro: The Cupertino crew has halted work on its next-gen spatial computing headset, perThe Information, instead focusing on launching a more accessible model next year. Appleâs reported goal is to reduce one-third of the weight and more than halve the price of its current 1.43-lb, $3.5k device.
SNIPPETS
Back to Nvidia: When it became the worldâs most valuable company on Tuesday, it marked the first time since February 2019 that an entity not named Microsoft or Apple had topped the list. At that point, Nvidia hadnât even cracked the top 20.
Fisker, the California-based EV company once valued at $2.9B, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Monday. The company said it owes $100m-$500m to 200-999 companies.
Boeingâs Starliner spacecraft made it safely to the International Space Station, but itâs having some trouble getting home. Helium leaks and thruster issues have turned the planned eight-day trip into a ~20-day affair for the two astronauts on board.
TikTok and the US government are at odds again: The FTC threatened the appâs parent company, ByteDance, with a lawsuit after the agency found TikTok to be âviolating or⊠about to violateâ the Childrenâs Online Privacy Protection Act.
Netflix will open Netflix Houses â entertainment complexes containing stores, restaurants, and experiences related to its shows â in Pennsylvania and Texas next year.
Tupperware is closing its last US factory in South Carolina, laying off 148 employees and moving all manufacturing to its Lerma, Mexico, plant â but it plans to build a logistics facility in the Midwest.
Nonalcoholic beer brand Athletic Brewingbought a new facility across the street from its San Diego plant thatâs projected to help double production capacity when it opens next year.
Fired NBA coach Monty Williams is living your dream: Heâll be paid $65m over the next five years to not show up to work. Better yet, he wonât have to watch the Detroit Pistons play basketball.
Don't miss this...
A TikTok exec shares why he thinks virality isnât worth the hype, and how to harness the platformâs marketing power.
data point
Tent staked, fire built, âMasterChefâ reruns queued: If you havenât been camping in a few years, be prepared for some culture shock â the whole âgetting away from it allâ thing is kaput. Campground WiFi access is in hot demand, perNBC News, and is now available at an estimated 82% of US campsites, making it more common than shower facilities.
One broadband provider called WiFi the new âfourth utilityâ of campgrounds, behind water, sewer, and electricity. A majority of millennial and Gen Z campers say WiFi is a part of their campground-selection calculus, according to Outdoor Hospitality Industry data, and itâs not just there for an occasional glimpse at email either: The Dyrt found a gobsmacking 29% of campers worked remotely from Mother Natureâs house last year.
Call us old school, but we donât want the last thing we see to be a slowly buffering YouTube video about bear self-defense.
Fit the bill
There are thousands of companies valued at $1B+. How many clues do you need to identify todayâs billion-dollar brand?
Clue 1: A seminal moment for this company was its 1930s invention of the puffing gun, a machine that expanded grain pellets into different shapes, like bubbles and rings.
Clue 2: That invention preceded many others from this company, including the first âblack boxâ flight recorder, Nerf balls, Care Bears, chiffon cake, and the first singing radio ad.
Clue 3: This company is an American institution, with a portfolio made up of popular brands like Cheerios, Pillsbury, Betty Crocker, Wheaties, Yoplait, Nature Valley, Old El Paso, and Haagen-Dazs.
đ Scroll to the bottom for the answer đ
Background Check
From slot machines to Sonic
Service Games supplied slot machines to military bases.
2024-06-20T00:00:00Z
Juliet Bennett Rylah
In 1940, Martin Bromley, Irving Bromberg, and James Humpert founded Standard Games â later renamed Service Games â in Honolulu, Hawaii. It provided coin-operated machines, including slots, to US military bases.
In the 1950s, amid a crackdown on slot machines in the US, Service Games established a presence in Japan. In 1960, Bromley formed two new Japanese companies to assume Service Gamesâ business, officially shortening its name to Sega.
While Bromley became the subject of a series of investigations into alleged illegal activity (which you can read about here), Sega expanded its roster of machines to include jukeboxes and arcade games, then made its own submarine simulator game, âPeriscope,â in 1966.
Sega continued to manufacture arcade games through the 1970s before moving into gaming consoles in the â80s, peaking with the Sega Genesis, which sold an estimated 30m-40m units.
Its most popular franchise, âSonic the Hedgehog,â was the answer to rival Nintendoâs Mario, and the character remains the companyâs mascot to this day.
AROUND THE WEB
đ On this day: In 2003, the Wikimedia Foundation was founded in Florida.
đ± Useful: A list of apps you only have to pay for once â no subscriptions.
On Tuesday, we asked you to vote for the AI logo you like the most.
The winner was Microsoft Copilot with 35% of the vote for its infinite rainbow loop. OpenAIâs black-and-white design took second place with 24%, followed by Meta AI (15%), Google Gemini (14%), and Apple Intelligence (12%).
As for what you value in a logo, âsimpleâ was the most common response by a long shot.
Some of you even tried your hand at making your own, like Michael Hofler whose logo design looks ready to grace the next big thing in AI:
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Refer just 3 people and we'll send Hustle essentials as a thank you.
Todayâs Fit the Bill answer is General Mills (Market cap: $37.63B)
Today's email was brought to you by Juliet Bennett Rylah and Sara Friedman. Editing by: Ben âLargest shareholder of imaginary Nvidia stockâ Berkley.