
US Oil Exports Surge Record High & What to Know About the Hantavirus
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Toby Howell
Good
Neal Freyman
morning, Brew Daily Show. I'm Neal Freyman.
Toby Howell
And I'm Toby Howell.
Neal Freyman
Today, Google just launched a whoop dupe.
Toby Howell
Ben what to know about the cruise ship battling the hantavirus. It's Friday, May 8th. Let's ride.
Neal Freyman
Good morning and happy 100th birthday to Sir David Attenborough, the man whose golden voice introduced us to the wonders of the natural world and the threats facing it. Many of us first learned of Attenborough's talents as the narrator for Planet Earth, but he'd been casting a spell on British TV audiences since the 1950s. In fact, Attenborough is credited as the only person to have won a bafta, the British Oscars in black and white, color, high definition, 3D and 4K. BBC's interim director general said he is without a shadow of the doubt the most consequential broadcaster of our times. Happy birthday, big guy.
Toby Howell
Happy birthday. I was listening to Scott Galloway podcast earlier and he said to be successful in podcasting, you have to have a handsome voice. Sir David Attenborough might have the most handsome voice at all. And it comes down to the fact that he speaks with an accent known as received pronunciation. The ringer wrote that this is considered the British standard connoting high social status and prestige. The the Lannisters talk with it on Game of Thrones. Actors doing Shakespeare in theater use it. It can sort of make him sound timeless, said Laura MacKenzie and NYU linguistics professor. And at 100 years old, Attenborough is timeless. Going to wind down with some planet Earth tonight to celebrate his birthday.
Neal Freyman
I mean, I'm just thinking about him. There's some people that have this really profound impact on your life. You have such affection for and they don't really appear that often thinking, you know, in the vein of Alex Trebek or David Attenborough. And when you think about, you know, how much pleasure and delivered to you over the years, I mean, just watching Planet Earth those early years was a truly magical experience. And he was the main reason for
Toby Howell
it had it on dvd. That was like one of the things that we would watch via DVD because they had just the full stack of it. It was, it was unbelievable. And now it's on Netflix. Go watch it tonight.
Neal Freyman
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Toby Howell
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Toby Howell
Explore connectivity solutions that transform along with your growing business. At att.com/small business the hantavirus, a respiratory disease with a mortality rate of up to 50%, is wreaking havoc on a cruise ship, leaving three passengers dead, five others ill, and officials worried about it spreading further. The Honda Expedition vessel left port in argentina back on April 1st with 150 passengers on board from 23 different countries. Ten days later, the first death occurred. Maria von Kirkhove, a director for the World Health Organization, says her leading theory is that the first patient was infected before boarding during travel in South America and then passed the virus to close contacts. The first fatalities were an older Dutch couple who may have contracted hantavirus after visiting a landfill during a bird watching tour prior to the cruise. Hantavirus normally spreads through contact with infected rodents, specifically their droppings, but no rodents have been found on the ship. Some passengers tested positive for the rare Andes version of the virus, the only hantavirus strain for which human to human transmission is possible. The issue authorities are now grappling with is that around 30 passengers disembarked from the cruise ship and flew home back in late April. The wife of the original Dutch man who died was symptomatic when she flew to Johannesburg on a flight carrying 88 other people. Since then, a growing web of contact tracing has spread across continents, with a flight attendant in the Netherlands potentially being identified as the first person not on the hondius to become infected. Neal the WHO had a press conference yesterday where they tried to reassure the public that this is not Covid given the completely different form of transmission, affirming that they do not expect this to devolve into a larger epidemic.
Neal Freyman
Yeah, there's two main arenas of this war against handover virus right now. One is this massive contact tracing operation across the world. There's those 30 people that got off the ship from at least 12 countries. So in the United States, they're tracking people in three states, in Switzerland, they're also tracking people all over the world trying to find out who these people are, what who have they been in contact with after they left the ship, before this outbreak was understood. And then the other arena is the ship itself. There are still over 100 people, passengers and crew on this ship. And they're heading to the Canary Islands right now, where on Saturday they will take, get there and then hopefully go through this evacuation process beginning on Monday. But yes, there are people who paid for this cruise that are still on the ship right now. And I've been reading about what it's like to be on a ship where already three people have died and five people have been taken to hospitals after being infected with this hantavirus. And yeah, it's what we know from COVID They're social distancing, they're wearing masks, they're trying to do anything to stay occupied, watching tv, reading books. And the people on the ship say morale is pretty high given all the circumstances. But I'm sure they're pretty excited to get off.
Toby Howell
It's also shining a light not just on the cruise industry, but the expedition cruise industry in particular, which are cruises that promise you access to destinations that you wouldn't normally go to. I mean like Antarctica, sub Antarctic islands, these very isolated communities around the entire world. And it's become a very fast growing corner of the travel industry. Almost every 80,000 passengers landed on the Antarctic Peninsula last season. That is up from 54,000 before the pandemic. So people are trying to go further flung places because that's an exciting. But when it comes down to if there's a virus on board, it makes it very complicated. How do you detect it, how do you contain it? Because it is easy to lose track of exactly when someone was infected when you are in such far flung people places. And if you do contract systems, you're thousands of miles away from civilization in some cases. So it might become one of these things where they have to reevaluate. How do we handle disease on these cruises that go very far away from normal humans?
Neal Freyman
Yeah. The sentiment online toward the cruise industry was not so positive this week. People are like, why are we still going on cruises when this can happen? Obviously in Covid, in March 2020, you know, the cruise industry was also in the spotlight for being this petri dish of, of an area or a place where these kind of diseases can spread. But since we're Talking about COVID I mean who officials yesterday stressed that they're taking this seriously, but we should not consider this like Covid at all because basically the COVID is transmit transmitted a lot more easily. The antivirus spread on this cruise ship was also quite unusual. This human transmission is, is very rare because you need to be in a close contact with someone for a very long time. Unlike Covid, where you, you know, if you're just in the room for a couple of hours or minutes, then you could basically contract it then. So that's why basically the only place where a human can give hantavirus to another human might be a cruise ship. Let's get right into it. Stock of the Week, Dog of the Week, the segment where we pick one stock that's stunned at the Met gala and another that tripped on the stairs. I won the pre show tic tac toe, best of seven. So I get to go first and my stock of the week is US Oil companies, which thanks to the war in Iran, are sending more of their product overseas the than at any point in history. Last week, US fuel exports reached a record as European and Asian countries look to America to fill the gap caused by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. That waterway through which a fifth of global oil supplies traverses has been effectively shut down to ship since the US and Israel struck Iran more than two months ago. The US was sending over 8.2 million barrels of refined fuels abroad last week. Like jet fuel, gas and diesel, a jump of more than 20% over last year. Refined fuels have been the main driver of. But that unrefined crude is also in high demand. The US recently became a net exporter of crude oil for the first time since World War II, which is remarkable given that just over 10 years ago it was one of the world's biggest importers of crude. It's been a windfall for U.S. energy companies, which according to the Financial Times, are set to earn an additional $60 billion of cash flow this year should oil prices stay elevated. But all this exporting to other countries is leaving regular American people wondering, hey, what about us? We're paying a ton more for gas and our own companies are shipping all this gas abroad. As these companies rake it in, pressure is growing on the Trump administration to relieve the pain at the pump for American consumers.
Toby Howell
So the card that the Trump administration can play is banning the export of fuel. That is a card it does not want to play. It is repeatedly insisted that it will not ban exports of gas to the world because they Want, you know, the free market to behave as the free market does. But if gasoline starts to creep up above $5 average, $6, an average, $7 per average, then those critics get a lot louder. And maybe that card does have to be play. But would it necessarily lower prices? Even if you do play that card, would it be better to keep more of this crude onshore? And a lot of people say no, because one of the limiting factors is not just how much crude oil you have in the country, it's if you can refine it into helpful things like gasoline. And right now, our refineries are cranking at almost maximum output, so there's just not that much supply you can bring online, even if you stopped exporting fuel to the rest of the world.
Neal Freyman
And at the same time, the price of oil is set globally. So even if we kept oil here, it might cause prices to rise elsewhere, and that means gas prices will still go higher. Because when we talk about oil prices, it's the, you know, the Brent crude benchmark globally, that, that everyone kind of pays the same thing. So it's not necessarily the fact or truism that if we kept more gas here and we banned exports, then we would see gas prices fall.
Toby Howell
A lot of people are saying that actually what we're seeing right now is oil markets operating very efficiently. I mean, the fact that the US Is sending to buyers that normally don't buy from us is a good Australia. Australia. We do not trade oil with Australia, but now we are, because that is where the oil market is filling in the gaps of this. All this supply that was taken offline because of the straight of Hormuz. That is still just the overall question mark, is you got to open the strait in order for everything to equalize. There's only so much oil even the US can send out to the rest of the world straight our Hormuz. And everything comes back to the straight of Hormuz.
Neal Freyman
And I mentioned stock of the week. We should probably talk about some companies. Well, Shell reported earnings yesterday. It's not a US Company, but it is based in London. It is a Western oil company. I mean, it's doing amazingly. Its adjusted profit soared 24% to nearly $7 billion in the first three months of the year over last year. And its first quarter profit was more than twice what the company earned in the previous quarter. Other companies that reported earnings did really well. BP Total Energies from France. So these Western European countries are seeing a windfall from higher oil prices, which are around $100 from, you know, around $60 before the war.
Toby Howell
My dog of the week is Whirlpool because according to its CEO, Americans are shopping like they're in the middle of a recession. The appliance company which makes everything from kitchen mixers to washing machines, reported lousy earnings Yesterday that showed a 7% drop in appliance demand in the first quarter. This level of industry decline is similar to what we have observed during the global financial crisis and even higher than during other recessionary period. CEO Mark Bitzer said on the earnings call. Investors took that to heart, sending shares of the company down at 12%. Specifically, Whirlpool says the Iran war is having a major impact on consumer confidence and also on its own supply chain, leading to higher prices and transportation costs. Whirlpool is seen as a proxy for the broader economy because it's a gauge on the willingness of consumers to make big ticket purchases and they are clearly not very willing right now. Neal, a lot of conflicting reports out this earnings cycle with some companies like Uber, Disney, Burger King seeing consumer spending hold up while Whirlpool is saying the economy is going down the garbage disposal. Hard to parse through the conflicting signals.
Neal Freyman
I am confused for sure because yesterday morning we got up here and we talked about how the consumer was healthy because Disney and Uber said that people were spending, people were ordering Uber eats, people were going to Disney's theme parks, watching Disney plus like everything was going well for the consumer despite all these headwinds. And then you had a rash of companies including Whirlpool yesterday say that actually the consumer is not doing well. And I'll just run through those. Kraft, Heinz CEO, CEO said that consumers are quote, literally running out of money at the end of the month. They have negative cash flows in the lower income brackets when they're dipping into their savings and then Dine Brands Global, which is the owner of Applebee's and ihop said are price sensitive. More value oriented guests seem to be staying home a bit more. Planet Fitness had its worst day on record. It was down 31% because it had weaker than expected members sign ups during the new year period, January through March, which is when people should be or expected to be signing up for the gym. She said the consumer and economic backdrop have shifted. Then you also mentioned McDonald's which said that the consumer is also, you know, going down rather than going up. So we are having a bit of a split screen thing going on with Uber and Disney saying things are hunky dory and then Whirlpool et al saying that things are Actually not okay at all.
Toby Howell
And then just to go back to Whirlpool for one second, Whirlpool was supposed to be a net winner in the tariff environment because they make 80% of its products in the US so a lot of people said that it was going to fare the tariff storm or weather the tariff storm a lot better than other companies. So the fact that it hasn't been doing well and the consumer demand hasn't been there, despite the fact that they're saving on input costs a little bit, that's a big warning signal. And again, I said that it is usually seen as a bellwether of the economy because what do you do when you're feeling well, when you have extra cash in the bank? You upgrade your washing machine, you upgrade your dryer a little bit. These are expensive purchases. So while maybe Uber is seeing the smaller purchases of like a burrito here and there coming in and they're saying that speaks to a strong consumer. Whirlpool saying not enough cash in the bank to make these big ticket purchases, which is a better indicator of how consumers are actually feeling. All right, we're going to take a quick break and come back with a story about a whoop dupe right after this.
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What? How am I supposed to pay this on short notice or at all?
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Neal Freyman
wrist shot at Whoop. The tech giant revealed the Fitbit Air, a screenless fitness band that will sell for $100 when it goes on sale later this month. Taking direct aim at Whoop with a lower priced health tracker, the Fitbit Air also marks Google's biggest play yet into the exploding market of wearable health devices that ditch screens. But the Fitbit Air isn't just a wristband. It's meant to be a portal into the broader health ecosystem Google's calling the Google Health. The new app will launch alongside the fitness band and be your all in one home base for personal health data like heart rate, sleep, step tracking, of course, resting heart rate, logging meals and cycles and yes, I will be at the forefront. Google's entering a crowded health field where it lags behind the dominant Apple Watch is the most popular wearable overall, while screenless devices like Oura Ring and Whoop are gaining lots of traction. Clearly, Google wants to win on price at $100 with an optional $10 per month Google Health subscription. The Fitbit Air undercuts Whoop, which sells an annual subscri for $200. The cheapest Apple Watch is 249, the Oura Ring starts at 349 and Google's own Pixel Watch 4 is 349. Toby, what do you make of Google's play here? Going screenless should Whoop be worried?
Toby Howell
Whoop should be worried because there are two camps that health wearables have adopted at this point. It is the heavy upfront investment that you make in Oura Ring, which is a $350 ring and then a smaller annual subscription fee. Or you be Whoop that gives you the bracelet for free, but then it's useless without the $200 a month subscription. Google's undercutting both sides of that equation. They're saying here's a cheap hardware with a pretty cheap subscription as well that
Neal Freyman
you don't even need, that you don't
Toby Howell
need and Then you could upgrade that too if you want more features to $100 a year. That is why everyone in the industry is shaking, because it undercuts or it undercuts. Whoop. It undercuts everyone at this point, which Google can do because it's just a massive company.
Neal Freyman
It's been fascinating. Watch watching this shift into more simpler hardware. And this comes with the wearing one. Right now it doesn't have a screen, it just sends all this data to your phone. And there are a few advantages. One is that the, I mean, the battery lasts a long time, that this Google Fitbit Air is going to not need a charge for a week. And at the same time you're not going to maybe take it off as much because it's less intrusive to your life. And really the value of these fitness trackers comes with measuring a lot of biometric data, health data over time, and send that to your phone. That's where you get a lot of the insight. So maybe you're willing to take off your Fitbit Air or your whoop less than you might a clunkier device like an Apple watch, where, you know, maybe it's just not on your wrist all the time. Like I have a garment, I'm not wearing it all the time, but if I had something like that, I would. So those are a few of the advantages. And it's also just cheaper to make and it's cheaper to buy. So this industry is exploding of just this screenless display less devices.
Toby Howell
Yeah, Whoop just raised $575 million at a $10 billion valuation. So clearly this category is hot. We have to talk about the health coach too. That is something that Google is putting first and foremost. And their justification for injecting this health coach into it is that if you look at pro athletes, this is from Rishi Chandra, Google's VP of this product category. When you look at pro athletes, they have an army helping them. They have a nutritionist, a sleep coach, a fitness trainer, all looking out for that individual. So what the health coach is trying to provide is all those things in one. You can prompt it and say like, hey, where can I improve my sleep? Where can I improve my fitness xyz? They think that's going to be a big value prop. Who does have something similar? Like I can talk to an AI chat bot about my health. I rarely do it. Let's, let's be honest because most of the numbers that they give you already paint that picture for you. Like, I already know if my sleep was good. Or bad. I already know how to improve my sleep, which is go to bed earlier, don't eat as close to bed. But they think that a lot of people are curious about their health. They want more insights, they want to go deeper. Hence the health coach.
Neal Freyman
This rivalry is getting spicy though, because Whoop CEO after all this came out. Whoops CEO Will Ahmed tweeted a picture of the circuit board of a Whoop and he said engraved on every circuit board is quote don't bother copying us. We're still winning. I don't know if that's a bullish signal. A lot of people were like, hey, cope man.
Toby Howell
All right, let's sprint to the finish with some final headlines. If you liked watching Siena play Kennesaw State in March Madness, get ready for more forgettable first round matchups because the men's and women's NCAA basketball tournaments are getting bigger. The NCAA announced yesterday that the tournaments are jumping to 76 teams up from these 68 that currently play, making the first expansion on the men's side since 2011. Before you go clutching your pearls or trying to envision what a 1 vs 18 matchup might look like, all that's really changing is the play in games. A set of games that whittled down bubble teams to see who makes it into the final field of 64. Instead of the first four. It will now be the first 12 with 24 teams vying for the last 12 spots into the tournament. From there, the traditional 64 team bracket will commence. Neil, a lot of people don't like this calling it a money grab from the NCAA. I say just let all 360 Division 1 programs in and have a March, April, May, June and July Madness.
Neal Freyman
It would take me full weeks to fill out that bracket. That does not sound exceptionally fun. But the mob out was. The mob was out in full force for this decision, saying it waters down the event. While regular season means absolutely nothing now because more teams will get in and probably the biggest criticism is that it will advantage mid teams from the bigger conferences. No shade on Maryland. I went there, but you'd see maybe more Maryland's making it in and fewer McNeese states from the mid major conferences. And that's what we all love about March Madness is those Cinderella stories and it would kind of tilt the tournament in favor of just those average teams from bigger conferences. At the same time, this doesn't mess with the first Thursday or Friday of March Madness, which is the thing that everyone loves, and they're separating it out into the tour, into this Intro tournament. But I will say it doesn't seem to be a decision that was made with the fans in mind.
Toby Howell
Right. I wonder too, if it's going to just cheapen an NCAA tournament appearance because technically you get to, you know, hang a banner or put a notch on your banner saying, we made it to the tournament if you just made it to the first four. So that is going to be a brutal consolation prize if you are a Maryland saying, hey, we made it to the tournament, but we were one of the first 24 teams eliminated on the first few days. So I think fan bases are going to start getting a little, I don't know, overloaded with tournament appearance, fake tournament appearances. As a fan, you're right, it doesn't change the experience that much. We weren't that locked into the first four anyway. Like now the fact that it's the first 24, I don't think it's going to change that much because March Madness truly starts when it starts in that first round. So don't have a huge problem with it, honestly. Just let more kids play, I guess.
Neal Freyman
Up next, a new lawsuit accuses the Italian food brand Sento of committing tomato fraud. Two Californians say Sento has been misrepresenting the San Marzano label on one of its tomato products, duping consumers into thinking they're buying the Ferrari of tomatoes when they're actually just getting a Fiat. The plaintiffs say that Sento's certified San Marzano label is unfair because the product does not have a certification from Italy's authority on such things, which also sets standards for products like Parmesan cheese and olive oil. The lawsuit says the way champagne can only be produced in the Champagne region of France, real San Marzano's can only be grown, processed and canned in a specific region of Italy. And Sento doesn't have that stamp of approval, despite presenting their tomatoes that way. Santo says the suit is a bunch of Bolognese. A lawyer responded the allegations are entirely without merit and that the company will vigorously defend itself.
Toby Howell
A lot of people have thought this about Sento over the years because A suit in 2019 was filed in New York basically arguing the same thing, because it is difficult to independently verify this. I mean, Sento uses a third party agricultural verifier, and they say that is who you should trust. But other critics say, no, you got to use this independent consortium that. I'm not going to try to pronounce that certified. Yeah, exactly. They are the, they are the de facto authority on this subject. I didn't even know this about San Marzano tomatoes, but they have thicker walls, fewer seeds and lower acidity, which makes them the Ferrari of cooking. I don't know if I've cooked with these tomatoes. Have you cooked with San Mars Mar?
Neal Freyman
I say I'm not. I don't think I'm that discerning when it comes to the tomato sauce. Like, I just go with whatever looks like the most authentic Italian brand. When I look at the, when I look at all of the cans, because there are a bunch of different ones. If it looks too American, I'm like, no, I think so. I'm sure you have bought Sento in the past because this is everywhere in every grocery store.
Toby Howell
That is exactly how I shop too. This is bad. We are victims of marketing. Finally, we are witnessing the largest petition ever in human history. Is it about the environment? A political cause? Nope. It's Real Madrid fans demanding that their star forward Killian mbappe get sold. 44 million people and counting have signed the petition, exceeding any human rights petition in recorded history. Mbappe, who's on a million dollar a week salary, has been rubbing fans the wrong way. There was the ill timed holiday with his girlfriend in the middle of the season, the fact that Madrid won all six games he was out with injury, and the stinging reality that arch rivals Barcelona can clinch the league against Madrid this Sunday. Neil Mbappe is one of the best players in the world, but a lot of people, more than the population of the state of California, want him gone.
Neal Freyman
44 million signatures. It just. This shows me how much people care about soccer. And I know this week we've been talking about al hotels are empty for the World cup and there's just bad vibes around that particular tournament. 44 million signatures for a petition for a player to leave your team, which is nearly the population of Spain, is just insane. Real Madrid claim to have 600 million fans worldwide, which did the calculation that 7.5% of the global population are fans of this one particular soccer team in Spain. Now, there are accusations that some of these or many of these signatures are bots and fake, but I still think it shows how popular of a sport this is. Absolutely passionate people are about it.
Toby Howell
I remember earlier in this week we talked about Alberta's succession movement and how they attracted 300,000 signatures. And I sent a tweet because at the beginning of the week this petition was gaining steam and Bob's already attracted like 500,000 by that point. I did not expect it to reach 44 million by the end of the week. I could see this thing spiraling even further, though, because now it's just a meme at this point. So 44 million people want you out. And Poppy is really good. That's the undertext of all this. Like, he is one of the top three players in the world that is not up for debate. He's the favorite to win the World Cup. But, I mean, it just happens. Sometimes the relationship sour. Sometimes when your star player is, you know, getting into locker room fights. Bad for the. Bad for the team. The team starts to rebel against them and the fans start to rebel as well.
Neal Freyman
Yeah. And they're playing against Barcelona on Sunday in El Clasico, and they are far behind. Barcelona can clinch the league. Then. There's a lot of disgruntled people, 7.5% of the world's population, apparently. Okay, that is all the time we have. Thanks for starting your morning with us. Have a wonderful Friday and an even better weekend. If you'd like to reach us, send an email to Morning Brew daily at Morning Broadcom or DM us on Instagram @me Daily Show. Let's roll the credits. Emily Milliron is our supervising producer. Raymond Lou is our senior producer. Our producer is Olivia Graham, and our associate producer is Olivia Lake. Technical direction by Nina Miller and Uchena Wagu. Hair and makeup always logs 10,000 steps. Devin Emery is our president, and our show is a production of Morning Brew.
Toby Howell
Great show, Daniel. I wish you all well.
Date: May 8, 2026
Hosts: Neal Freyman & Toby Howell
Episode Theme:
An engaging discussion about surging US oil exports amid global turmoil, the alarming hantavirus outbreak aboard a cruise ship, the battle for dominance in screenless health wearables, and notable business and sports headlines.
Timestamps: 00:55–02:41
Main Points:
Notable Quotes:
Timestamps: 03:08–07:01
Main Points:
Notable Quotes:
Timestamps: 05:59–07:01
Main Points:
Notable Quotes:
Timestamps: 07:01–11:08
Main Points:
Notable Quotes:
Timestamps: 07:01–11:44
Timestamps: 11:44–14:59
Household appliance giant Whirlpool saw a 7% drop in demand and a big earnings miss, a dynamic the CEO compares to the financial crisis.
Shares fell 12%; company cites poor consumer confidence, supply chain troubles, and impacts of the Iran war.
Contrasts against robust reports from companies like Disney and Uber, revealing conflicting consumer-spending signals.
Whirlpool seen as an economic bellwether: people aren't buying big-ticket items, suggesting financial strain.
Notable Quotes:
Timestamps: 16:51–20:55
Main Points:
Notable Quotes:
Timestamps: 20:55–27:38
The NCAA men’s and women’s basketball tournaments will expand to 76 teams, increasing play-in games but not changing core tournament structure.
Mixed reactions; concern the move favors large-conference teams and dilutes “Cinderella” stories.
A lawsuit claims Sento mislabels “San Marzano” tomatoes, deceiving buyers by using a non-official certification.
Discussion about the prestige and characteristics of real San Marzano tomatoes; difficult for consumers to verify authenticity.
Similar lawsuits have occurred in the past.
Over 44 million people have signed a petition demanding star player Kylian Mbappé be sold, setting a record for the world’s largest petition.
Unprecedented fan backlash despite Mbappé’s top-tier talent; significance for soccer culture and fandom.
Selected Memorable Quote:
“I already know if my sleep was good. Or bad. I already know how to improve my sleep, which is go to bed earlier, don't eat as close to bed.”
— Toby Howell, on the limits of high-tech health trackers (19:33)
This episode blends global headlines with business insight and pop culture, delivering what Morning Brew fans expect: essential, entertaining context for your day.