Tag: Heres

  • $3 Billion later, here’s how Elon Musk and SpaceX changed this corner of Texas.

    BOCA CHICA, Texas – To Gilberto Salinas, the gleaming glass-and-steel building with the “SPACEX” sign emblazoned across its top stretching along State Highway 4 represents a portal into the future – a doorway to deep-space exploration just a few miles from his home.

    Just down the road, workers mill in and out of the launch pad area where SpaceX founder Elon Musk and his team propel 5,000-ton rockets into outer space and from where the tycoon hopes to someday send humans to Mars.

    “I still get goosebumps when I see those rockets launching,” said Salinas, chief executive of Brownsville’s economic development arm. “The future of deep-space exploration is happening here in our backyard.”

    An entrance to SpaceX's rocket launch site in Boca Chica, Texas.

    An entrance to SpaceX’s rocket launch site in Boca Chica, Texas.

    To Nansi Guevara, a Brownsville visual artist, the rocket-making complex is an irrevocable disruption to the shorebirds, ocelots and endangered Kemp’s ridley sea turtles that nest in the Rio Grande delta. It’s also the reason rents and property taxes are on a steep rise, she said, and why skilled workers from California and Florida are descending upon South Texas to fill high-paying jobs once promised to locals.

    “More and more people are questioning it,” said Guevara, an activist who has opposed SpaceX.

    Musk, the richest man in the world, has poured more than $3 billion into the ever-expanding rocket-producing venture of SpaceX, perched in a river delta about 22 miles east of Brownsville. Space travel enthusiasts have applauded his ambitious plans to launch rockets into outer space with the stated goal of some day placing a man on Mars.

    Locally, support – if not outright enthusiasm – for SpaceX remains strong and widespread, though some like Guevara question just how much the venture has benefited locals and warn of harmful environmental impacts.

    SpaceX’s media relations officials referred USA TODAY to their website for details on how they mitigate environmental concerns, where the company claims the list of measures it takes “just for operations in Texas is over two hundred items long, including constant monitoring and sampling of the short and long-term health of local flora and fauna.”

    The company also partners with Sea Turtle, Inc., a local nonprofit focused on sea turtle conservation, and deploys workers to pick up litter around Boca Chica, according to the website.

    SpaceX Starbase, situated off of State Highway 4, is framed in a windshield near Brownsville, Texas.

    SpaceX Starbase, situated off of State Highway 4, is framed in a windshield near Brownsville, Texas.

    “SpaceX is committed to minimizing impact and enhancing the surrounding environment where possible,” it said.

    So far, the team at SpaceX has launched its biggest and most powerful rocket, Starship, six times, the latest one occurring last month. Musk has requested approval to ramp up operations to 25 launches a year and said he plans to move his entire rocket-building operation from California to South Texas.

    Environmentalists and watchdog groups worry that Musk and others in the spaceflight sector may soon have freer rein when President-elect Donald Trump takes office in January; Trump has said he will appoint Musk to the “Department of Government Efficiency,” an advisory group mandated with downsizing government.

    Musk, who spent more than a quarter-billion dollars to help Trump get elected, is now tasked with reducing government – even as he’s amassed billions of dollars in federal contracts and has faced scrutiny from federal agencies as chief executive of various ventures.

    How that close relationship with the federal government plays out in South Texas remains to be seen.

    “They’ve already been getting away with doing whatever they want and causing environmental damage to our community,” said Bekah Hinojosa, co-founder of the South Texas Environmental Justice Network. “Now, we’re just worried it’s going to exacerbate and get worse.”

    Launch day celebrations

    To date, SpaceX has generated more than $800 million in direct and indirect taxes to local and state governments, drawn more than $99 million in tourism to the region and created more than 3,400 jobs for employees and contractors, according to figures SpaceX provided to Cameron County.

    To reach the complex, visitors drive east from Brownsville along Highway 4 toward the beaches, on a road that runs roughly parallel to the Rio Grande. A decade ago, the area was desolate tidal flats dotted with sabal palms and Spanish Dagger yucca. Today, two futuristic-looking office towers and a soaring black-glass building comprise Starbase – 220,000 square feet of buildings spread over 350 acres. This is where SpaceX staffers design and build the rockets and control their launch.

    About a quarter mile down the road, two soaring launch towers – one for each launch pad – sit sentry on SpaceX’s launch site, as workers mill around.

    Hopper Haus Bar and Grill co-owner Barton “Bic” Bickerton pours a Starbase Brewing Lucky Launch Day Lager in Port Isabel, Texas.

    Hopper Haus Bar and Grill co-owner Barton “Bic” Bickerton pours a Starbase Brewing Lucky Launch Day Lager in Port Isabel, Texas.

    For Barton “Bic” Bickerton, 55, owner of the Hopper Haus Bar & Grill in nearby Port Isabel, the real magic happens during each launch, when his small establishment crams with space enthusiasts from around the world and SpaceX employees.

    On those days, the bar, which has the word “BARBASE” painted on an outside wall and serves “Cosmic Coco” and “Lucky Launch” draft beer, opens early to accommodate enthusiasts watching the early morning launch. SpaceX employees celebrate at the bar with shots of Jameson. Visitors from Norway, Russia, Germany, South Africa and other countries fill the bar and spill out outside, toasting to space exploration or dissecting the science behind the latest launch.

    “It’s really pretty cool,” Bickerton said.

    Business has grown 40% since opening in 2021, said Bickerton, a former high school baseball coach. He’s building a larger dining room adjacent to the bar and a backyard patio to accommodate the ever-growing crowds during launches.

    “Business wise, it’s been unbelievable,” he said.

    A row of homes located on SpaceX owned property near Starbase near Brownsville, Texas.

    A row of homes located on SpaceX owned property near Starbase near Brownsville, Texas.

    Dean Putegnat, co-owner of Redfish Recycling in Brownsville, quickly saw an opportunity to service Starbase’s sprawling complex and all the recyclable refuse it produces. His company collects 14 commercial containers and 70 residential containers from the space explorers a few  times a week, “about the size of a mini-municipality,” he said.

    What he didn’t foresee was the influx of people from California, Austin and other areas who readily signed up for residential recycling service – and who are steadily pushing parts of the border into a more recycling-friendly area. As a result, the residential recycling segment of his business is rapidly growing, Putegnat, 51, said.

    Given the sudden interest, a city proposal to bring curbside recycling to Brownsville could pass through city council next month, making recycling even more widespread, Putegnat said.

    “More houses want recycling, more convenience stores need a recycling container, more restaurants need recycling,” he said. “SpaceX definitely has a lot to do with the indirect growth we’ve had.”

    Rising rents and indigenous tribe restrictions

    But with growth comes growing pains. Some locals point to rising rents, as out-of-towners move in to fill SpaceX jobs.

    Christopher Basaldú, an anthropologist and environmentalist, said he was forced to vacate his Brownsville apartment in late 2021 when the owners sold the building. He’s now living in a smaller apartment with fewer amenities at a higher monthly rent, he said.

    More concerning to Basaldú is the way SpaceX’s operations have threatened habitats near the launch site and, by closing the only access road to the beach during tests and launches, limit the Carrizo/Comecrudo Tribe of Texas’ access to Boca Chica Beach, which the tribe considers to be its historical and spiritual center. SpaceX closes the only access road to the beach several hundred hours a year during tests and launches.

    During certain cycles of their native calendar, members of the tribe venture to the beach and place offerings and prayers – practices Basaldú said are hampered by SpaceX.

    “We can’t participate in traditions that have been happening for many thousands of years,” said Basaldú, who is a member of the tribe. “In the course of just a few years, this foreigner billionaire has stopped that from happening.”

    Last year, environmental and cultural groups, including the Carrizo/Comecrudo tribe, filed a lawsuit in federal court against the Federal Aviation Administration, claiming the agency failed to fully assess Starbase’s impact on the surrounding area. The FAA has denied the claims.

    For years, the Tesla and SpaceX CEO has bristled at what he sees as government overreach in his space ventures – something he may have greater control over given his future position in the Trump administration.

    Elon Musk gives a tour toPresident-elect Donald Trump and lawmakers of the control room before the launch of the sixth test flight of the SpaceX Starship rocket on Nov. 19, 2024 in Brownsville, Texas. SpaceX’s billionaire owner, Elon Musk, a Trump confidante, has been tapped to lead the new Department of Government Efficiency alongside former presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy.

    Elon Musk gives a tour toPresident-elect Donald Trump and lawmakers of the control room before the launch of the sixth test flight of the SpaceX Starship rocket on Nov. 19, 2024 in Brownsville, Texas. SpaceX’s billionaire owner, Elon Musk, a Trump confidante, has been tapped to lead the new Department of Government Efficiency alongside former presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy.

    Scott Amey, general counsel for the Project on Government Oversight, a Washington-based watchdog group, said Musk’s role in the upcoming administration presents two potential conflicts of interest: steering federal contracts toward his companies or watering down agencies that monitor his businesses, such as the FAA or the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    “There are quite a few ethics and conflict of interest laws that will apply to him,” Amey said. “It will take a lot of self-policing as well as a strong ethics officer to make sure he doesn’t cross the line.”

    Earlier this year, the FAA fined SpaceX more than $633,000 for reportedly not following regulations during two launches in 2023. In a post on X following the penalties’ announcement, Musk threatened to sue the federal agency.

    “The biggest impediment to progress that we’re experiencing is overregulation,” Musk said earlier this year. “It takes longer to get the permit to launch than to build a giant rocket.”

    SpaceX officials have agreed to take steps to mitigate the company’s impact on the surrounding environment. But recent events, such as the April 2023 explosion of a booster of the Starship rocket that sent debris flying in all directions and rattled homes several miles away, continue to alarm environmentalists and locals.

    Rocket explosion debris

    On a recent afternoon, Justin LeClaire, an avian conservation biologist with the environmental advocacy group Coastal Bend Bays and Estuaries, plodded through the sand dunes just north of the launch sites, looking for signs of the snowy plover, Wilson’s plover and least tern – all shorebirds protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act.

    Justin LeClaire, a conservation biologist for Coastal Bend Bays and Estuaries, shows Donny Persaud, a PhD candidate at Cornell University, photos of damaged shorebird eggs after a SpaceX launch in Boca Chica, Texas. A large hunk of cement and twisted rebar from an explosion is partially buried in the sand.

    Justin LeClaire, a conservation biologist for Coastal Bend Bays and Estuaries, shows Donny Persaud, a PhD candidate at Cornell University, photos of damaged shorebird eggs after a SpaceX launch in Boca Chica, Texas. A large hunk of cement and twisted rebar from an explosion is partially buried in the sand.

    Instead, LeClaire pointed to a large chunk of concrete with a tangle of rebar sticking out of it, like a giant spider, wedged in the sand – a relic from last year’s explosion. Nearby, smaller chunks of debris – like bowling balls – dotted the sand.

    Last June, his group surveyed nine shorebird nests the day before a Starship launch. The next day, they returned and tallied the impact: Out of 22 eggs that were in the nine nests, only five survived the launch intact – all other eggs were missing or deemed too damaged to be viable, according to the group.

    The launches and occasional explosion, along with the steep increase in human traffic and the trash they bring, is wreaking irrevocable harm on the surrounding habitat, LeClaire said.

    “All of these things combined could really be completely habitat-altering for the Boca Chica area as a whole,” he said.

    Guevera, the artist, said when she first moved to Brownsville from Laredo eight years ago, she visited Boca Chica beach and ventured down to where the Rio Grande empties into the Gulf of Mexico. There, she took off her shoes and stepped into the river. Across the river, Mexican families splashed along the shoreline.

    She felt a deep connection with the region and the historic river that has separated the U.S. from her ancestral homeland of Mexico for nearly two centuries.

    Guevara said she’s dismayed that her access to that area is now restricted and bristles at the thought of Starbase slowly desecrating the area – all in the name of sending rockets into space.

    “My quality of life here is good because of nature,” she said. “If we don’t have nature, what do we have?”

    Follow Jervis on X: @MrRJervis.

    This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Elon Musk and SpaceX changed this Texas town. Opinions differ on how.

  • Trump has tapped an unprecedented 13 billionaires for top administration roles. Here’s who they are

    President-elect Donald Trump has assembled the wealthiest presidential administration in modern history, with at least 13 billionaires set to take on top government posts.

    They include a wrestling magnate, a private space pioneer, a New York real estate developer, the heir to a small appliance empire, and the wealthiest man on the planet — with several being donors and close personal friends of the incoming president.

    In total, the combined net worth of the wealthiest members of his administration could surpass $460 billion, including Department of Government Efficiency co-head Elon Musk — whose $400 billion net worth exceeds the GDP of mid-sized countries.

    MORE: Trump and giveaways: What Musk spent $270M on during the election

    Even discounting Musk, Trump’s cabinet is still expected to be the wealthiest in history, with reported billionaires Howard Lutnick nominated as commerce secretary, Linda McMahon nominated as education secretary, and Scott Bessent nominated as treasury secretary. Together, Trump’s expected cabinet is worth at least $7 billion.

    Trump’s ambassador picks also include several billionaires, including financier Warren Stephens, who has been tapped to serve as the ambassador to the United Kingdom, Conair executive Leandro Rizzuto Jr., tapped to serve as the ambassador to the Organization of American States, Charles Kushner, named the ambassador to France, and Tom Barrack, named the ambassador to Turkey.

    “It’s not a surprise that [Trump] surrounds himself with people who come from the same world that he does,” said Jordan Libowitz, vice president of communications for the watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. “The billionaire class of businessmen is who he is and who he wants to be seen as, and who he wants to be seen with.”

    The wealth of Trump’s current cabinet rivals only that of his first-term cabinet — which had a combined net worth of $3.2 billion — and dwarfs the $118 million combined net worth of President Joe Biden’s cabinet.

    PHOTO: Vivek Ramaswamy and Elon Musk, who is carrying his son, arrive for a roundtable meeting to discuss President-elect Donald Trump's planned Department of Government Efficiency, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Dec. 5, 2024. (Jose Luis Magana/AP)

    PHOTO: Vivek Ramaswamy and Elon Musk, who is carrying his son, arrive for a roundtable meeting to discuss President-elect Donald Trump’s planned Department of Government Efficiency, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Dec. 5, 2024. (Jose Luis Magana/AP)

    During Trump’s first term, his secretary of education, Betsy DeVos, boasted the highest net worth, with Forbes estimating it to be roughly $2 billion. In contrast, the wealthiest official in the Biden administration is White House Chief of Staff Jeff Zients, whose disclosures from 2021 showed his net worth ranging between $90 million and $443 million.

    While it’s common for people with careers in business to serve in government, watchdog groups told ABC News that ultra-rich individuals with complex financial backgrounds and previous business dealings raise concerns about potential conflicts of interest.

    “Being wealthy by itself is not a disqualifier,” said Kedric Payne, senior director of Ethics at Campaign Legal Center, formerly deputy chief counsel of the Office of Congressional Ethics. “It’s just simply the potential conflicts of interest that are the concern.”

    “The American people re-elected President Trump by a resounding margin giving him a mandate to implement the promises he made on the campaign trail, and his Cabinet picks reflect his priority to put America First,” Trump-Vance transition spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told ABC News. “President Trump will continue to appoint highly-qualified men and women who have the talent, experience, and necessary skill sets to Make America Great Again.”

    Under federal ethics laws, Trump’s wealthy nominees and appointees will have to divest themselves of stock holdings that could raise conflict issues, and will be required to release their financial disclosures. It’s not yet clear if Musk and Ramaswamy will fall under the disclosure requirements, due to their DOGE positions being described as “outside” of the government — despite the potentially massive impact they could have on the government.

    MORE: Trump promised to disrupt Washington. His Cabinet picks would do just that: ANALYSIS

    “Luckily, there are laws in place that address this specific problem, and they’re typically enforced,” Payne said.

    The Office of Government Ethics will review presidential nominees and appointees’ assets and financial interests before the Senate confirmation process, and provide advice on how to avoid conflicts of interests if they are confirmed, according to Payne.

    Here are the Trump administration’s wealthiest members and how much they’re reportedly worth.

    Elon Musk, Department of Government Efficiency co-head: $439 billion

    Musk is the world’s richest person, with his stakes in Tesla, SpaceX, Twitter, and artificial intelligence startup xAI making him worth over $400 billion, according to Forbes. The tech mogul spent over a quarter of a billion dollars to help return Trump to the White House, and has emerged as one of the most influential figures in Trump’s orbit.

    Leandro Rizzuto Jr., Ambassador to the Organization of American States: $3.5 billion

    Rizzuto’s family made billions growing the hair product company Conair from a small family business run out of a Queens, New York, garage into one of the largest private companies in the United States. Forbes estimated the family’s net worth at approximately $3.5 billion in 2017.

    Rizzuto briefly served as Trump’s principal officer at the U.S. Consulate General in Bermuda in 2020 after his 2018 nomination to be ambassador to Barbados failed in the Senate.

    Warren Stephens, Ambassador to the United Kingdom: $3.4 billion

    Stephens has spent his entire career with his family’s Little Rock-based investment bank, becoming the firm’s CEO and president in 1986.

    He spent $2 million in 2016 to support a group that aimed to stop Trump from winning the Republican nomination, but donated to Trump in the 2020 presidential race, and eventually supported Trump 2024 election after initially throwing his support behind other Republican candidates.

    Linda McMahon, Education Secretary: Up to $3 billion

    McMahon, with her husband Vince McMahon, founded the company that later became World Wrestling Entertainment Inc. Under her leadership, WWE became the world’s largest wrestling entertainment company, with Vince McMahon worth over $3 billion in 2024. The McMahons have since separated, and it’s unclear how much of the company Linda owns individually.

    A Trump supporter, she was the head of the Small Business Administration during Trump’s first term in office.

    Howard Lutnick, Commerce Secretary: $2.2 billion

    Lutnick, who has been tapped to serve as the Secretary of the Department of Commerce, is the CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald, a financial services firm he joined in 1983. The billionaire businessman has led the investment first since 1991 and owns about 60% of the company, according to Bloomberg.

    Charles Kushner, Ambassador to France: $1.8 billion

    Kushner is a real estate developer who made his fortune building thousands of residential units across New Jersey. In 2005, Kushner was sentenced to 24 months in prison after pleading guilty to multiple felonies, including making false statements to the Federal Election Commission, assisting in the filing of a false tax return, and retaliating against a cooperation witness.

    During his plea hearing, he admitted to retaliating against his sister for cooperating with law enforcement by having a prostitute seduce her husband and covertly film them having sex.

    MORE: Paul Manafort, Roger Stone, Charles Kushner among those pardoned by Trump

    After serving his sentence, Kushner made a series of successful investments in the New York real estate market, including the purchase of a midtown skyscraper for nearly $2 billion. He was subsequently pardoned by Trump at the end of Trump’s first term.

    His son Jared Kushner is married to Trump’s daughter Ivanka Trump, and the Kushner family’s overall net worth is approximately $1.8 billion according to Forbes.

    Jared Isaacman, NASA Administrator: $1.8 billion

    Isaacman is a pioneer in private space exploration who made his fortune by founding the payment processing company Shift4 Payments.

    In addition to his stake in Shift4 — which processes a third of the customer payments made to American hotels and restaurants — Issacman sold his tactical aircraft company Draken International, LLC, to the investment company Blackstone for a reported nine-figure sum.

    Thomas Barrack Jr., Ambassador to Turkey: $1 billion

    In 1991, Barrack founded the private equity real estate firm Colony Capital, which now manages more than $80 billion as DigitalBridge Group.

    PHOTO: Tom Barrack, a former advisor to former president Donald Trump, leaves U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York in a short recess during jury selection for his trial, Sept. 19, 2022, in Brooklyn. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

    PHOTO: Tom Barrack, a former advisor to former president Donald Trump, leaves U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York in a short recess during jury selection for his trial, Sept. 19, 2022, in Brooklyn. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

    A close friend of the president-elect, Barrack chaired Trump’s first inaugural committee and in 2022 was acquitted of federal charges accusing him of illegal foreign lobbying on behalf of the United Arab Emirates.

    Steven Witkoff, Special Envoy to the Middle East: $1 billion

    After first meeting Donald Trump in a New York deli in the 1980s, Witkoff climbed New York’s real estate ladder alongside Trump, ultimately building a personal fortune of a billion dollars.

    Witkoff has remained close to Trump for decades, testifying as an expert witness at his New York civil fraud trial in defense of the former president, and golfing with Trump during his second assassination attempt in September. Despite his limited experience in foreign affairs, Witkoff was named Trump’s Special Envoy to the Middle East.

    Frank Bisiganano, Social Security Administration Commissioner: $1 billion

    Bisiganano was one of JPMorgan Chase’s most influential executives during the 2008 recession, before taking over the financial services company First Data Corporation. Bisiganano became the CEO of Fiserv — a leading financial technology firm — when the company bought First Data in 2019. A hefty executive compensation package — more than $100 million in 2017 — and his stake in the company contributed to his net worth exceeding $1 billion, according to Fortune.

    Scott Bessent, Treasury Secretary: Reported billionaire

    A protege of Democratic megadonor George Soros, Bessent worked as the chief investment officer of Soros Fund Management before founding his own firm, Key Square Group. Bessent developed a reputation for bold bets on macroeconomic trends, including making more than a billion dollars by betting against the British pound in the 1990s, followed by a similar trade against the Japanese yen in 2013 that netted more than a billion dollars in profits.

    MORE: Who is Trump’s treasury secretary pick, Scott Bessent?

    At one point, Bessent’s Key Square Group managed more than $5 billion.

    During the campaign cycle, Bessent was a major fundraiser and emerged as a key economic adviser to Trump.

    Vivek Ramaswamy, Department of Government Efficiency co-head: $1 billion

    Ramaswamy, a biotech entrepreneur and 2024 presidential candidate, made his fortune through his 10% stake in Roivant Sciences, a biotech company he founded in 2014. After leaving Roivant in 2021, he founded Strive Asset Management, which manages approximately $1.7 billion — including offering an “anti-woke” index fund.

    During his long shot bid for the White House, Ramaswamy loaned and contributed $26 million to his own campaign.

    Kelly Loeffler, Administrator of Small Business Administration: $800 million

    Loeffler is a former Georgia senator and the former CEO of Bakkt, a cryptocurrency trading platform. She owned a minority stake in the WNBA’s Atlanta Dream in 2010 before selling her stake in 2021 amid criticism stemming from the Black Lives Matter movement. Loeffler is married to billionaire and major Trump donor Jeffrey Sprecher, the CEO of Intercontinental Exchange, which owns the New York Stock Exchange.

    PHOTO: Sen. Kelly Loeffler speaks at the Georgia Republican Party's state convention, June 9, 2023, in Columbus, Ga.  ( Cheney Orr for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

    PHOTO: Sen. Kelly Loeffler speaks at the Georgia Republican Party’s state convention, June 9, 2023, in Columbus, Ga. ( Cheney Orr for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

    She was appointed to fill a vacated Senate seat in Georgia in 2020 but was defeated in a special election in 2021. Trump recently named Loeffler to serve as the co-chair of his inaugural committee and nominated her to lead the SBA.

    David Sacks, AI and Crypto Czar: Net worth unknown

    Sacks is a member of the so-called “PayPal Mafia,” a group of tech entrepreneurs who founded successful companies after eBay purchased PayPal in 2002. He launched a series of companies including the workplace communications company Yammer and the venture capital firm Craft Ventures. Sacks’ podcast with fellow venture capitalists Chamath Palihapitiya, Jason Calacanis, and David Friedberg hosted Trump for a one-hour episode in June.

    As Trump’s AI and crypto czar, Sacks is tasked with supercharging the development of AI and cryptocurrency development with minimal regulation.

    Doug Burgum, Interior Secretary: $100 million

    Burgum, the former governor of North Dakota, got his start in the software business in 1983 when he mortgaged a quarter million dollars worth of farmland to found Great Pains Software. Microsoft eventually purchased the company for a billion dollars in 2000, and Burgum went on to run a real estate development firm and venture capital company.

    MORE: Who is Doug Burgum, North Dakota governor and potential Trump running mate?

    He was elected governor of North Dakota in 2016 and was reelected in 2020. He ran a long shot presidential campaign and dropped out before the primaries, though he was one of Trump’s final three picks for vice president.

    Mehmet Oz, Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services: $100 million

    Dr. Oz is a heart surgeon-turned-TV-host who became famous for his program “The Dr. Oz Show.” He was previously the director of the Cardiovascular Institute at New York Presbyterian Hospital and vice-chairman and professor of surgery at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons.

    In 2003, Oz began his television hosting career with his show “Second Opinion” on the Discovery Channel, and later became a regular on “The Oprah Winfrey Show.” In 2009, Oz debuted his own “Dr. Oz Show,” which ran until 2022, when Oz ran for the Senate in Pennsylvania and lost.

    PHOTO: Dr. Mehmet Oz attended 51th Veith Symposium in New York, Nov. 21, 2024.  (Fatih Aktas/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    PHOTO: Dr. Mehmet Oz attended 51th Veith Symposium in New York, Nov. 21, 2024. (Fatih Aktas/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    During the coronavirus pandemic, Oz promoted the treatment of hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malaria drug unproven in treating COVID-19. He has faced criticism over his claims about weight-loss products and over his past statements on vaccination.

    Oz has defended his endorsement of controversial medical products by saying that he goes against the “established grain,” and that he always puts patients first.

    During his Senate run, he valued his assets between $100 million and $315 million, according to a federal financial disclosure.

    Trump has tapped an unprecedented 13 billionaires for top administration roles. Here’s who they are originally appeared on abcnews.go.com

  • QB Room: If Aaron Rodgers is done with the Jets, where does he play in 2025? Here’s the outlook.

    (Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports)

    (Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports)

    Almost exactly 16 years ago — starting in late November of 2008 — Brett Favre’s one-year shotgun marriage to the New York Jets went into the tank. At the time, the Jets were 8-3, squarely in the AFC playoff picture, and coming off a 34-13 win over the Tennessee Titans. But there was also a problem.

    Favre’s throwing shoulder was in pain.

    Though the franchise wouldn’t know it definitively until an MRI in late December, Favre had taken a hit against the Titans and tore the biceps tendon in his throwing shoulder. It was an injury that would take a season of Favre-mania in New York and turn it inside out — scuttled by a 1-4 finish which saw the Jets quarterback (and presumptive starter the next season) throw two touchdowns against nine interceptions. The Jets missed the postseason, with Favre looking and sounding like he was physically and mentally cooked. Not surprisingly, he told the Jets he was retiring just a few weeks after the conclusion of the season.

    And that was that.

    Of course, it wasn’t.

    Favre’s legendary flip-flopping with his retirement status had one more turn left, and following his release by the Jets in late April of that year, he was drawn back into the NFL fold by the Minnesota Vikings in mid-August. At the time, it was natural to ask what Favre could have left. His season with the Jets, despite earning a Pro Bowl nod, was a roller coaster in the middle of a circus. It ended badly and injured. Then the Vikings came calling.

    One year later, Favre put together one of the best seasons of his career, finishing 2009 with 33 touchdowns and seven interceptions while leading the Vikings to the NFC title game, where they narrowly lost to the eventual Super Bowl champion New Orleans Saints.

    This is a relevant chapter of NFL history right now. Because we’re staring at a fading Aaron Rodgers with the Jets — clearly still not himself after last year’s Achilles repair — and wondering what’s left in the tank for a star who, like Favre before him, is looking physically and mentally cooked in a Jets uniform.

    Given the clean sweep firings of the head coach and general manager who courted Rodgers so feverishly to the Jets — and the team owner who reportedly verbalized the idea of benching him early in the season — it’s fair to expect that the end is near for the soon-to-be 41-year-old veteran. Or at the very least, the end with the Jets is near.

    But with Rodgers already stating that he wants to play in 2025 — and sources close to him telling Yahoo Sports that he doesn’t want his legacy to be this Jets implosion — it’s worth taking a gander at potential landing spots for Rodgers this offseason. As much as we’re staring at him and certain that he doesn’t have much left to offer, we can’t account for every NFL general manager or head coach who might think otherwise.

    With that in mind, here’s what the landscape looks like, with a rationale for and against Rodgers’ next potential landing spot.

    Starting with the …

    Why it could happen: Head coach Kyle Shanahan made a call to see if Rodgers was available via trade prior to the 2021 NFL Draft. Shanahan has spoken glowingly about Rodgers on many occasions and has the confidence (arrogance?) to believe he could get one last squeeze out of the future Hall of Famer. Plus, this 49ers team, if fully healthy in 2025, would represent the kind of talented landing spot that turned Favre around for one exquisite post-Jets season. Rodgers also wants to be on a team that can win now. He’s not sticking around to get creamed on a bad team.

    Why it won’t happen: Brock Purdy’s extension is still the primary plan for the 49ers right now. And while he’s had some ups and downs this season, he still represents a decade or more of quarterback stability in San Francisco. Unless Purdy falls apart, there’s no reason to risk that on an aging and limited Rodgers — even if Rodgers agreed to play for next to nothing to help the 49ers with their salary cap.

    Why it could happen: Like Shanahan and the 49ers, Sean McVay and the Rams had their own interest in Rodgers in 2021, prior to dealing for Matthew Stafford. There’s some question about whether or not Stafford will be in the fold next season, and the Rams don’t have a clearly logical long-term option at the position. The overall roster isn’t the same quality as San Francisco, but Rodgers has a personal affinity for Los Angeles and there is enough offensive talent to at least have a nice one-season bridge opportunity for both quarterback and team.

    Why it won’t happen: The Rams have salary-cap issues, so Rodgers would have to come in for nothing, and the team has shown little interest in rebuilding with anything but younger players. Adding Rodgers would merely be a one-season patch to try and win the Super Bowl in the 2025 season, and the Rams don’t look like they’re equipped for that with or without him. So what would be the point?

    Welcome to QB Room, Charles Robinson's weekly quarterback-centric NFL column at Yahoo Sports. (Joseph Raines/Yahoo Sports)Welcome to QB Room, Charles Robinson's weekly quarterback-centric NFL column at Yahoo Sports. (Joseph Raines/Yahoo Sports)

    Welcome to QB Room, Charles Robinson’s weekly quarterback-centric NFL column at Yahoo Sports. (Joseph Raines/Yahoo Sports)

    Why it could happen: Because the universe is weird and the Vikings did resurrect Favre so why bet against the planets aligning and history repeating itself? Also, starter Sam Darnold is leaving in free agency for a starter contract elsewhere, and rookie J.J. McCarthy is coming off two offseason knee surgeries and is still learning the playbook and position. Meanwhile, the Vikings’ roster would give Rodgers exactly the kind of weapons to recapture a season of greatness, while also sticking it in the eye of the Packers just for fun. So, basically, what Favre did.

    Why it won’t happen: There’s little logic in letting go of Darnold in free agency so that you can get moving with the McCarthy plan, then replacing that plan with a Rodgers interruption. The Vikings would be asking for problems and drama.

    Why it could happen: Geno Smith hits a wall this season and the Seahawks fizzle down the stretch, and at some point the team sees that Sam Howell isn’t a viable starter. And some weird form of desperation.

    Why it won’t happen: Rodgers isn’t a better option than holding onto Smith for at least one more season and continuing to work with Howell.

    Why it could happen: Madness.

    Why it won’t happen: Sanity. And the salary cap. And Deshaun Watson hangover. And sanity (yes, I said it twice).

    Why it could happen: Desperation from a front office and coaching staff that feels like it basically has 2025 to put a winning season together, and the hope that maybe Will Levis could get something positive by sitting behind Rodgers for a season and rebooting.

    Why it won’t happen: Levis is at least playing well enough in losses and showing signs of life, earning one more year of patience and development. Also, Rodgers doesn’t want to be a part of a in-progress build.

    Why it could happen: Same thing I said about the Titans, but plug in Anthony Richardson for Levis.

    Why it won’t happen: Same thing I said about the Titans, but plug in Anthony Richardson for Levis.

    Why it could happen: Mark Davis is a bad team owner who likes shiny things and will be desperate if the Raiders aren’t positioned to draft a quarterback. And maybe minority owner Tom Brady thinks Rodgers has something left.

    Why it won’t happen: This is a rebuild and Rodgers isn’t putting his last gasp into a rebuild. Also, Davante Adams has told Rodgers everything he needs to know about the Raiders and their own bad ownership situation with Davis.

    Why it could happen: Tua Tagovailoa suffers another concussion that changes the course of his career and he has to sit out the 2025 season — but is also eligible to return in 2026, health permitting. The Dolphins need a one-season fix and have the talent to be attractive to Rodgers.

    Why it won’t happen: Tagovailoa won’t get another concussion this season and there is no need for a starting quarterback next year.

    Why it could happen: Bryce Young falls apart down the stretch and the Panthers find themselves in a situation where they can’t lure or draft another starter.

    Why it won’t happen: Rodgers is in the class of players who couldn’t be lured to Carolina. It’s a rebuild of rebuilds.

    Why it could happen: The Giants’ coaching staff and front office has to win in 2025 or get swept out, and Rodgers is a better option than the other retreads or rookies available. Pure desperation.

    Why it won’t happen: The Giants’ ownership, coaching staff and front office has had a front-row seat for Rodgers’ stint with the Jets. They know what this looks like. Rodgers won’t be interested in the rebuild. And the Giants will be positioned to draft a quarterback.

    Why it could happen: See the Cleveland Browns entry.

    Why it won’t happen: See the Cleveland Browns entry and replace Watson’s name with Derek Carr.

    Why it could happen: It’s probably the best and most realistic option left on the table.

    Why it won’t happen: Rodgers can’t go out like this, and will play almost anywhere to make sure the Jets debacle isn’t the last image he leaves in the NFL.

    For now, that’s the horizon Rodgers is heading into. Now entering Week 12 of the QB Room …

    (Joseph Raines/Yahoo Sports)(Joseph Raines/Yahoo Sports)

    (Joseph Raines/Yahoo Sports)

    • Most of this week’s odds and ends is going to be eaten up by three quarterback contract situations to watch in the second half of the season. So buckle up. These three cases are drawing more curiosity across the league with each passing week, from a financial and talent perspectives. And all of them are seemingly getting more complicated as we head into the home stretch of the regular season. In no particular order, it’s time to talk about …

    As we mentioned in the Rodgers multiverse lead, there remains a possibility that this situation takes a left turn. Part of it is rooted in how head coach Kyle Shanahan’s opinion of Jimmy Garoppolo began to erode following the Super Bowl LIV loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in 2020. The following season, you began to hear from some of Shanahan’s confidants that he had some frustrations with Garoppolo’s decision making and ability to handle moments on the big stage. Then came the drumbeat that Shanahan still pined for Kirk Cousins, which seemed shocking at the time.

    Looking back, the takeaway from the situation were that Shanahan could definitely run hot and cold with starting quarterbacks. Even guys who were proven and had some success. Garoppolo’s injuries ultimately undercut him the next few seasons with the 49ers, but there’s merit to the belief that the experience left a lasting impression on how long Shanahan sticks with guys once he has even a sliver of reservation.

    November 17, 2024; Santa Clara, California, USA; San Francisco 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy (13) scores a touchdown against Seattle Seahawks defensive tackle Jarran Reed (90) during the first quarter at Levi's Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-Imagn ImagesNovember 17, 2024; Santa Clara, California, USA; San Francisco 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy (13) scores a touchdown against Seattle Seahawks defensive tackle Jarran Reed (90) during the first quarter at Levi's Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-Imagn Images

    Does Niners quarterback Brock Purdy, pictured scoring a touchdown against the Seahawks on Sunday, need another “prove-it” year to land a huge, multi-year contract extension? (Kyle Terada-Imagn Images)

    Applying that to the Purdy situation, there’s no question there have been peaks and valleys this season in his play. Not dramatic swings, mind you, but enough to make the remainder of the season important when it comes to the urgency of his contract extension.

    The 49ers close out their final seven games with considerable competition, including two concrete Super Bowl contenders (the Buffalo Bills and Detroit Lions), a Green Bay Packers team that is in the thick of playoff seeding and two NFC West teams that are clawing to win the division (the Los Angeles Rams and Arizona Cardinals). And of the two “easy” teams left on the schedule, there are the Miami Dolphins, who can challenge the 49ers defensively and are getting better with Tua Tagovailoa’s return, and the Chicago Bears, who made a change at offensive coordinator that created encouraging signs.

    That’s not a cakewalk for the 5-5 Niners down the stretch. How Purdy plays in that expanse will matter, particularly as it pertains to this latest concern about his throwing shoulder — which reportedly interfered with his practice on Thursday — and whether he can elevate the healthy parts of San Francisco’s roster down the stretch.

    The plan is still to extend Purdy this offseason. But if this is an uneven ride or Purdy has health issues through the rest of the season, it’s more likely the team presses pause on extension talks and evaluates how it moves forward. If that happens, I think the 49ers will play out the final year of Purdy’s deal in 2025, knowing they can either extend him after that season or apply the franchise tag

    The bottom line: There might be one more prove-it year in play for Purdy if he can’t catch a heater from this point on. And there’s this whisper … former 49ers backup Sam Darnold looks pretty good running the Shanahan offense in Minnesota and will be a free agent this offseason.

    It’s certainly not time to get over our skis when it comes to Wilson’s contractual future, but his 4-1 start and fit within the Steelers’ scheme and ideology has been good enough to start laying track for a longer marriage. When I spent time with the Steelers in the summer, I was flat-out told by members of the team’s braintrust that the 2025 quarterback was absolutely on the 2024 roster. The only question was whether it would be Wilson or Justin Fields.

    Right now, Wilson is making the best case to be the choice. That said, he turns 36 next week and the offense hasn’t been a juggernaut, which was evident in Sunday’s touchdown-less win against the Ravens and Thursday night’s 24-19 defeat to the 3-8 Browns. So there needs to be some thought into how the team would be constructed around Wilson with an extension.

    Even under the best circumstances, Wilson’s extension would likely be a four-year pact with a window of guaranteed money in 2025 and 2026, making it a short-term gamble — with the potential to renegotiate and create some guaranteed money in 2027 if Wilson can play at a high level in 2025 and the Steelers make some playoff strides.

    A question that is buzzing across the league right now is what Wilson’s salary would look like, given his age and this being his late-stage reboot in his career. A follow-up to that question is whether Wilson would take a team-friendly deal that would allow Pittsburgh to inject more capital to create a three-year Super Bowl window from 2025 to 2027. I asked around with a few general managers who have done their fair share of mid-to-high level quarterback deals, and the sense that I got was that Pittsburgh could seek the kind of contract Aaron Rodgers did with the New York Jets, with a slight adjustment to align with the salary cap expanding rapidly.

    The result: something in the neighborhood of four years for $160 million, with $80 million guaranteed at signing — and a trap door after the 2026 season that would allow the Steelers to move on without much cap pain if Wilson’s play goes off a cliff.

    Mind you, this is all based on Wilson finishing out 2024 with a strong run. That remains to be seen. If it happens, expect the Steelers to move quickly following the season to lace something up with Wilson, but also reserve the right to franchise tag him in the $42 million range if something can’t be put together before free agency.

    There are some interesting split opinions on what is going to happen with Darnold. There are quite a few executives who think Darnold has worked himself squarely into the track that Baker Mayfield took in 2023, when Mayfield signed a one-year prove-it deal with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2023 (earning $6.85 million) while parlaying himself into a healthy contract extension. That deal ended up being a three-year, $100 million contract with $40 million guaranteed at signing from the Buccaneers. It looks like Tampa Bay landed a solid bargain. But Mayfield is also likely to press for extension talks following the 2026 season and a new deal that could pay him considerably more, given his current level of success. Adjusted for Darnold, a Mayfield-type of contract could be in the neighborhood of three years for $120 million, with $50-60 million guaranteed at signing.

    Now comes the split opinion. A couple executives are still looking at Darnold as a player who is more likely to regress when he isn’t throwing to Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison, or being coached up by Kevin O’Connell. They feel like he’s most valuable to the Vikings team that he’s currently starting for, and that his best career route would be finding a path to sticking in Minnesota and building on what he’s accomplished this season. Of course, that’s not the Vikings’ plan. With the money the team has already doled out to Jefferson, the design is to use the flexibility offered by having a rookie salary in the starting quarterback spot — which is why the Vikings used the 10th overall draft pick on J.J. McCarthy. Blowing up that plan and signing Darnold to even a mid-level quarterback extension would create a need for adjustments.

    I’ll close this out with a comparison from an NFC executive: “[Darnold] is having his Case Keenum moment, like Keenum putting it together for a season with the Vikings [in 2017]. Then he went to Denver on a free-agent contract and wasn’t throwing to [Adam] Thielen in his prime — which was actually really good — and Stefon Diggs, and getting protected by a Vikings defense that was really good that year. He went somewhere else and we saw how much of his progress was about the talent and team around him. To me, that’s what Darnold is right now. If he can stick in Minnesota, that’s his best shot. Anywhere else, he’s not going to be playing at this level.”

    It’s food for thought. For all three of these players and the deals that they are chasing.

    This embedded content is not available in your region.

    • I’m not going to waste more time on the Shedeur Sanders-to-Dallas fever dream that the talk shows are having, but I have to relay a point that an AFC general manager made when we were chatting earlier this week: Even if Dallas was stupid enough to go the rookie quarterback route, then got over hurdle No. 1 by drafting Sanders, then cleared hurdle No. 2 by getting Dak Prescott to waive his no-trade clause …they’d still trip horrendously on hurdle No. 3, which is the reality that no team in the NFL wants to take on Prescott’s new contract — especially after he just suffered a second lower body injury that required surgery and could render him even less mobile than he already is following the first major lower body injury of his career requiring surgery in 2020.

    Prescott is not seen as a great health or salary risk for anyone right now. That means if Dallas were to draft Sanders, the Cowboys would likely have to cut Prescott and take on a $90 million dead cap hit that renders the flexibility of Sanders’ rookie salary completely nullified. Could Dallas go this route? Absolutely. Would it be wildly foolish and risk bottoming out the entire organization in the next couple of seasons? Yes. Without a doubt. And everyone in the league knows it.

    • One of the interesting things that I’ve seen with the success of the rookie quarterbacks this season — and it’s something that was accentuated with Bears QB Caleb Williams’ first game under new offensive coordinator Thomas Brown — is that teams are loosening up when it comes to athletic QBs being allowed to access their scrambling ability in spite of the inherent risks of it. We’ve seen it with Jayden Daniels in Washington, where part of the offense was contracted to move the pocket, but also opened further with a willingness to let Daniels cook with his running ability. The same has gone for Bo Nix in Denver and Drake Maye in New England. Talking with a source from the Broncos earlier this week about Nix, he made a great point about why rookie QBs are being allowed to run more often this season.

    “It’s two things,” he said. “There are more players in this rookie class who can do it really well, which is obviously the most important thing, but it also gives them a lot of confidence. Then that confidence gets injected into other things they’re doing. It’s similar to scripting some easy [pass completions] on the first drive. You’re getting the juices flowing. [Running] isn’t something you want to do forever, but if you can do it smartly and it helps a young guy adjust, let them engage that part of their talent.”

    Given that vantage, maybe it was no surprise that when Brown took over for the fired Shane Waldron, one of the aspects that got accentuated for Williams was that he could go to his scrambling ability more readily if he wasn’t seeing a clear decision quickly in his progressions. Not only was Williams getting the ball out faster, but when you watch film, you could see him taking the running option very deliberately when a throw wasn’t available, leading to his season high of 70 rushing yards on nine carries. I don’t think that was an emphasis for Williams under Waldron, and I expect we’ll see Williams making more plays taking the running lanes available to him the rest of the season.