While the nation was focused on big, controversial cases, corporate America was quietly racking up a remarkable string of victories in the high court this term. {{/existing_user}} {{^existing_user}} You're almost finished. The Supreme Court headlines last week were dominated—and rightly so—by Justice Anthony Kennedy's retirement and the endorsement of President Donald Trump's xenophobic travel ban. While the nation was focused on these major controversies, big business was quietly racking up a remarkable string of victories in the high court this term. Corporate interests even won big in a number of cases that don't appear at first to implicate business.
The Big Business of Becoming Bhad Bhabie
Kluger was initially against the idea of getting back into the music business, but he consented to some studio time to see how Bregoli sounded outside the car. "There's something really special about her phrasing, and I think that's actually part of why the 'cash me outside' phrase went viral. "She's not allowed to say 'cash me outside,' " Kluger says. By then, she had released four singles as Bhad Bhabie — each a more perfect pop distillation of a gritty brand of trap rap. "I don't really get too, too, too involved with everything," she explained, flipping her hair like a kind of punctuation.
إرسال تعليق