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It was December of 2021. I had COVID and was on the verge of being officially diagnosed with prostate cancer. Things were pretty bad and suddenly got worse: I noticed Fire Gasparino trending on Twitter not because I had made up a story, or defamed someone.

My sin was reporting, continuously and accurately, that an investment cult had formed around the stock of the troubled movie theater chain known as AMC, pushing its shares well above where they should be. And like most cults, this one wouldnt end well.

The abuse lasted through Christmas. I guess I could have wilted and joined some of my colleagues in heralding the small investor-led movement around the stock as something biblical. David slays Goliath.

I didnt and kept reporting the story behind one of the most absurd and now costly stock pumps in recent history.

These days, Im glad I did.

Yes, I survived COVID, my cancer diagnosis and getting vilified by a Twitter mob just fine. In fact better than fine because of what happened next: The stock imploded as I reported it would. AMC was burning loads of cash, heading for bankruptcy or massive dilution to raise much-needed capital, neither good for shareholders.

Shares are down 95% since December 2021. About 10 days ago,  the stocks crash and burn was complete as the company took concrete steps toward the issuance of a ton of new shares (aka diluting existing shareholders) and stay out of bankruptcy. Were it not for a bit of financial alchemy in a 10-for-1 reverse stock split, AMCs stock price would be reading just above $1.

Im not taking joy in people losing money but in people saving some. Anyone who followed my reporting on AMC saved themselves some real money. Those who followed cultists, the self-described AMC Apes or the cheerleading pseudo-journalists are paying the price.

Phil Graham, the brilliant but troubled former publisher of The Washington Post, came up with the truism about the profession of journalism as being the first rough draft of history. That was back in the early 1960s before he killed himself in a fit of depression.

I wonder what Phil Graham would call what goes down on the rebranded Twitter site X or any of the other instantaneous social-media feedback loops that are now competing with real reporting. A really, really, really rough draft of history?

Social media is great in so many ways. Yes, its a draft of history, even if its really rough, and that often serves a purpose through the exchange of ideas to make an informed judgment. Its also an outlet for people desperately searching for purpose, and while theyre at it, indulging in their worst instincts and behaviors. Its a breeding ground for the cult.

How cults are created is an age-old question. The result is deadly and near deadly stuff like Jonestown and Pizzagate    and the financially deadly stuff that surrounded the stock of AMC. The weird notion that a cabal of greedy hedge funds, hell-bent on destroying the nations largest movie theater chain, were shorting the stock (betting its price would collapse) in dark corners of Wall Street does seem appealing.

That average people could buy this stock, and destroy a bunch of nasty hedge funds while becoming rich, even more so.

Just one problem: Nothing close to what the cult was blathering about was true. The evidence of this scheme thrown around Twitter or the Reddit message boards was of the wackadoo variety. And If you dared question the illogic, as I did, be prepared for harassment like youve never seen before.

The power of social media is intense and crazy, of course, and it made this cult particularly nasty and resilient over the past two-plus years. That is until the hammer finally fell just days ago and the AMC cult ended like they all do   in disaster.

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Its a shame more reporters didnt call this out. It was so obvious based on what you can find on a balance sheet. Short sellers made hundreds of millions of dollars in August because AMCs finances included massive cash burn, lots of debt and movie attendance that due to streaming hasnt returned to pre-pandemic levels.

CEO Adam Aron, not exactly a short seller, recently explained AMCssituation in a call withanalysts. Business is getting better Barbenheimer was a box office hit; a Taylor Swift film coming to AMC theaters in October is crushing it in pre-sales. But he said that if he cant raise money by selling more stock, Chapter 11 is almost inevitable. He recently beat back an Ape-inspired lawsuit challenging his dilution plan, because they believe AMC is really doing just fine and doesnt need the money.

It does, of course, and the coming dilution is why AMC, for now, and maybe for the foreseeable future, is still in business, even as its stock is battered and bruised.

Some of the Apes are still HODL (holding on for dear life, in the lingua franca of the cult), and still attacking those they see as backing the evil hedge funds. Thats scary.

Even more scary: Far too many reporters over the past three years sought the cults approval because it feels good to be applauded on social media. It also helps you build your followers, which is also idiotically important to reporters these days.

They are truly sellouts to the profession, because they should know, based on the history, cults never end well.

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Science

Germany to Send First European Astronaut Around the Moon on Artemis Mission

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Europe has secured its first astronaut seat to orbit the Moon through NASA’s Artemis program, marking a historic milestone for ESA. Director General Josef Aschbacher confirmed that a German astronaut will take the inaugural European lunar-orbit mission, enabled by Europe’s contributions to Orion’s service module and the Lunar Gateway. Veteran astronauts Matthias…

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Politics

Lawmakers stumble on stablecoin terms as US Congress grills Fed’s Bowman

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Lawmakers stumble on stablecoin terms as US Congress grills Fed’s Bowman

US Representative Stephen Lynch pressed Federal Reserve Vice Chair Michelle Bowman on Tuesday over her past remarks encouraging banks to “engage fully” with digital assets, questioning the Fed’s role in advancing crypto frameworks while showing confusion over the definition of stablecoins.

In a Tuesday oversight hearing, Lynch asked Bowman, the Fed vice chair for supervision, about remarks she had made at the Santander International Banking Conference in November. According to the congressman, Bowman said she supported banks “[engaging] fully” with respect to digital assets.

However, according to Bowman’s comments at the conference, she referred to “digital assets” rather than specifically cryptocurrencies. The questioning turned into Lynch asking Bowman about distinctions between digital assets and stablecoins.

The Fed official said that the central bank had been authorized by Congress — specifically, the GENIUS Act, a bill aimed at regulating payment stablecoins — to explore a framework for digital assets.

“The GENIUS Act requires us to promulgate regulations to allow these types of activities,” said Bowman.

Cryptocurrencies, Federal Reserve, Law, Congress, Stablecoin
Representative Stephen Lynch at Tuesday’s oversight hearing. Source: House Financial Services Committee

While the price of many cryptocurrencies can be volatile, stablecoins, like those pegged to the US dollar, are generally “stable,” as the name suggests. Though there have been instances where some coins have depegged from their respective currencies, such as the crash of Terra’s algorithmic stablecoin in 2022, the overwhelming majority of stablecoins rarely fluctuate past 1% of their peg.

Related: Atkins says SEC has ‘enough authority’ to drive crypto rules forward in 2026

Bowman said in August that staff at the Fed should be permitted to hold small “amounts of crypto or other types of digital assets” to gain an understanding of the technology.

FDIC acting chair says stablecoin framework is coming soon

Also testifying at the Tuesday hearing was Travis Hill, acting chair of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. The government agency is one of many responsible for implementing the GENIUS Act, which US President Donald Trump signed into law in July.

According to Hill, the FDIC will propose a stablecoin framework “later this month,” which will include requirements for supervising issuers.