
Insights
August 28, 2025
Today: Some quick media moves, news and several exciting upcoming events to ponder as you ride out the last wave of summer. And because it can’t be all work and no play, revisit Global Gateway Advisors’ Summer Edit for inspiration on what to read, watch or listen to this long weekend.
ICYMI: The last edition of COMPASS introduced OK Today, a global, youth-driven collective working to change how the world sees and talks about mental health through dialogue, education, community and culture. Learn more and get involved here.
Events: What’s coming up in September
Technology & Innovation
- Fortune Brainstorm Tech (Park City, UT, Sept. 8-10): Join the top leaders in tech — including clients and event speakers Brad Anderson, President Products, User Experience Engineering and Security, Qualtrics and Anthony Moisant, CIO and CSO of Indeed – to discuss the role of technology in society and topics from AI and cybersecurity to fintech, crypto and defense tech. The evening prior to the event, Zig Serafin, CEO, Qualtrics, will co-host a Fortune CEOi private dinner with Diane Brady, Executive Editorial Director, Fortune. More here – Will you be on site? Let us know so we can meet up!
- WSJ Technology Council Summit (New York City, Sept. 15-16): Industry leaders including Carolina Dybeck Happe, COO of Microsoft; Anthony Moisant, CIO and CSO of Indeed; and Severin Hacker, cofounder and CEO of Duolingo, will convene to explore how AI’s rapid rise is reshaping companies, industries and jobs through interviews, discussions and networking. More here
- Fast Company Innovation Festival (New York City, Sept. 15-18): Join innovators, entrepreneurs, and creatives including Justin McLeod, founder and CEO of Hinge; Brian Niccol, chairman and CEO of Starbucks; and Ego Nwodim, actress, comedian, and SNL cast member, for four days of talks, workshops, and experiences exploring the future of business, technology, design and culture. More here
- Axios AI+ Summit (Washington, D.C., Sept. 17): Examine the forces driving the global race to dominate AI, the business landscape it is reshaping, and the policy challenges emerging as breakthroughs outpace regulation and leaders race to balance innovation with oversight. More here
Executive Leadership & Finance
- Gartner CFO + Finance Executive Conference (London, Sept. 10-11): Finance leaders will tackle risk, efficiency and growth in uncertain times, with keynotes from polar explorer and climate tech investor Ben Saunders and futurologist Magnus Lindkvist. More here
- Forbes CMO Summit (Aspen, Colorado, Sept. 16-18): An exclusive gathering for top marketing leaders, the Forbes CMO Summit fosters candid, Chatham House Rule discussions on growth and brand leadership, with speakers including Zena Arnold, CMO, Sephora U.S.; John Gerzema, CEO, The Harris Poll; Zach Kitschke, CMO, Canva; and Marian Lee, CMO, Netflix. More here
Ideas, Media & Policy
- The Atlantic Festival (New York City, Sept. 18-20): Discussions with leading thinkers and cultural icons — including Scott Galloway, Jeffrey Goldberg and Keri Russell — along with exclusive book readings, film screenings and performances. More here
Health & Biotech
- Fierce Pharma Week (Philadelphia, Sept. 8-11): Top pharma leaders — including attendees from Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson, AstraZeneca, Merck and Novartis — will meet for a week of strategy and innovation in Philadelphia. More here
- LSX World Congress USA (Boston, Sept. 16-17): Join leaders from biotech, medtech and healthtech to showcase innovation, forge partnerships and shape the future of healthcare technology — with attendees from companies including Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson, AstraZeneca, Novartis, Eli Lilly, Merck, Philips and Stryker. More here
- Modern Healthcare Leadership Summit (Washington, D.C., Sept. 25): C-suite executives and key decision-makers will gather to tackle challenges from AI integration to value-based care, sharing practical insights to improve financial and operational performance, with speakers including Peter Arduini, CEO, GE HealthCare; David Rhew, MD, global chief medical officer, Microsoft; and Micky Tripathi, chief AI implementation officer, Mayo Clinic. More here
Bookmark Global Gateway Advisors’ event tracker, updated weekly.
Media news + moves
- The anchor exodus: The trend of news anchors leaving mainstream media continues, with Don Lemon, Joy Reid, Chuck Todd and Jim Acosta among those finding they can operate more freely — and often earn more — in the independent realm of Substacks, YouTube and podcasts, further fragmenting the traditional media landscape. Some, however, see it as the pendulum swinging back: ‘It feels to me like we are going back to valuing traditional beat reporters,’ said Alison Pepper, a former CBS News talent executive and CAA agent. Keep reading
- Truth isn’t totally dead: Jessica Yellin, independent journalist and former CNN White House Correspondent, argues that as more Americans turn to social and video platforms for news amid rising AI-driven misinformation, “evidence-based creators” have become essential truth-tellers — but they need stronger frameworks, resources and ties to legacy media to endure. Keep reading
- A month of changing logos: While Cracker Barrel grabs headlines, MSNBC is also rebranding — dropping the peacock and adopting My Source News Opinion World, or simply MS NOW. Keep reading
The argument for the left: Former Atlantic staff writer Jerusalem Demsas has launched The Argument, a new publication (on Substack, naturally) aimed at bolstering the ideas and arguments of modern liberalism and convincing readers of their importance and value. It has already raised roughly $4 million at a $20 million valuation and attracted an impressive slew of contributors including Matt Yglesias, Rachael Bedard and Derek Thompson. Read Demsas’ welcome letter here - Hiring: The Wall Street Journal is seeking a Talent Coach for a new development program intended to equip journalists with advanced skills in content creation and audience engagement. Learn more
The latest in AI:
- A cautionary tale: AI can fool anyone — even the editors of a tech-centric outlet like WIRED, who had to retract a seemingly perfect but ultimately AI-fabricated pitch. Keep reading
- A new standard for compensation: Perplexity, the startup building an artificial intelligence search engine to rival Google — and recently in the spotlight after offering to buy Chrome — is giving publishers the chance to earn revenue from the articles their content generates. ‘AI is helping to create a better internet, but publishers still need to get paid,’ said CEO Aravind Srinivas. The company has earmarked $42.5 million to distribute through the program. Keep reading
The latest in Inclusion:
- Global employers caught in a DEI crossfire: In the U.S., the Trump administration has rolled back diversity policies with executive orders declaring many initiatives “illegal DEI,” while Europe, the U.K., Japan and Australia are moving in the opposite direction with mandates on pay transparency, board quotas and equity reporting. The result is a fragmented global landscape where a one-size-fits-all strategy is nearly impossible, pushing employers to tailor policies by region — and to communicate those strategies with careful, intentional messaging both internally and externally. Keep reading
- LGBTQ+ inclusion drives long-term growth: A new analysis by the Human Rights Campaign Foundation found that companies with long-standing LGBTQ+ inclusive policies delivered stronger financial results over time — including higher revenue growth, net income and market stability. Keep reading
- Scientists drop diversity language: To avoid scrutiny from the Trump administration, scientists are modifying grant applications by removing terms like “diverse” and “underrepresented.” Longtime researchers say this level of language policing — which even affects scientific contexts such as “diverse airborne toxicants” — is unprecedented. Still, there’s no real alternative to funding from the National Institutes of Health, which provided nearly $37 billion in the last fiscal year. Keep reading
- Drop in Women Leaders Across U.S. Corporations: Against the backdrop of Trump-era executive orders dismantling DEI programs, the number of women in leadership positions in the U.S. has fallen. Keep reading
Track key changes in diversity, equity and inclusion — updated in real time — here.
Media moves:
- TechCrunch hired Russell Brandom as artificial intelligence editor.
- Alexis Sobel Fitts was named a senior assignment editor overseeing technology and media coverage at The Washington Post.
- Bloomberg News hired Judy Lagrou as a reporter, while senior reporter Lindsay Dodgson has left the news organization.
- Katie Roof will join The Information as Deputy Bureau Chief of the venture capital section after being “poached” from Bloomberg, while Sri Muppidi will expand to become a beat reporter on OpenAI and Anthropic.
- Charles Forelle is being positioned to be the next editor in chief of Barron’s, per Oliver Darcy of Status.
- The Wall Street Journal has hired Lydia Wheeler as a legal affairs reporter, while both Marie Beaudette and Denny Jacob are departing the news organization.
- Fierce Healthcare reporter Noah Tong left the news organization for a new opportunity.
- Axios health care policy reporter Victoria Knight left the news organization.