M&M Custard, one of the largest franchisees of Freddy’s Frozen Custard and Steakburgers, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Kansas.
The Overland Park, Kansas-based company operates 31 Freddy’s locations across Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri and Tennessee, reporting $5.2 million in assets against $27.7 million in liabilities owed to more than 100 creditors.
In court documents, CEO Eric Cole called the company’s 11 Chicago stores a “toxic asset” that generated negative EBITDA and became a financial drain on the entire portfolio. M&M bought six Chicago stores in 2021 for $1 million, hoping to dominate the market with an additional commitment to develop 13 more locations. Three years later, Cole blamed Chicago’s “burdensome regulatory and tax environment” for its melting sales.
What This Hedge Fund Billionaire Did Differently to Fix His NFL Disaster
When David Tepper purchased the Carolina Panthers for a record $2.3 billion in 2018, he took a hands-on approach — churning through seven coaches and 10 quarterbacks. The strategy bombed as the team won just 33% of its games and never made the playoffs. Tepper even threw a drink at a fan and got fined $300,000.
Now the hedge fund manager worth $24 billion is doing something radically different: stepping back. Tepper hired new coaches and a GM, let them rebuild the roster without interference, and invested heavily in analytics and facilities. The result? The Panthers are 6-5 this season and playoff-bound.
“You really know you’re successful when you know what you don’t know,” Tepper told The New York Times in a rare interview, admitting his early mistakes.
The ‘Complete Idiot’s Guide’ Franchise Gets a Hollywood Deal

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Those yellow-and-black how-to books that taught millions to fake their way through everything are headed to your screen.
Amasia Entertainment just snagged the franchise rights from Penguin Random House to turn The Complete Idiot’s Guide series into films, TV shows, podcasts and streaming content. The deal covers both scripted and unscripted projects across all platforms, including social media.
The move underscores Hollywood’s obsession with mining nostalgic IP for sure-thing content — because why create something new when you can repackage a 32-year-old book series everyone already knows?
AI Teddy Bear Powered By ChatGPT Pulled from Shelves For Saying Inappropriate Things

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A $99 talking bear meant for kids escalated conversations into graphic sexual content and offered tips on finding dangerous household items, according to a watchdog report.
The Kumma bear, manufactured in China and sold by Singapore-based FoloToy, uses OpenAI’s GPT-4 chatbot. Researchers from the Public Interest Research Group discovered that the bear discussed sexually explicit subject matter. It also volunteered where children could find knives and matches around the house.
The findings shed a bright light on how AI companies’ adult-facing technology gets repurposed for children’s products without adequate safeguards.
FoloToy CEO Larry Wang told CNN the company is “conducting an internal safety audit” after pulling its AI-enabled toys from sale. OpenAI hasn’t commented on how its technology ended up in a children’s toy.
AI Workers Who Train ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini Tell Their Families Not To Use It

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The people teaching AI chatbots to sound human are warning loved ones to stay away from the technology they help build.
A dozen AI raters and trainers who work on models including ChatGPT, Google’s Gemini and Elon Musk’s Grok told The Guardian they’ve stopped using generative AI personally and actively discourage friends and family from trusting it. These workers evaluate AI responses for accuracy and spend their days catching bots dispensing false information, revealing biases and making dangerous recommendations.
Workers report vague instructions, minimal training and unrealistic time limits—suggesting companies prioritize speed over safety. Meanwhile, chatbots became more confidently wrong: their rate of repeating false information nearly doubled from 18% to 35% between August 2024 and 2025, according to NewsGuard.
Anthropic Launches Claude Opus 4.5 AI Model After $350 Billion Valuation

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Anthropic just released Claude Opus 4.5, its third AI model in three months following Claude Sonnet 4.5 in September and Claude Haiku 4.5 in October.
The new release targets professional software developers and knowledge workers like financial analysts, consultants and accountants. Anthropic says the model beat rivals including Google’s Gemini 3 Pro and OpenAI’s GPT-5.1 on coding tests, and even outscored every human candidate on Anthropic’s internal engineering exam.
The annoucement comes after Microsoft and Nvidia announced multi-billion-dollar investments in the startup last week, giving it a whopping $350 billion valuation.
M&M Custard, one of the largest franchisees of Freddy’s Frozen Custard and Steakburgers, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Kansas.
The Overland Park, Kansas-based company operates 31 Freddy’s locations across Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri and Tennessee, reporting $5.2 million in assets against $27.7 million in liabilities owed to more than 100 creditors.
In court documents, CEO Eric Cole called the company’s 11 Chicago stores a “toxic asset” that generated negative EBITDA and became a financial drain on the entire portfolio. M&M bought six Chicago stores in 2021 for $1 million, hoping to dominate the market with an additional commitment to develop 13 more locations. Three years later, Cole blamed Chicago’s “burdensome regulatory and tax environment” for its melting sales.
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