Federal agencies have offered exits to millions of employees and tested the prowess of engineers — just like when Elon Musk bought Twitter. The similarities have been uncanny.
Trump himself actually goes back and forth between boasting about his smarts (a “very stable genius,” he famously called himself) and his handsomeness (“you have never seen a body so beautiful,” he crowed last September). But his arc bends toward the cosmetic.
On an earnings call, the Meta CEO praised X's Community Notes system, highlighting its effectiveness compared with third-party fact-checkers.
Billionaire Elon Musk has worked behind the scenes on an initiative aimed at depleting the civil service, prompting questions about its legality.
Around the same time as Musk’s post, hundreds of thousands of federal workers received an email also titled “Fork in the Road,” with a similar offer: Simply send an email to the Office of Personnel Management with the word “Resign” in the subject line, and you’ll receive eight months’ pay, so long as you reply before Feb. 6.
In November 2022, days after Elon Musk took control of the company then called Twitter, employees received an email with the subject line: “A fork in the road.” Now he’s turned his attention to the US government,
The world’s richest man has paid to boost his online warriors into global leaderboards, raising questions about his prowess — and his need for digital praise.
How the Sunshine State, once America’s dead end, became its new seat of power.
Elon Musk’s mother, Maye Musk, suggested her son sue CNN over a panel discussion that aired on the network this week focusing on a hand gesture the billionaire made during an inauguration
The Name of the Year for 2024, according to the American Name Society, is “Ozempic," as in “Ozempic face,” “oat-zempic” and those tall, thin Christmas trees known as “treezempic.”
Musk’s numbers are down, and even some who like him don’t seem to love him being so central.