All posts tagged: hed

Replit’s Amjad Masad on the Cursor deal, fighting Apple, and why he’d rather not sell

Replit’s Amjad Masad on the Cursor deal, fighting Apple, and why he’d rather not sell

Amjad Masad has been building Replit for a decade, but the last 18 months have been something else entirely. The AI coding assistant company went from $2.8 million in revenue in all of 2024 to tracking toward what Masad describes as a billion-dollar annual run rate. At TechCrunch’s sold-out StrictlyVC event in San Francisco on Thursday night, we covered a lot of ground in a short time, beginning with the question everyone in the industry is asking right now: in a world where rival Cursor is reportedly in talks to be acquired by SpaceX for $60 billion, is Replit also bound to sell? We also got into Replit’s net revenue retention — a measure of how much existing customers expand their spending — which Masad says is reaching as high as 300%, his willingness to take Apple to court over what he called outright lies in its App Store battle with Replit, and the possibility of the company beginning to invest in its own customers. On the question of independence, Masad was unambiguous. Unlike Cursor, …

Man thought he’d hidden everything when police knocked the door but he forgot one thing

Man thought he’d hidden everything when police knocked the door but he forgot one thing

A cocaine dealer hid his mobile phone and thousands of pounds in cash but forgot to hide his knuckleduster when police came calling, a court has heard. Officers had gone to 22-year-old Thomas Morgan’s house after detectives involved in a different operation found messages about the class A drug were being sent to his Facebook page. At the time Morgan was involved in dealing coke he was subject to a community order for engaging in controlling behaviour with a former partner, which included sending her a picture of himself in woodland with a rope around his neck and telling her she was responsible, and a suspended sentence for dangerous driving after leading police on a 70mph chase on a motorbike. Megan Williams, prosecuting, told Swansea Crown Court, sitting remotely in Cardiff Magistrates Court, that Morgan came to the attention of police in Swansea in March this year when officers involved in an unrelated drug investigation found Facebook messages between the person they were investigating and the defendant. She said on March 31 officers went to …

Pedro Pascal Didn’t Know He’d Be in Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Show

Pedro Pascal Didn’t Know He’d Be in Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Show

Pedro Pascal didn’t know he’d be involved in Bad Bunny‘s 2026 Super Bowl halftime performance until right before he was being brought onto the field. The Last of Us actor reflected on his cameo in the Grammy Award winner’s monumental Super Bowl performance in a profile with Fantastic Man. Pascal admitted that he reached out to Bad Bunny’s team about participating somehow, even if that meant he’d be volunteering or serving coffee. “I wanted to participate in any way — literally a volunteer position, like serving coffee if needed — and I put the feelers out through people I work with,” he said. “When it comes to representation synchronized with celebration there’s no one better than Benito at the moment, and that fills me with inspiration outside of just being super into his music.” The Emmy nominee explained he went into shooting Tony Gilroy’s Behemoth! and hadn’t heard back from Bad Bunny’s team, so he “sent someone an email with a selfie of me sticking my tongue out, being, like, ‘It’s really me.’ Within 25 …

‘He’d gaze at the stars and go: I’m gonna be up there one day’: Prince by those who knew him best, 10 years after his death | Prince

‘He’d gaze at the stars and go: I’m gonna be up there one day’: Prince by those who knew him best, 10 years after his death | Prince

‘To me, he was a new version of Sly Stone’ George Clinton, singer and leader of Parliament-Funkadelic Tight for years … George Clinton at the the 2025 Songwriters Hall of Fame induction ceremony. Photograph: Theo Wargo/Getty Images for Songwriters Hall Of Fame It feels deep that Prince has been gone 10 years. When he died, it felt like I couldn’t even move my mouth, but I’m able to talk about it now. I first met him when he came to my show in 1977, when he was 19. He had the swagger and looked like he was in [Clinton’s band] Funkadelic. To me, he was a new version of Sly Stone. He was excellent on the guitar, could write on keyboards, and play bass and drums as good as hell. His [pianist] daddy had been an arranger, so he knew how to arrange music, and he could dance like James Brown. As a rock star he was perfect, but he was more than a musician. He was special. I took his music to a pirate …

Brian Cox never thought he’d direct a film “in a million years” before Glenrothan

Brian Cox never thought he’d direct a film “in a million years” before Glenrothan

In his long acting career, Brian Cox has appeared in a very impressive array of films and TV shows. But despite having previously directed for the stage, it’s taken him until now – at the ripe old age of 79 – to step behind the camera and helm a screen project. His directorial debut is Glenrothan, a sentimental, Scotland set drama about two estranged brothers, played by Cox himself and Alan Cumming, who are reunited after several decades apart. Cox stars as Sandy, the owner of a whisky distillery who has never moved away from his (fictional) home town, while Cumming is Donal, who has been residing in Chicago for the past 35 years but – after a disaster – decides the time is finally right to return to Scotland and possibly even make amends with his brother. Ahead of release, Radio Times spoke exclusively to Cox about what drove him to direct – and it turned out it wasn’t something that had been especially high on his own bucket list. “Blame that man over …

Trump announces 2-week Iran ceasefire after he’d warned ‘a whole civilization will die tonight’

Trump announces 2-week Iran ceasefire after he’d warned ‘a whole civilization will die tonight’

President Donald Trump announced a two-week ceasefire with Iran on Tuesday night — hours after he’d threatened “a whole civilization will die tonight” and about 90 minutes before a deadline he set for Tehran to reach an agreement with the U.S. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. “Based on conversations with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Field Marshal Asim Munir, of Pakistan, and wherein they requested that I hold off the destructive force being sent tonight to Iran, and subject to the Islamic Republic of Iran agreeing to the COMPLETE, IMMEDIATE, and SAFE OPENING of the Strait of Hormuz, I agree to suspend the bombing and attack of Iran for a period of two weeks,” he wrote on Truth Social. Earlier in the day, Trump had warned on social media that “a whole civilization will die tonight” if there was no deal between the two warring countries. That threat, Trump’s most extreme public rhetoric in the conflict to date, had included a vow to launch attacks …

Raphael Died Before 40. His Met Retrospective Asks:What if He’d Lived?

Raphael Died Before 40. His Met Retrospective Asks:What if He’d Lived?

Imagine I asked you to name the famous Italian Renaissance artist who angered his patron by repeatedly missing deadlines because he was busy studying perspective. You’d probably answer Leonardo da Vinci. Other artists could be dilatory, but no other artist is as famous for putting his research before his painting. It’s practically Leonardo’s signature.  Yet, in this case, you’d be mistaken. The artist in question is somebody unexpected—somebody set to receive a major retrospective at the Metropolitan Museum of Art this spring, his first in the United States. His reputation holds him as the most enterprising, diligent, and proficient painter of the period: the short-lived Raphael of Urbino (1483–1520). Since Giorgio Vasari’s Lives of the Artists (1550/68), Raphael has been considered the model of reliable efficiency, embodying the adage, “If you need something done quickly, find a busy person.” Despite dying young, in his late 30s, Raphael produced numerous drawings, paintings, and buildings. Study is not something legend tends to associate with him. Easily absorbing style after style, Raphael deployed them at will like a …

This is how we do it: ‘I worried that he’d miss having sex with women’ | Life and style

This is how we do it: ‘I worried that he’d miss having sex with women’ | Life and style

Joe, 35 double quotation markOnce I really trusted Matt, I started to enjoy being more dominant Matt was the first person I’d dated who wasn’t gay. He told me early on that although he’d mainly had relationships with men, he had slept with as many women as men. I worried he wouldn’t feel fulfilled by me, that he would miss having sex with women, which I now know is the worst thing you can say to a bisexual person because it suggests they are less capable of monogamy. I was projecting my own insecurities on to his sexuality. There is a seven-year age gap between us, but if anything Matt is more mature than me. Outside the bedroom he’s the decisive alpha, so I like it when that dynamic flips during sex. I used to find control in submission. There’s a stigma about being a “bottom” – that it means giving up power – but really you’re still setting the terms. And once I really trusted Matt, I started to enjoy being more dominant. Sometimes …

Jeff Klein on SVB Expansion, Whether He’d Ever Sell

Jeff Klein on SVB Expansion, Whether He’d Ever Sell

Is Jeff Klein looking to open a San Vicente Bungalow in Palm Springs? Or is he looking to cash out? That was the question left open by The Wall Street Journal’s March 19 bombshell scoop — that Klein, 54, was working with Goldman Sachs and real-estate firm JLL to find a new investment partner for his high-end hospitality empire, long a magnet for A-list celebs and industry climbers, ostensibly as part of an expansion plan. “We are currently looking at several new locations and evaluating different ways to structure the next phase of growth while protecting the magic and exclusivity,” Klein told the Journal. Notably, though, the Journal also reported that Klein would “consider selling a majority or even all of the businesses,” including his West Hollywood and New York properties. In other words, the Journal suggested, he might just take the money and run. Rambling Reporter gave Klein a call to clear up the confusion and learned that it’s definitely the former — unless, of course, the money ends up being stupid enough for …

Matthew Lillard ‘felt like he’d died’ after response to Quentin Tarantino criticism

Matthew Lillard ‘felt like he’d died’ after response to Quentin Tarantino criticism

Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Matthew Lillard has admitted that he felt like he was observing his own wake after he was flooded with messages of support following Quentin Tarantino’s criticism of him. The US actor, 56, was the target of director Tarantino’s vitriol in a now-infamous podcast episode, in which he made disparaging comments about Lillard and fellow actors Paul Dano and Owen Wilson. In a new interview, Lillard joked that the outpouring of love he received in response felt as though he was witnessing his own funeral. “It felt like I had died and was in heaven watching everyone send out their RIP tweets,” he told People. “I mean, it was really nice being a part of your own wake, sort of sitting there living through all the nice things people say after you die. “Everyone, from the people at the mall this weekend …