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Will Trump sell his Truth Social shares at stock deadline?

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Presidents can move entire markets with a single sentence. Donald Trump, a former president, sent a single stock soaring with just three words: “I’m not selling,” he pronounced at a press conference on Sept. 13, when asked whether he would offload the millions of shares he owns in his social media company. Buoyed by this declaration of faith from its largest shareholder, the stock shot up 27% to $20.76, before closing the day at $17.97.

Later this month, for the first time since Trump Media & Technology Group (TMTG)—which owns Truth Social—went public, Trump will be allowed to sell his shares in the company. As the former chair of TMTG and a major insider, Trump is subject to a “lockup” provision that prevents insiders from selling stock in the newly public company before a certain date.

The lockup period for Trump, who owns about 57% of TMTG and is its largest stakeholder, will expire on Sept. 25 at the latest. If TMTG’s stock remains above $12, the lockup could end as early as Thursday, Sept. 19—a feat that looks increasingly likely. The price hasn’t dropped below $15 on any trading day since Aug. 22.

Trump currently owns 114.5 million shares of TMTG (ticker symbol: DJT), which are worth about $1.85 billion.

Trump’s stake in TMTG is likely a significant portion of his wealth. Forbes estimates Trump’s net worth to be about $3.7 billion, meaning the paper value of his TMTG shares would account for about 50% of his total wealth. Of course, as with anyone whose wealth is tied up in company stock, Trump’s net worth can fluctuate regularly with changes in the share price.

Trump cannot sell too much, too soon—in theory

As the lockup expiry date approaches, Fortune looked through dozens of SEC disclosures to examine the condition of TMTG. We found a company with a market cap of $3.1 billion—an almost inexplicable valuation given that the underlying enterprise is no larger than the size of a small family business. It has declining revenues, no profits, and is embroiled in multiple lawsuits. The company even confesses it made material misstatements in its financials reporting with no clear timeline of when it will be able to remedy them.

And—crucially for the company and anyone holding its shares—its future is largely tied up with the decisions of its largest individual shareholder: Donald Trump. The filings acknowledge Trump’s personal financial interests may hurt his investors because he has a right to vote his shares in ways that “may not always be in the interests of the Combined Entity’s stockholders generally.”

Insiders at newly public companies approaching the end of a lockup period will often communicate with the board to devise a plan to sell their stake incrementally over time and avoid a free-for-all in the market, according to Michael Ewens, a finance professor at Columbia Business School. “Everyone realizes selling it all is bad,” he says. “There’s a good reason for that; they don’t want the share price to tank.”

If insiders, especially Trump, rushed to offload as many shares as possible when the lockup period ended it would trigger a fire sale. Shareholders, many of whom are retail investors who bought the stock as a show of support for Trump, could see their investments greatly devalued or wiped out. But, as the largest shareholder of the company, no one would have more to lose from a cratering TMTG share price than Trump. The ensuing price drop could make whatever shares he wasn’t able to sell almost worthless, according to Jay Ritter, a professor at the University of Florida Warrington College of Business who studies public offerings.

But holding on to TMTG stock poses its own set of risks, namely that its share price appears entirely divorced from its underlying business results, trading mostly on the fervent devotion Trump inspires in his followers rather than any market fundamentals. That means Trump, as by far the largest shareholder, is caught between a rock and hard place. He can flood the market with shares knowing that whatever he doesn’t manage to sell will be worth a fraction of their original value. Or he can hold on to them and face the daunting prospect of turning TMTG and Truth Social into a genuine tech and media business.

TMTG’s shaky financial footing

Thus far, TMTG’s financial performance has been modest. 

The company made revenues of just $1.6 million in the first half of 2024, a decline of 30% from the year before. It posted a net loss of $344 million for the period, as total costs rose 1,104% from $9.8 million to $118.5 million, according to TMTG’s latest quarterly earnings report. 

To shore up its finances, TMTG struck a deal on July 3 to sell up to $2.5 billion worth of stock to Yorkville Advisors, a New Jersey investment firm that works with small- and micro-cap companies. The deal, a “standby equity purchase agreement,” is common among new companies. Essentially, it gives TMTG a guaranteed buyer if it issues new shares and a means to put cash on its balance sheet, while Yorkville gets the right to purchase discounted stock. In this case, Yorkville will pay 97.25% of the share price, which it can then turn around and sell at full price on the open market. Over the three-year term of the deal, TMTG will have sole discretion over when to issue shares that Yorkville can purchase, according to the agreement.

The deal limits Yorkville to 19.99% of TMTG’s outstanding shares, which as of July—when the deal was signed—was 37 million shares, worth $680 million. TMTG can also request advances. And the deal isn’t exclusive, meaning TMTG can still raise capital from other sources. In striking the deal, TMTG paid Yorkville a $25,000 structuring fee and issued 200,000 shares to Yorkville, currently worth $3.9 million, as a commitment fee.

“I see no reason why Yorkville would not want to immediately resell the shares, rather than expose itself to the risk of a stock price decline,” Ritter said. “Yorkville appears to be in a situation in which it can make some money as a middleman without exposing itself to much risk.”

While an equity purchase agreement isn’t unusual for a newly public company, its choice of investor does raise questions, according to Francine McKenna, a former public accountant at KPMG and PwC. Among them: “who those people are, who is part of that deal, who’s part of that insider group?,” McKenna said. “And in this case, you have Yorkville Advisors as part of the insider group. I would say they’re not Morgan Stanley or Goldman Sachs.”

In the past, Yorkville’s founder and president Mark Angelo had run-ins with regulators in Italy and Switzerland, according to disclosures made to the SEC. In 2015, Angelo and Yorkville Advisors were fined $135,000 by the Italian financial regulator the Commissione Nazionale per le Società e la Borsa for failing to make a public tender offer to buy the shares of certain shareholders involved in a deal. In 2022, Yorkville settled with the Swiss Federal Department of Finance for $82,515 over claims it didn’t properly disclose derivative holdings in three Swiss-listed companies.

A spokesperson for Yorkville Advisors declined to comment on the equity purchase agreement with TMTG, saying it “does not respond to inquiries from the press with respect to its business transactions.” The spokesperson described the fine from Italian regulators as a “technical violation in reliance on advice provided by Yorkville’s outside Italian counsel.” Yorkville did not respond to follow-up questions from Fortune about the settlement with Swiss regulators.

Fortune also sent TMTG a detailed set of questions regarding the statements made in its SEC filings, its financing deal with Yorkville Advisors, whether company insiders and the board had discussed plans regarding the end of the lockup period, and the company’s overall strategy. The company responded by questioning Fortune’s journalistic methods:

“By cherrypicking statements from our filings while omitting all countervailing information, and touting quotes from supposed experts who just happen to support all the reporter’s biases, Fortune offers a great lesson in how to manufacture fake news,” the spokesperson said. 

A dispute among TMTG’s cofounders

TMTG was founded shortly after Trump left the White House in 2021. Two former contestants on The Apprentice, Wesley Moss and Andrew Litinsky, approached Trump with the idea to start their own social media site since he had recently been banned from mainstream platforms in the wake of Jan. 6.  

Moss and Litinisky secured Trump’s approval to use his brand to bolster Truth Social, their nascent, conservative alternative to X (formerly Twitter). In return, a company they set up, United Atlantic Ventures (UAV), received an 8.6% equity stake in TMTG. In October 2021, TMTG agreed to go public via a “special purpose acquisition company” (SPAC) called Digital World Acquisition (DWAC), helmed by Florida investor Patrick Orlando.

TMTG wouldn’t end up going public until March 2024 after the deal got tied up in an SEC investigation. The SEC eventually alleged in an ongoing lawsuit that Orlando made material misrepresentations on disclosure forms when he said he didn’t have any intended acquisition targets, despite having already held “numerous lengthy discussions” with TMTG representatives. SPACs are generally not allowed to pre-coordinate with other companies.

“The lawsuits that were surrounding various parts of [the SPAC deal], and the SEC investigation slowing it down for so long, was unusual,” said Usha Rodrigues, a professor of corporate finance and securities law at the University of Georgia Law School, and an expert in SPACs. SPACs are “supposed to be blank-check companies where you really don’t have an intended target at the outset,” she said.

Earlier this month the judge in the case, Christopher R. Cooper of the U.S. District Court of D.C., granted Orlando’s lawyers’ request for a 30-day extension to respond to the SEC’s initial complaint.

Orlando did not respond to a request for comment sent via LinkedIn and multiple emails sent to his lawyers. 

Those weren’t the only legal disputes plaguing TMTG. In February, Litinsky and Moss sued TMTG for allegedly withholding their 8.6% stake in the company by attempting to dilute their equity by issuing one billion new shares, including 900 million that would be designated as voting stock, according to the lawsuit. Doing so, Litinsky and Moss allege, was against the conditions of their original contract with Trump and TMTG (then called Trump Media Group Corp.), which granted them the right to approve both the issuance of new shares and the creation of any new classes of stock. 

In response TMTG sued Litinsky and Moss’s company UAV a month later, claiming it was justified in doing so because the pair botched the company’s public offering, leading to a years-long delay. The two “failed spectacularly at every turn,” the suit alleges. In September the two won a separate case and the right to sell their shares on the open market. (Lawyers for Litinsky and Moss did not respond to multiple requests for comment). 

TMTG’s risk factors include at least seven lawsuits against the company and Donald Trump

All companies are required by law to disclose possible risks to their business, even risks that seem remote. Most companies’ risks revolve around competitive or regulatory threats to their business models. But the risks at TMTG are unusual because they are tied to the popularity of one man. 

The company’s management acknowledged in an SEC filing that Trump’s personal legal issues—one of which resulted in 34 felony convictions that Trump is currently appealing—leaves the company’s future hanging in the balance. The outcome of any one of the at least seven different criminal and civil court cases involving Trump could determine the success of a company with already precarious finances. While TMTG is not involved in any of these cases, the company says it “cannot predict” what effects “an adverse outcome” might have on Trump’s personal reputation and therefore its business, according to the same SEC filing.

In its discussion of the risks Trump’s legal troubles pose, TMTG cited a 2016 USA Today article that found the former president and his various businesses had been involved in roughly 3,500 lawsuits over 30 years. Trump had been a plaintiff in 1,900 of those cases, a defendant in 1,450, and in 150 he had either been a third party or involved in a bankruptcy proceeding. 

In fact, throughout its official documents TMTG admits that much of its future hinges on Trump and Trump alone. TMTG cites Trump extensively as one of its risk factors, citing the possibility that the company’s fate is tied to his political fortunes, according to the SEC filings. 

“Success depends in part on the popularity of our brand and the reputation and popularity of President Donald J. Trump,” one document reads. “The value of TMTG’s brand may diminish if the popularity of President Trump were to suffer.”

Should the focus of TMTG’s majority shareholder and pitchman waver, the company’s fortunes might falter. “If President Donald J. Trump were to cease to be able to devote substantial time to Truth Social, TMTG’s business would be adversely affected,” the SEC filings say.

TMTG also highlights Trump’s history of bankruptcies. TMTG is hardly the first venture to carry the Trump name, which can still be found on buildings across the world. Between 1991 and 1992 Trump’s Atlantic City casinos—the Trump Taj Mahal, the Trump Castle, and the Trump Plaza—all filed for bankruptcy.

Businesses that carried the Trump name via a licensing deal didn’t fare much better. Trump Steaks discontinued sales after just two months, Trump Mortgage, and Go.Trump.com—a Trump-branded travel site—were both founded in 2006 and shuttered by 2007. 

Another of Trump’s online companies, Trump University, closed in 2011 amid a series of lawsuits that alleged students were deceived by false advertisements. In 2018, a federal court approved a $25 million settlement against Trump University.

Of each of those businesses, TMTG said “there can be no guarantee that TMTG’s performance will exceed the performance of those entities,” according to SEC filings. 

Threats on the outside, and ‘material weaknesses’ on the inside

While dealing with the external threats posed by its numerous legal proceedings, TMTG is also grappling with an internal problem, one that officers of the company acknowledged they are struggling to rectify: properly accounting for TMTG’s finances. Any issues with a public company’s bookkeeping, referred to as “material weaknesses,” pose serious problems to investors, who rely on financial information being accurate.

When TMTG went public earlier this year executives realized the company did not have sufficient qualified personnel to meet the SEC’s reporting standards, according to an SEC filing made about two months after it went public. TMTG is currently trying to fix that. “These remediation measures will be time consuming, incur significant costs, and place significant demands on our financial and operational resources,” the same disclosure says.

Such issues are more common in startups and newly public companies because those types of firms have fewer resources and are not as experienced operating under SEC guidelines, according to Jason Schloetzer, an accounting professor at the McDonough School of Business at Georgetown University. “These weaknesses can lead to reduced investor confidence, increased regulatory scrutiny, and governance challenges, such as inadequate board oversight of the financial reporting process,” Schloetzer said. 

What if DJT is just a meme stock worth only $1.50 a share?

It is not unusual for a company’s stock price to race ahead of reality. Lots of companies have over-inflated stock prices. This year, for instance, Big Tech stocks hit new highs based on the mostly unrealized promise that artificial intelligence will usher in a new age of productivity. But there is a difference between that type of hype—which is based on businesses that have underlying sales growth—and the situation at TMTG, where revenues are declining and losses are worsening.

The extensive risks outlined in TMTG’s own documents, combined with its sagging financial performance, raise questions about whether its current trading price is sustainable. The most common explanation is that TMTG is a meme stock, whose performance is based on the excitement of retail investors rather than sound fundamentals.

“A meme stock is almost by definition, not tied to economic realities,” said Rodrigues, the SPAC expert. “They trade on momentum, emotion, and rumor.”

In the case of TMTG the stock moves on news of its majority shareholder—Trump, according to Ritter, the UF professor and IPO researcher. “Meme stocks thrive on attention, so the stock might jump if there is news about the company or Donald Trump, even if the news is not necessarily good news,” he said.

As the stock moves with Trump’s news coverage, favorable or not, TMTG’s outlook remains a head-scratcher. TMTG’s current market price of $16.14 per share is grossly overinflated, roughly 90% higher than its fair market value of $1.50 it should be trading at if one were to look at the company’s cash per share, according to Ritter. By Ritter’s calculations, for TMTG to live up to the $4 billion valuation currently implied by its stock price it would have to generate sustainable earnings of $200 million a year. But TMTG’s current financial performance is far off that mark and there’s “no evidence” the company has a plan to start pulling in annual profits at those levels, according to Ritter.  

“The only bull case for the stock that I can think of is the greater fool theory of investing: you can make money by buying an overvalued stock if you can find an even greater fool who is willing to buy it from you at an even more-inflated price,” Ritter said.

NCDC reports higher Mpox infection among males in Nigeria

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NCDC reports higher Mpox infection among males in Nigeria

Statistics from the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention have shown that more of those getting infected with Mpox in Nigeria are males.

 

According to figures posted on the NCDC website on Monday, September 16, 67 per cent of Mpox cases recorded since January 2024 were in males. 

 

The agency said, “Men are predominantly affected, accounting for approximately 70 per cent of 6,001 suspected and confirmed Mpox cases recorded in Nigeria since September 2017, when the first confirmed cases occurred.” 

 

The figures revealed that a total of 1,031 suspected cases have been reported across 47 local government areas in 23 states and the Federal Capital Territory, with 67 confirmed cases in 2024.

 

The age and sex distribution in the report showed that children under five years old are the most affected, followed by the 26-30 and 46-50 age groups. 

 

Out of the 64 confirmed cases recorded in 2024, children under five accounted for the highest number, with 15 confirmed cases.

 

The NCDC highlighted that men are predominantly affected, accounting for approximately 70 per cent of the 6,001 suspected and confirmed Mpox cases recorded in Nigeria since September 2017, when the first confirmed cases occurred. 

 

 Mpox, previously known as Monkey Pox, is an infectious viral disease that can occur in humans and other animals. Symptoms include a rash that forms blisters and then crusts over, fever, and swollen lymph nodes.



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GAC Aion opens 1st store in Philippines


GAC Aion opened its first store in the Philippines and delivered vehicles to its first 10 local customers.

(Image credit: GAC Aion)

GAC Aion, the electric vehicle (EV) subsidiary of GAC Group, has opened its first store in the Philippines, as it expands its presence in the Southeast Asian market.

GAC Aion’s first flagship showroom in the Philippines opened on September 16, marking the EV maker’s official entry into the Philippine market, according to a statement today.

The store is located in the city of Makati, the financial center of the Philippines, and occupies 1,420 square meters.

The store currently showcases six GAC Aion models, as well as its EV platform, with four charging piles, including two fast-charging piles.

It also has an after-sales service area to provide customers with car-buying and after-sales experience, according to the company.

GAC Aion opens 1st store in Philippines-CnEVPost

The Philippines is a promising automotive market in ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) and the local government is supportive of the EV industry, which provides room for the Aion to grow, said the company’s head of sales for Southeast Asia, Rongbo Kim.

GAC Aion will bring high-quality new energy mobility solutions to Filipino consumers and continue to expand its local sales and service network, he said.

GAC Aion held a ceremony at the store to deliver vehicles to the first 10 local owners. It did not mention the specific model of the vehicles, but a picture showed that the vehicles appeared to be Aion Y Plus SUVs (sport utility vehicle).

GAC Aion opens 1st store in Philippines-CnEVPost

The Aion Y Plus was already launched in Thailand last September with a starting price of 1,069,900 baht ($32,100).

The model is now available in 13 versions in China, where it is priced in the range of RMB 99,800 ($14,070) – RMB 189,800.

GAC Aion announced partnerships with dealerships in three Philippine cities, according to the statement.

The Philippines is ASEAN’s fourth-largest automotive market, with a 17.8 percent year-on-year increase in passenger car sales from January to June, the statement noted.

GAC Aion sold 35,355 vehicles in August, down 21.48 percent year-on-year but up 0.33 percent from July, according to data compiled by CnEVPost.

In the January-September period, GAC Aion sold 247,959 vehicles, down 17.18 percent.

($1 = THB 33.34, $1 = RMB 7.0950)

GAC Aion opens its 1st overseas plant in Thailand

GAC Aion opens 1st store in Philippines-CnEVPost

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Attacco hi-tech in Libano: esplosioni di cercapersone causano 11 morti e 4000 feriti – Gaeta.it

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Attacco hi-tech in Libano: esplosioni di cercapersone causano 11 morti e 4000 feriti  Gaeta.it



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WWE Raw Ratings Report – 9/16/2024

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This past week’s “WWE Raw” witnessed a gradual increase in key demographic ratings and overall viewership, bouncing back from a low number in the September 9 edition of the show.

“WrestleNomics” reports that the September 16 edition of the show garnered a total of 1,509,000 viewers, which represents a 6 percent jump from the previous week. The 18-49 key demographic also saw growth when compared to the previous week as it secured a 0.49 rating from 0.45 the previous week. The show, however, experienced a decline in both overall viewership and key demographic ratings over the trailing four-week average, dropping by 7 percent and 2 percent, respectively. “Programming Insider” reported that the first hour of “Raw” earned the highest rating for the show at 0.53, while the next two hours had ratings of 0.50 and 0.43, respectively. The overall viewership also started at a high of 1.618 million viewers for the first hour, followed by 1.541 million viewers and 1.367 million viewers for the following two hours.

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“Raw” saw an increase in viewership despite going against Monday Night Football, which featured a match between the Atlanta Falcons and the Philadelphia Eagles, which raked in over 13.65 million viewers and 4.01 in the key demographic. The report highlighted that the WWE show ranked #1 in the 18-49 demographic when not considering the NFL game.

The September 16 “Raw” saw the return of CM Punk, who cut a scathing promo on his Bad Blood opponent Drew McIntyre, while Judgment Day defended their tag team titles against The New Day’s Xavier Woods and Kofi Kingston, and retained their titles. Sami Zayn continued to demand a match against WWE World Heavyweight Champion Gunther, and the show ended with Damian Priest defeating former friend Dominik Mysterio, but he and Rhea Ripley were later attacked by the Judgment Day.

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US Pastor David Lin returns home after 17-year wrongful detention in China

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California Pastor David Lin.(Photo: FreePastorLin.com)

(CP) California Pastor David Lin has been released from a Chinese prison after nearly two decades and has returned to the United States, the State Department said Sunday, ending a case that sparked an international outcry from free speech advocates and U.S. officials who say he was wrongfully detained.

“We welcome David Lin’s release from prison in the People’s Republic of China,” the State Department said, Politico reported, adding that the 68-year-old pastor “now gets to see his family for the first time in nearly 20 years.”

Lin’s daughter, Alice Lin, told the outlet that the State Department notified her on Saturday that Chinese authorities had released her father from prison and that he would arrive in San Antonio, Texas, on Sunday.

“No words can express the joy we have — we have a lot of time to make up for,” she said.

Lin, a U.S. citizen, was working to establish a Christian training centre in Beijing in 2006 when he was first questioned by Chinese authorities and barred from leaving the country. He was later detained and charged with fraud under unclear circumstances. In December 2009, Lin was sentenced to life imprisonment. He has denied all charges. After several sentence reductions, he was set to be released in 2029.

Lin was active in China’s underground house church movement, which involves discreet religious gatherings often held in private homes and not connected to state-sponsored religious organizations. The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom has noted that this movement “has long faced hostility from Chinese authorities” and participants often face “intimidation, harassment, arrest, and harsh sentences.”

Although Lin has staunchly maintained his innocence, he did not raise the attention of his case because he felt as though his imprisonment was a God-ordained mission field, his daughter said in a 2019 interview on the Washington Watch radio programme.

She added that her father told the family that officials forged documents and even tried to get him to sign a confession — something he would not do because he “didn’t do anything wrong.”

“What we do know is that he was in China because he had this huge burden for the unchurched in China. He had the vision to build a church and a Christian training centre,” she explained, adding that he was imprisoned because of his faith. “His last message to us as a free man … he told us, ‘Don’t worry, God knows what He is doing. It is God’s wish that I am here. There are many people inside that need to hear God’s Word. Please don’t worry, but only pray for me. I will be back in the U.S. soon.’ That was 10 years ago.”

Several U.S. politicians voiced their support for Lin on Sunday and called for the release of other Americans detained abroad.

“I am extremely glad to hear David Lin was freed,” Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, said Sunday in a statement posted on X. “His capture, like so many others, marks a rising trend of hostage diplomacy by authoritarians around the world.”

The Dui Hua Foundation, a California-based nonprofit advocating for detainees in China, welcomed Lin’s release but said there are more than 200 Americans “under coercive measures” in China, including 30 who are barred from leaving the country.

China ranks as one of the worst countries in the world when it comes to Christian persecution, according to Open Doors USA’s World Watch List. China’s crackdown on nongovernment-sanctioned house churches over the last several years has led to the arrest of countless worshipers and the destruction of churches, along with stringent regulations and enhanced digital surveillance specifically targeting house churches.

ChinaAid President Bob Fu previously told The Christian Post that “the top leadership is increasingly worried about the rapid growth of the Christian faith and their public presence, and their social influence. It is a political fear for the Communist Party, as the number of Christians in the country far outnumber the members of the party.”

China’s government wants to “Sinicize” religion, meaning it wants to promote and guide religion that is Chinese in orientation, he said.

In March, Beijing freed Pastor John Cao, who was sentenced to seven years in prison on charges of “organizing illegal border crossing.” Authorities had arrested Cao and his colleague, Jing Ruxia, in March 2017 and charged him with illegally crossing the border between Myanmar and China.

Before crossing the border, Cao, from North Carolina, built 16 schools that serve 2,000 impoverished minority children in Myanmar’s northern Wa state.

In August, a court in Guiyang, the capital of Guizhou Province in China, sentenced Elder Zhang Chunlei of a house church to five years in prison for “subversion of state power” and “fraud.” The sentencing reportedly occurred in a closely regulated proceeding that limited public attendance.

© The Christian Post





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Gillian Mathews’ garden for outdoor lounging and dining

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September 18, 2024

I’ve wanted to visit the Seattle garden of Gillian Mathews, former owner of Ravenna Gardens, since reading about it at Danger Garden and in the Seattle Times. Designed by Richard Hartlage of Land Morphology (whose personal garden I recently visited), its modern style, lush plantings, and original art really spoke to me. So before heading to Seattle for the Puget Sound Fling, I reached out to Gillian to ask if I might visit. She kindly said yes and something along the lines of, “I won’t be there that day, but make yourself at home, and feel free to have lunch in the garden if you want.”

Did I want?? Yes, I certainly did!

On a sunny day in mid-July, I arrived at her charming bungalow in the View Ridge neighborhood with a sandwich and drink and made myself at home. Oh, but it was hard to sit and eat when a beautiful garden was begging to be explored. Get ready for ALL the pictures.

Back garden for living and dining

Let’s start the tour in the back garden, where I went searching for a dining spot. You enter from a narrow side path into an open space paved with dark gray gravel. Four steps up, a dining patio beckons under a crisscrossing steel arbor. A gabion wall of slate-gray stone retains the slope, from which a scupper pours water into a metal trough. A trio of wire spheres makes an airy sculptural statement without cluttering the openness of the space.

I read in the Seattle Times that this is an old sheep trough from England. Floating glass spheres add a dash of orange — an appetizer for the orange chairs on the dining patio.

Let’s head up the steel-and-gravel steps, past a scrim of tall grass…

…and onto the dining patio, laid out on a diagonal with the house. Under the bold, minimalist lines of the metal arbor, low gabion walls enclose a dining table with orange chairs. An oversized lantern isn’t wired with electricity but can be illuminated with a candle.

Boxwood standards add lollipop shapes, underplanted with red flowers and Angel Wings senecio.

Orange flowers echo the orange chairs and rusty steel arbor.

Beyond, a row of stock-tank planters offers space for a cutting garden, with a couple of Adirondack chairs tucked back there for relaxing.

Behind the stock tanks, another retaining wall holds the slope, with shade-loving plants filling the uphill bed.

Apricot strawflower

Cornflowers

Heading back down the steps, you see a fern table in a shady spot against the house — very Pacific Northwest.

These ferns are planted in a mound of growing medium held together with stones and branches on a metal table. They are green and thriving in the middle of July. All I can say is, a Seattle summer is far, far different from an Austin summer.

While examining the fern table, I noticed a footed magnifying glass perched atop a small column.

It invites you to lean in for a much closer look — a charming touch.

Next to the fern table, concrete and metal pipes are repurposed as planters and a perch for a wire sphere.

There is a spirit in the woods, reads a terracotta plaque of a ghostly face and moths.

Terracotta fruit in a wavy metal dish. Gillian’s art is exquisite.

A few steps lead up to a deck along the back of the house, from which you can see the dining patio and hear the trough fountain. A garden bed and deck planters offer separation between garden rooms, plus plentiful texture and color.

A big beaked yucca is the star, with purple eucomis and other interesting plants as supporting players.

A mesh chair offers nearly invisible seating.

There’s another table here too, under the graceful branches of a red Japanese maple.

Succulent planter on the table

Gillian’s deck and a ground-level patio are completely embraced by potted plants. You’re immersed in the garden even when sitting here.

The deck and patio function as extra living space for the small house, with doors opening directly onto them.

One more angle

A metal chest displays a collection of terracotta potted plants.

On the wall, an old crib mattress bedspring provides a creative way to display tillandsias.

On this bright noonday visit, it was nice to step into the shade of the arbor-enclosed patio.

A comfy sofa and chairs overlook a shade garden glowing yellow-green.

Succulents in a wavy bowl planter evoke an undersea coral reef.

Japanese forest grass, hosta, and other shade lovers add rounded forms along with a twiggy sphere.

Ceramic leaves stand amid real ones.

Is this a metal kiwi bird? He’s cute.

Looking back toward the deck

A crinkly fern and its shadow

Lots of potted plants. I wonder where Gillian moves all of these in the winter.

More!

Side garden

OK, let’s head out through the side-garden path. Tall steel containers along the house are planted with espaliered apple trees. Galvanized wall planters staggered on the fence bring the garden up to eye level.

Front garden

Streetside, the garden hides the house behind a tapestry of rounded shrubs, columnar evergreens, and scrim-like grasses and flowers. A generous walk widens at the street to welcome visitors.

The house sits above a retaining wall of round boulders, which was here when Gillian bought the house in 2015.

Looking up, you see an orange front door — a preview of the color to come in the back garden.

Looking lengthwise along the curbside garden — what a welcome!

Seedheads and rich foliage color

A few flowers

Verbena bonariensis

Hardy geranium

Another appealing combo

On the front porch, potted plants and a few weathered gnomes add personality.

A succulent basket and collected twigs and branches bring nature to the front door.

Like most of us who don’t live on an acreage, Gillian has neighboring houses and cars she probably doesn’t want to look at when she gazes out the window. The garden is of course a nice distraction from that.

But she also uses steel screens…

…and troughs of tall horsetail reed to hide unwelcome views.

How much nicer to look out at a wall of greenery.

Below the porch, a gravel path runs through the sunny garden…

…to a shady nook by the side fence, where a pair of Adirondacks makes an inviting hideout for two.

A star-shaped topiary in a container is an unexpected but fabulous focal point.

The garden view, enticing in every direction. Thank you, Gillian, for welcoming me into your beautiful garden even when you couldn’t be there!

For a look back at my visit to Ravenna Gardens, the boutique nursery that Gillian founded and operated for more than two decades, click here. Coming up next: my visit to the Chihuly Garden and Glass museum in Seattle.

I welcome your comments. Please scroll to the end of this post to leave one. If you’re reading in an email, click here to visit Digging and find the comment box at the end of each postAnd hey, did someone forward this email to you, and you want to subscribe? Click here to get Digging delivered directly to your inbox!

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Digging Deeper

Come learn about gardening and design at Garden Spark! I organize in-person talks by inspiring designers, landscape architects, authors, and gardeners a few times a year in Austin. These are limited-attendance events that sell out quickly, so join the Garden Spark email list to be notified in advance; simply click this link and ask to be added.

All material © 2024 by Pam Penick for Digging. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.



Michael Jordan selling his Illinois mansion at major discount

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Michael Jordan’s Illinois mansion is on the verge of being sold, according to Jenna West of The Athletic.

The Highland Park home went under contract on Sunday after being listed for 12 years, as confirmed by realtor Katherine Malkin.

The mansion was most recently listed for $14,855,000, a significant reduction from its original asking price of $29 million when it first hit the market in 2012.

The exact sale price of the property has not been disclosed.

Continue reading Michael Jordan selling his Illinois mansion at major discount at TalkBasket.net.

Avatar: The Last Airbender Now Has A Deckbuilding Card Game

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Avatar: The Last Airbender fans can pass the time waiting for Season 2 of Netflix’s live-action adaptation by playing the latest game based on the hit Nickelodeon animated series. Avatar: The Last Airbender – Aang’s Dynasty is a cooperative deckbuilding card game with an expansive story you create with friends. Created by The Op Games, the officially licensed Avatar deckbuilder is available now for $50 at Amazon.

If you’re interested in picking up the new game for yourself or for an Avatar fan on your holiday shopping list, you might want to snag it quickly. Aang’s Dynasty is only available at Amazon (for now at least), and the retailer’s shipping window is currently two to five weeks; delayed shipping windows are often a precursor to products selling out at Amazon.

Aang’s Destiny is a story-driven tabletop game where you take on the role of either Aang or one of his friends–Katara, Appa, and Sokka–to work together through adventures that will take you across the Four Nations. The game includes seven different boxes worth of story cards, each one composing a different adventure. The idea is that you play through each of the scenarios in order as you make your way through the Four Nations, with each increasing in difficulty and adding rules as your decks become more honed and powerful.

As for those decks, they include cards representing things like the group’s allies, bending abilities, as more, so that as you advance, your characters increase their power and skill as if they were experiencing the story in The Last Airbender. You’ll also need to collect certain items and complete various different objectives in each story in order to advance.

Avatar: The Last Airbender – Aangs Destiny Cooperative Deckbuilding Game

The game includes more than 370 cards in total, and the randomness inherent in deckbuilders means that each run through Aang’s Destiny will be different from the others. You can play with as few as two people, and each run lasts more than 60 minutes for players ages 10 and up.

Avatar: The Last Airbender - Aang's Destiny is $50 at Amazon
Avatar: The Last Airbender – Aang’s Destiny is $50 at Amazon

Aang’s Destiny might be the newest tabletop adaptation of Avatar: The Last Airbender, but it’s far from the only one. There are several that tell other stories and use different gameplay mechanics to bring players into the world of Avatar. Crossroads of Destiny provides more of straightforward board game experiences, for example, while Fire Nation Rising focuses more on combat and makes heavy use of dice. There’s also Avatar Legends: The Role Playing Game, a tabletop RPG with numerous expansions and other add-ons.

Check out the list below.

Avatar: The Last Airbender Tabletop Games

Avatar: The Last Airbender Blu-Ray Deals

Of course, you can also get Avatar in its original form: as a TV show. Amazon offers all of Avatar on Blu-ray, along with the standalone sequel, Legend of Korra, with different options for box sets to get one or both.

Avatar: The Last Airbender Graphic Novel and Art Book Deals

You can also delve deeper into the world of Avatar: The Last Airbender with a host of graphic novels that take Aang and his friends through even more adventures. Amazon has a bunch of Avatar graphic novel omnibus deals, as well as books that let you dive deeper into the series, its stories, and its characters. You can also save on several Korra graphic novel omnibuses as well as the four-volume art book series.



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